Look at the data charted relatively if you disbelieve. We've been over this umpteen times for the blind. Solar: Solar has many different influences besides irradiance. But just looking at longer term sunspots and irradiance shows the obvious pattern from stronger to weaker solar output <img src=http://www.global-warming-and-the-climate.com/images/sunspot-lenght-&-teperature.gif> <img src=http://forums.accuweather.com/uploads/post-12024-1223135412.jpg> PDO/AMO: Affected by ocean cycles and solar and very correlated to global temps. <img src=http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/amopdoustemp.jpg width=400 height=300> PDO to sea surface temperatures <img src=http://i52.tinypic.com/15oz3eo.jpg> CO2: CO2 Does NOT correlate well to global temperatures except on interglacial scales and then it lags. <img src=http://www.procon.org/files/1-climate-change-images/graph-showing-that-arctic-air-temperature-parallels-natural-solar-activity.jpg> <img src=http://c3headlines.typepad.com/.a/6a010536b58035970c0192ab4df91a970d-300wi>
Montana has the widest observed temperature range of any state. The state record high 117 F was set in July 1893 in Glendive and July 1937 near Medicine Lake, and the state record low, also the record low -70 F for the entire Lower 48, was set in January 1954. Greenland Ranch, in Death Valley, holds the world record high of 134 degrees set a century ago on July 10, 1913. The state record low -45 F was set in January 1937.