6 Tips for Being Smart About Snow Forecasts

Be savvy about the snow forecast and you’ll know whether you should hunker down indoors or go outside and play, like Ziggy and Brody here. Image Credit: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

 
Winter weather forecasts can be as daunting as the icy mess itself. Watching snow creep into the forecast is as delightful for some as it is stressful for others. But whether you’re rooting for it or wishing it’d go away, trying to read a snow or ice forecast isn’t always straightforward unless you’re a diehard weather enthusiast. Thankfully, it’s easy to cut through the noise and become a savvy consumer of snow predictions with a little bit of knowledge—and a healthy dose of skepticism.

1. WEATHER MODELS ARE NOT INFALLIBLE.

Weather models are an incredibly useful tool that help us predict the weather better than ever before, but these advanced computer simulations are not immune to making huge mistakes every once in a while. We run into this issue before every major weather event, but the problem of people treating weather models like the ultimate truth is even more pronounced before a big snowstorm.

Meteorologists usually call these weather models “guidance” for good reason. Each model has its own biases and flaws that only trained meteorologists know to spot and account for when making their forecasts. Some weather models have a hard time figuring out how much snow or ice will fall over certain areas. Even worse, if a model starts with bad data, it will push out a bad forecast.

Despite these flaws, snowfall accumulation maps posted to social media can go viral and collect millions of views before meteorologists have a chance to refute them. You should take maps produced by weather models with a grain of rock salt unless they’re accompanied by some sort of explanation from someone who knows their stuff.

2. NEVER TRUST AND ALWAYS VERIFY.

It’s easy to sound authoritative on the Internet. One of the big debates after the recent presidential election involved the influence that fake news websites had on voters’ beliefs. Unfortunately, that’s nothing new in the world of weather. Meteorologists have dealt with this problem for years. Anyone can create a social media account or a blog and talk about the weather with some cool maps and an official-sounding tone, but that doesn’t mean that the information they’re publishing is accurate.

You should always double- and triple-check your sources before believing or sharing weather information you find online, especially if the forecast calls for a significant storm. Do a little research into the author—it doesn’t take much more than one or two clicks to sniff out a phony forecaster. A general rule of thumb is that the less-reputable sources go to great lengths to tell you that they’re an “expert” rather than proving it to you with a record of accurate, dependable information.

3. BE SKEPTICAL OF OVERLY PRECISE FORECASTS.

It’s not always the fake news sources that tend to mislead you. Some television news stations have a nasty habit of making their products sound more advanced than they really are in order to draw in viewers. Every once in a while, some broadcast meteorologists like to show snowfall forecast maps with predictions down to one-tenth of an inch using values produced by their in-house weather models.

A snowfall forecast with precision down to the length of the nail on your pinky toe is good for show, but it isn’t good science. There are too many factors at play in most snowstorms to predict snowfall totals down to the exact inch, let alone throwing decimal points into the mix.

4. EXACT ACCUMULATIONS DON’T MATTER.

A desire for precision is understandable. We’d love to know exactly how much snow will fall during a storm, but the honest answer is that it really doesn’t matter. The best forecasts use a range of totals rather than exact numbers.

Snow only affects your life once it reaches certain depths. It only takes a dusting of snow to turn a road into an icy mess. A couple of inches of snow usually give you enough traction to slowly proceed with your daily life, but once depths exceed half a foot, it gets increasingly harder for pedestrians to walk and for vehicles to drive. In other words, there’s not much practical difference between 2 inches and 3 inches of snow—but there’s a big difference between 3 inches and 7 inches.

5. PAY ATTENTION TO UNCERTAINTY.

Meteorology is not an exact science. Since we have no way of knowing for certain what’s going to happen in the future, just about every weather forecast conveys some degree of uncertainty. Some weather events are more uncertain than others, and most high-impact snowstorms are usually on the extreme end of the uncertainty scale. Pay attention if your friendly neighborhood weatherperson tells you that things are looking iffy. There’s always a chance you could wind up with a lot less—or a lot more—snow or ice than you were expecting.

