Introduction
 Theses
    Introduction
    Warm healted
    Cool sea - cool winter
    What counts
    Polar air everywhere
    Ice invaded Norway
    Baltic experiment
    Solid Arctic axis
    Four decades cold
    Why Britain cold
    Cause for warm
    Spreading of warming
    One rise - two shifts
 Cooling Europe 1939
 Climate down 1939-42
 Sea War turn climate
 Big Warming 1918
 Climate change twice
 References
 Previous Essays
 
 
 
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Theses 3A

Thesis    Facts    Evidence    Conclusion   
 

Norway cold occupied –winter 1940/41

 

Thesis

When Norway, in climatic terms a maritime country, gets the coldest temperatures ever measured in the South Norway only few months after being attacked, invaded, and occupied, while the northern part remained in the ‘average’, then only the naval activities in the Skagerrak and along the coast could have generated the record temperatures in January 1941.

 

Facts

Norway is close to the Atlantic, benefiting from the Norwegian current and it warm water. During summer 1940 Germany attacked Norway from the sea with most of its naval forces involved in the campaign, while Norway and Allied forces tried to prevent this. Encounters and battles continued after the invasion was completed in June for many months.

The first winter after the occupation and following the most excessive ‘turning of coastal waters about’, low temperatures that were never measured before were recorded. Meanwhile the northern part of Norway was a bit colder than in previous years but remained within ‘usual’ range.

After the arctic winter 1939-40, the war at sea generated the second arctic winter 1940-41 along the ‘cold axis’ from Stockholm to London. However, the ‘cold pole crown’ of receiving the record temperatures, went to Southern Norway.

 

Evidence

Also in the Norwegian arctic winter case 1940/41, it can be said that the cold follows the sea war scenario. Even though the naval activities in Norway’s waters were high in 1940 compared to other times, but moderate with regard to other sea areas in 1939 and 1941, the naval related ‘turn about’ of seawater in the variant and complex coastal areas of Norway, the atmosphere reacted immediately. The weakened heat capacity of the sea could not sustain the common maritime winter climate.

 

Conclusion and further reading

The naval, combat and transport captivities along Norway’s very long coast lines, fjords and coastal seas, cooled the sea surface down to a degree that cleared the way for arctic air to establish record temperature conditions in January 1941. The centre of cold during the first war winter was North Germany (Rotterdam – Hamburg – Berlin) due to massive sea activities in the Western Baltic and Helgoland Bight. In late 1941 the centre of sea war was in the Baltic serving Stockholm with record conditions, and the Baltic Sea with extreme and lasting icing during winter 1941-42. Arctic by occupation (3_11), and North Sea cooling (2_16), and Baltic battle field (3_21), and Baltic Sea icing (3_24).

 


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