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DAY LENGTH SEPTEMBER 9, 2000
12 hours 48 minutes
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HISTORICALLY SEPTEMBER 9 IS THE DATE OF GREATEST HURRICANE ACTIVITY
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US Naval Observatory
Sun and Moon Data
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SEPTEMBER 9, 2000
in Burlington, VT
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Sunrise
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6:26 a.m. |
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Sunset
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7:14 p.m. |
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Moonrise
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5:25 p.m. |
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Sunrise, sunset, moonrise where you are? CLICK HERE.
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Chinese Solar Term
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WHITE DEW
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Want to know more about solar terms? CLICK ON SYMBOL
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Curious about Yin Yang and the solar year? CLICK ON SYMBOL |
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National Weather Service in Burlington reports these records for September 9 as of 2000:
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NORMAL
52°F to 71°F
Average 62°F |
RECORD HIGH 90°F in 1959 |
RECORD LOW 37°F in 1938 |
NORMAL
PRECIPITATION
0.13" |
MOST PRECIPITATION 1.90" in 1885 |
MOST SNOW Not Available |
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September 9, 1821
Great New Hampshire Whirlwind: apparently originated in Windsor, crossed river into Cornish, N.H., pursued path across Lake Sunapee, over Mt. Kearsarge; six killed; most massive tornado in New England until Worcester Tornado in 1953; other smaller tornadoes that afternoon in Vermont at Pittsford and Berlin and at Haverhill, N.H., opposite Newbury.
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