6. MANY FACTORS CAN AFFECT SNOW TOTALS.

Meteorologists talk about uncertainty for a reason. Predicting the future is hard work, and despite all our advanced technology, missing one subtle change in a storm can make a huge difference in the outcome. There are lots of reasons a snow forecast could go awry. Two of the most common causes of a broken snow forecast are dry air, which evaporates snow before it can reach the ground, and warm air, which can turn the snow into rain or ice. Even worse than finding less snow than you expected is getting slammed with a lot of it when you were expecting a light coating. Surprise snowstorms are less common today than they were just two decades ago, but they can happen if a storm veers off its expected course or a storm ingests more cold or moist air than expected.


November 28, 2016 – 4:00pm

Does Drinking a Hot Drink Really Cool You Down?

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iStock

by James Hunt

When it’s hot outside, few things are more inviting than a tall glass of ice-cold water—unless you’re my grandmother, who swore that the best way to cool down on a hot day was to drink a piping hot cup of tea.

You’ve probably heard other people say the same thing, but is it just an old wives’ tale, or is there any truth in it? If you’re trying to stay cool, should you reach for the fridge or the kettle?

Common sense suggests that ice water would be the better option. Getting a near-freezing cold beverage into your body should lower your core temperature and offer temporary respite from the blazing heat around you. That’s just physics: cold water naturally draws heat from the warmer body tissue around it.

Although some people suggest that the body responds to a cold stimulus by trying to heat up, there’s no real evidence for any real effect from that.

But the evidence for drinking hot beverages to cool down isn’t straightforward either, suggests research from the University of Ottawa. At least one study found that drinking even a small hot drink triggered a disproportionately high sweat response without significantly raising your core temperature. And since sweating cools you down, that means a hot drink is actually better at cooling you down than a cold one.

Of course, there are some catches. One is that you won’t feel the effects until your sweat has evaporated fully, contrasting with the instant effect of an ice water hit. The other, much bigger one is that it only works under certain conditions. If it’s humid, if you’re sweating a lot already, or if you’re wearing clothes that trap moisture on you then there’s bad news: drinking a hot drink is only going to make you hotter.

The ultimate explanation for this phenomenon was provided by Peter McNaughton, a professor of pharmacology at King’s College London. His research revealed that the TRPV1 heat receptors in your tongue and throat react to heat stimuli by causing you to sweat, regardless of your core temperature. These heat sensors are actually the same reason you break out in a sweat when you eat spicy foods.

So while it seems counterintuitive, having a hot drink on a hot day actually can cool you down. Turns out my grandmother knew better than all of us. Let’s raise a steaming mug of tea to her memory.

Have you got a Big Question you’d like us to answer? If so, let us know by emailing us at bigquestions@mentalfloss.com.


November 28, 2016 – 3:00pm

FTC Requires Labels on Homeopathic Drugs: ‘No Scientific Evidence’ They Work

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The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has had it with marketers of homeopathic products. The agency has ruled [PDF] that all homeopathic products must now be labeled with a warning that there is no scientific evidence that they actually work.

The theory behind homeopathy is, itself, a little hard to swallow. Practitioners believe that whatever causes an illness must also be able to cure it, and that diluting a chemical can transform it from toxin to treatment. But even if that were true, the homeopathic products on store shelves today are so watered down that you’d need to take hundreds of thousands of doses in order to ingest a single molecule of the so-called active ingredient.

Scientists have been studying homeopathic remedies for as long as people have been using them, yet they’ve found no evidence that these products are any better than a placebo. These products cannot do what they say they can do—but until now, they’ve been allowed to go on saying it anyway.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates, well, food and drugs. Herbal supplements and other so-called natural remedies are largely outside their purview. This lack of government oversight has enabled the explosion of a multi-billion-dollar industry in which an untested bottle of pills could claim to cure anything from cellulite to cancer.

The FTC can’t do anything about a drug’s efficacy or safety, but it can do something about all those unsubstantiated claims. The agency released a 24-page report [PDF] on homeopathy advertising and sales that concluded, “No convincing reasons have been advanced …  as to why efficacy and safety claims for OTC homeopathic drugs should not be held to the same truth-in-advertising standards as other products claiming health benefits.”

