Residents of San Francisco’s oceanside neighborhoods may complain about it, but the city’s legendary fog does more than just provide character — it also protects nearby redwood forests. Now researchers from the University of California, Berkeley are claiming that the fog has lessened by 33% over the past 100 years, and climate change may be the culprit.
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3 Responses to “Climate Change is Causing San Francisco to Lose its Fog”
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Hmm, but hasn’t the bay area also undergone a massive urbanization in the last 100 years? Urban Heat Island effect is a known causal event that results in increased temperatures in urban areas with a change in the energy to heat profile of the land (i.e. when heat gets absorbed and released during the daily cycle). It’s so dramatic that those doing climatic models need to factor it out of temperature readings in urban areas or they get a false global warming signal..
sf coastline is less b/c it’s a small city.Most of it doesn’t reach more than 3 stories.
I think the climate change here is result of smog, blowing over from China.
[...] The foggy Northern California coastline can sometimes put a damper on your spirit, but given the a chance to inhabit a house like the Montara House, you’d be sure to find a pick-me-up no matter what the weather conditions. Located on the coast just south of San Francisco on a steep sloped site, the concrete home maximizes natural daylight inside the home and provides a comfortable and warm environment to escape the fog. And though designed by San Francisco-based Anderson Anderson Architecture, the resident family were actually the builders of this eco-home, which includes an impressive pv and solar water heating system. [...]