Climate Change within the Countryside

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Quick Success Data Science

A Python project for climate warriors

A split-screen image compares a hot urban scene of skyscrapers and highways to the cool greens of rural pastureland and forests.
Urban and rural views by DALL-E3

I even have a relative who believes rising temperatures are only a “heat island” effect. That’s, rapidly growing cities of steel and concrete heat up faster and retain heat longer than green rural areas. He says, “Much of worldwide warming goes away for those who deal with temperature measurements taken within the cooler countryside.”

The good thing about data science is that you would be able to be your personal fact-checker. On this Quick Success Data Science project, we’ll test the previous assumption using temperature data from the good state of Texas.

In accordance with the EPA, heat islands are urbanized areas that have higher temperatures than outlying areas. Artificial structures, akin to buildings and roads, absorb and re-emit the sun’s heat greater than natural landscapes, akin to forests and lakes. Human activity, including driving cars and cooling buildings, generates additional heat. In big cities, where these structures and activities are highly concentrated, “islands” of upper temperatures form relative to the encompassing countryside.

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