The agency’s new ruling gives homeopathic product marketers two choices: Either they can stop making unsubstantiated claims about their products, or they can add a warning to their drugs’ packaging. The warnings must communicate that a) there is no scientific evidence that the product works; and b) that the claims made on the package are based on outdated, unproven theories that are not accepted by modern scientists or doctors.

Telling consumers the truth is a step in the right direction, although it may be too little too late. Numerous studies have shown that we don’t actually read or heed a package’s disclaimers. The FTC’s own report found that 25 to 45 percent of consumers believed that a sample product had been approved by the FDA. They continued to believe this even after reading a warning on the package that clearly stated the opposite.

“It’s embarrassing to admit because it sounds like people are stupid,” advertising lawyer Rebecca Tushnet told Slate in 2014. “In fact, people are human. They have limiting processing capacity, and you can’t just stuff information down their gullet.”

You’re a smart reader (we know this because you’re on our site). If you want to avoid getting ripped off, apply those savvy reading skills the next time you’re in the pharmacy.


November 28, 2016 – 2:30pm

Amazon’s Favorite Versatile Pressure Cooker Is a Steal Today

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amazon / istock

If you’re a chef with limited counter and cabinet space, it can be tricky to figure out what items are worthy of that precious culinary real estate. Should you buy a pressure cooker, a slow cooker, or a rice cooker? Luckily, you don’t have to choose. The wildly popular Instant Pot IP-DUO60 7-in-1 Multi-Functional Pressure Cooker manages to cram a rice cooker, a pressure cooker, a slow cooker, a yogurt maker, a warmer, a steamer, and a saute/browing pan into one tight package. The device has piled up a stellar 4.7-star Amazon rating with over 12,000 reviews, and it’s also been one of the most popular items for Mental Floss shoppers. For anyone with a tight kitchen space, this versatile cooker is a convenient, compact workhorse.

Today, it’s also a great deal! Amazon has cut the price for the six-quart, 1000W Instant Pot IP-DUO60 all the way to $68.95, a savings of over $50 off its list price. It’s one of the lowest prices we’ve seen for one of Amazon’s most celebrated kitchen tools. At this price, buying an Instant Pot is a no-brainer, so use that surplus mental energy on deciding what to cook this weekend. 

Buy at Amazon: Instant Pot IP-DUO60 7-in-1 Multi-Functional Pressure Cooker, 6Qt/1000W for $68.95 (list price $234.95) 

Mental Floss has affiliate relationships with certain retailers, including Amazon, and may receive a small percentage of any sale. But we only get commission on items you buy and don’t return, so we’re only happy if you’re happy. Good luck deal hunting!



November 28, 2016 – 2:21pm

Amazon Product Id: 
B00FLYWNYQ

9 Photos That Show the Enduring Power of Evolution

A new book gathers 200 beautiful images showing evolution’s influence on the flora and fauna of the world.


Shaunacy Ferro


Monday, November 28, 2016 – 14:00

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If you look in the right places, evidence of evolution is all around us. You don’t have to be a DNA researcher or a paleontologist to see it, either. For more than a decade, photographer Robert Clark has been shooting images that explore the fruits of evolution. His new book, Evolution: a Visual Record, collects all those photographs in one volume for the first time, showcasing 200 images of fossils, plants, and animals that illustrate how the world has changed. Below is just a small sample.

The book is $30 on Amazon.

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Giant Japanese Sinkhole Begins Sinking Once Again

filed under: cities, roads
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On November 8, a huge sinkhole swallowed part of an intersection in Fukuoka, Japan, creating a hole in the street almost 100 feet wide and 50 feet deep. While the hole was repaired and the street reopened about a week later, it has begun sinking yet again, according to Mashable.

The city’s mayor, Soichiro Takashima, initially said that after the two-day filling period, the new road was 30 times stronger than it had been before the sinkhole appeared. The hole was probably caused by underground construction work on a subway line extension.

