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"wsrphoto" wrote in message oups.com... Richard Ferguson wrote: I have read somewhere that you can add up the air and water temperature to determine the degree of hypothermia hazard. What I don't remember is the range of total temperature that was relatively safe vs. unsafe. I did some google searching without finding what I was looking for. I did find some survival time tables as a function of water temperature, and one reference that said you should wear a wet suit if either the air or water temperature is under 65 degrees F. I don't see where air temperature is really a factor for this, since it can have a high variability and only some relation to water temperature. You can check out some sites on Web sites at sites or gages with air and water temperature. The two are related at times for natural streams, especially at the extremes, for very cold and very warm periods. But where the water temperature is effected by other factor, glacier runoff, rain, snowmelt, and the ever-present dam releases, the two aren't well related. Some examples in Washington State a http://waterdata.usgs.gov/wa/nwis/uv..._no= 12056500 http://waterdata.usgs.gov/wa/nwis/uv...te_no=12058800 The first is above a reservoir, the second below, at slightly different elevations but not significantly for many cold days. Interesting thought, but questionable application. --Scott-- Hee hee. I hate when I do that. --riverman (PS: its not HOW the air temp affects the water temp that matters. Its how the air and water temp affect YOU.) |