Land Surface Temperature Anomaly [Day] (1 month)

Land Surface Temperature Anomaly [Day] (1 month) | NASA

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About this dataset

Land surface temperature is how hot or cold the ground feels to the touch. An anomaly is when something is different from average. These maps show where Earth’s surface was warmer or cooler in the daytime than the average temperatures for the same week or month from 2001-2010. So, a land surface temperature anomaly map for May 2002 shows how that month’s average temperature was different from the average temperature for all Mays between 2001 and 2010.

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December 2021

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1.0 degrees 360 x 180 download
0.5 degrees 720 x 360 download
0.25 degrees 1440 x 720 download
0.1 degrees 3600 x 1800 download
CSV for Excel older than 2007 download

What do the colors mean?

These maps show land surface temperature anomalies for a given day, week, or month compared to the average conditions during that period between 2001-2010. Places that are warmer than average are red, places that were near-normal are white, and places that are cooler than average are blue. Black means there is no data.

Related Websites

MODIS

Terra

MODIS Land Science Team

Earthdata MODIS

Further Reading

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Alaska Hit with a Hot March

Heat and Fire Scorches Siberia

Credits

Imagery produced by the NASA Earth Observations team based on data provided by the Land Processes Distributed Active Archive Center (LPDAAC) and the MODIS Land Science Team.

Federal Geographic Data Committee Geospatial Metadata

View the FGDC Metatdata for Land Surface Temperature Anomaly [Day] (1 month)

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