At 1:45 a.m. on Saturday, November 26, police closed the rebuilt section of road near the city’s Hakata railway station because it began sinking again, sagging by about 2.8 inches. No one was injured, nor were there any gas leaks or power outages reported, and the road was reopened to traffic by 5:30 a.m.

According to The Japan Times, the joint venture responsible for the subway construction warned that sagging could occur again, and promised to close the road if it sank by more than an inch. On his Facebook page, the mayor pledged that officials would keep monitoring the height of the street for further sinkage; in another Facebook post, he also apologized for not warning citizens of the possibility of the road dropping again.

[h/t Mashable]


November 28, 2016 – 1:30pm

Wes Anderson’s H&M Commercial Stars Adrien Brody and Plenty of Whimsy

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Wes Anderson. Image credit: Tullio M. Puglia/Getty.

The work of Wes Anderson isn’t hard to identify if you know what to look for: He has a soft spot for smooth tracking shots, festive color palettes, and quality hats. All of this is on display in the short film “Come Together,” a new holiday commercial from H&M directed by the iconic filmmaker.

The piece stars one of Anderson’s go-to actors, Adrien Brody. Here the star of Darjeeling Limited (2007) finds himself on a train once more, this time as the conductor. After announcing to passengers on the “H&M Lines Winter Express” that train delays will interfere with their holiday plans, he invites everyone for hot cocoa in the cafe car. The scene ends with the train’s unaccompanied minor walking into a makeshift winter wonderland as John Lennon’s “Happy Xmas” plays in the background.

Commercials may seem like a departure for the accomplished auteur, but the H&M project is hardly his first: He’s also directed ads for Hyundai, IKEA, and American Express.


November 28, 2016 – 1:15pm

Durable Solar Roads Will Be Tested on Four Continents

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In the search for sunlight-harvesting real estate, one French engineering group is turning to roadways. As Bloomberg reports, Colas SA, a subsidiary of Bouygues, has plans to incorporate super-strong solar panels into pavement around the world.

The team has already designed technology capable of collecting solar energy while supporting heavy tractor-trailers overhead. At the apparatus’s core is a regular solar panel. Colas SA’s Wattway unit has reinforced it with several coatings of different plastics to protect the solar cells inside without blocking the Sun’s rays. A layer of crushed glass on top keeps cars from sliding. Wiring in the road routes the power directly to the grid.

Construction of a test site in Tourouvre in Normandy, France began last month. The kilometer stretch of road includes more than 30,000 square feet of photovoltaics, which are predicted to generate up to 280 kilowatts of energy. According to Wattway, that’s enough electricity to power a year’s worth of public lighting in a town of 5000. In addition to supplementing the power grid, Wattway’s solar roads can also charge electric cars, light billboards, and run hydrogen power plants.

Wattway isn’t the first group to come up with the bright idea. Last year, the Missouri Department of Transportation announced plans to build America’s first public solar road along a section of Route 66, and in that same year a solar bike path in the Netherlands generated enough energy to power homes for year. But this latest project is especially ambitious—after building their next two sites in Canada and the U.S., Wattway has plans to test the technology in Africa, Europe, and Japan. They’re installing panels in 100 test sites over the next year with hopes to have them ready for commercial use by 2018.

Before that happens, the group needs to ensure their panels can withstand the weight of traffic. At this point, their panels can hold up beneath an 18-wheeler truck, but Wattway’s chief technology officer Philippe Harelle says they may have worse luck under a snowplow. Cost is another roadblock: Panels used in solar roads are more expensive than the ones used in solar farms. But unlike solar farms, panels embedded in highways take advantage of free space. As Harelle told Bloomberg, “We wanted to find a second life for a road.”

[h/t Bloomberg]


November 28, 2016 – 12:30pm

15 Colorful Lyrics from National Anthems Around the World

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The world’s national anthems are a delightful mixed bag of patriotism, poetry, and the peculiar. While some of these verses rarely receive airtimeand there’s always risk that something is lost in translationeach lyric is like a postcard, rich with details about a country’s history and culture. Enjoy!

1. AUSTRIA: WE HAVE HAMMERS

Land of mountains, land by the river,
Land of fields, land of cathedrals,
Land of hammers, with a promising future!

