The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has released the third 
edition of a report, 'Climate Change Indicators in the United States.' The 
report pulls together observed data on key measures of our environment, 
including U.S. and global temperature and precipitation, ocean heat and 
ocean acidity, sea level, length of growing season, and many others. With 
30 indicators that include over 80 maps and graphs showing long-term 
trends, the report demonstrates that climate change is already affecting 
our environment and our society. 

The third edition of the Indicators report, which was last published in 
2012, adds additional years of data and four new indicators: Lyme disease, 
heating and cooling degree days, wildfires, and water level and 
temperature in the Great Lakes. In addition, the report adds four new 
features that connect observed data records to local communities and areas 
of interest, including cherry blossom bloom dates in Washington D.C., 
timing of ice breakup in two Alaskan rivers, temperature and drought in 
the Southwest, and land loss along the mid-Atlantic coast. 

EPA compiles decades of observed data in cooperation with a range of 
federal government agencies, nongovernmental organizations, universities, 
and other institutions. The Indicators report focuses on long-term trends 
for key measures of our environment for which high-quality data exist. 
Each indicator and the report itself were peer-reviewed by independent 
experts, and extensive technical documentation accompanies the report.

To order a FREE copy of the report, send a request with your mailing 
address included to [email protected] 

More information about the Climate Change Indicators report: 
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/indicators.html 

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