![]() ![]() Mean and Extremes’ Hourly Temps (Extremes: 1st and 99th Percentile).Boxplot of Phoenix Monthly Precipitation Distributions (1896-2022)ĬLIMOGRAMS FOR PHOENIX (based on data from 1973 on).Downtown Phoenix Annual Maximum Heat Index Temperatures (1948-2023) New (9/3/23).Downtown Phoenix Annual Minimum Wind Chill Temperatures (1948-2023) New (9/3/23).Downtown Phoenix Annual Minmum Temps (1896-2020).Downtown Phoenix Annual Maximum Temps (1896-2020).Downtown Phoenix Calendar Year Precipitation History (1896-2022) New (1/1/23).Downtown Phoenix Annual Mean Temperature History (1896-2022) New (1/1/23).Latest Update: e-mail contact: CLIMATE OVERVIEW GRAPHSĢ023 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown Phoeni x (New 9/1/23)Ģ022 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown PhoenixĢ021 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown PhoenixĢ020 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown PhoenixĢ019 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown PhoenixĢ018 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown PhoenixĢ017 Daily Temperature and Precipitation Chart for Downtown Phoenix The data were downloaded and processed from the NOAA National Center for Environmental Information (NCEI) and the NWS-Phoenix site (NOWDATA archives and F-6 reports). The 1896-to-present period of record includes observations made by the Weather Service or affiliates from 1896 to May 1933, and at Sky Harbor Airport from June 1933 thereafter. Included are summary overview charts followed by 128-year-to-year graphs depicting daily temperatures, temperature anomalies, and rainfall for each and every year. The following is a graphical climatology of Downtown Phoenix, Arizona temperatures and precipitation, from 1896 into 2023. Arizona forms the Four Corners region with Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico.Graphical Climatology of Downtown Phoenix AZ: Daily Temperatures and Rainfall, by Year (1896 – Present) The southwest consists of desert valleys and low mountain ranges. A mountainous belt extends from the southeast to the northwest, with maximum elevations between 27 meters. The northeast has high plateau regions, while forests of Douglas fir, spruce, and pine are abundant in the north. Vast deserts, rosy mesas, high plateaus, numerous canyons and valleys, forests, and snow-capped peaks constitute the varied topography. Humphreys Peak has the highest elevation of 3852 meters in the state, while the Colorado River on the Sonoran border has the lowest elevation of 22 meters. The southern and western parts of Arizona are mostly arid lands, while the high altitudes in the north and east have alpine climates.Īrizona, the Grand Canyon State, has an average elevation of 1250 meters above sea level. California and Nevada in the west, Utah in the north, Colorado in the northeast, New Mexico in the east, and the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California in the south share borders with the state. It is one of the Mountain states, which lies in the southwestern region of the United States. Arizona has a primarily semi-arid to arid climate (Köppen climate classification BS, BW) at lower elevations, with pockets of continental (Köppen Dfb) and alpine (Köppen Dfc) types in the northern highlands.
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