Land of Mountains, Land by the River (Hammers are a symbol of industry.)

2. ARGENTINA: ALERT THE ZOMBIE REVOLUTIONARIES 

The Inca is roused in his tomb
and fire is rekindled in his bones,
on seeing his sons renewing
his homeland’s former splendor

Himno Nacional Argentino (Canción Patriótica)

3. GABON: NO SORCERERS ALLOWED

Yes, may the happy days dreamed by our ancestors
Come for us at last, rejoice our hearts,
And banish the sorcerers, those perfidious deceivers
Who were sowing poison and were spreading fear.

The Concord

4. COLOMBIA: METAL BAND NAME #1, “A CONSTELLATION OF CYCLOPS”

Thus the motherland is formed,
Thermopylaes are bursting forth;
a constellation of cyclops
its night brightened.
The trembling flower
finding the wind mortal,
underneath the laurels
safety sought.

Himno nacional de Colombia

5. SENEGAL: METAL BAND NAME #2, “LION’S FROTH”

Senegal, you the son of the lion’s froth,
Sprung from the night to the gallop of horses.

Pluck Your Koras, Strike the Balafons/The Red Lion

6. PARAGUAY: WE ARE ROME!

A new Rome, the Fatherland shall proudly display
Two leaders of name and valor
Who, rivals, like Romulus and Remus
Divided government and power.

Paraguayans, The Republic or Death

7. ROMANIA: NO YOU’RE NOT, WE’RE ROME!

It’s now or never that we prove to the world
That in these veins still flows Roman blood
And in our hearts for ever we glorify a name
Triumphant in battles, the name of Trajan.

Wake Up, Romanian!

8. BANGLADESH: LET’S PLAY IN THE DIRT

O mother! The fragrance from your mango groves makes me wild with joy,
Ah, what a thrill!

My Golden Bengal

9. HONDURAS: SHOUT OUT TO FRANCE

It was France, the free, the heroic,
Which in its dreams of centuries slept,
Awoke irate to life
At the virile protest of Danton:
It was France, who sent to the death
The head of the consecrated King,
And which built up proudly at its side,
The altar of the goddess of Reason.

National Anthem of Honduras

10. ANDORRA: WE <3 FRANCE (OR AT LEAST THE FRANKS), TOO

The great Charlemagne, my father,
liberated me from the Saracens
And from heaven he gave me life …
I am the only remaining daughter,
of the Carolingian empire

The Great Charlemagne

11. ALGERIA: SCREW YOU, FRANCE!

O France,
Past is the time of palavers
We closed it as we close a book
O France! The day to settle the accounts has come!

The Pledge

12. FRANCE: DON’T MESS WITH US

Tremble, tyrants and you traitors
The shame of all parties,
Tremble! Your parricidal schemes
Will finally receive their reward!
Everyone is a soldier to combat you
If they fall, our young heroes,
The earth will produce new ones,
Ready to fight against you!

The Song of Marseille

13. CABO VERDE: MOTIVATE YOURSELF WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL TRUTH

Hope is as big as the sea
Which embraces us

Song of Freedom

14. ARMENIA: DEMOTIVATE YOURSELF WITH THIS DEPRESSING TRUTH 

Death is the same everywhere,
A man dies but once,
Blessed is the one that dies
For the freedom of his nation.

Our Fatherland

15. KIRIBATI: LET’S MAKE THIS THE ANTHEM FOR THE PLANET, PLEASE? 

Stand up, People of Kiribati!
Sing with jubilation!
Prepare to accept responsibility
And to help each other!
Be steadfastly righteous!
Love all our people!
Be steadfastly righteous!
Love all our people!

The attainment of contentment
And peace by our people
Will be achieved when all our hearts beat as one,
Love one another!
Promote happiness and unity!
Love one another!
Promote happiness and unity!

We beseech You, O God,
To protect and lead us
In the days to come.
Help us with Your loving hand.
Bless our Government
and all our people!
Bless our Government
and all our people!

Stand Up, Kiribati


November 28, 2016 – 12:00pm