*This story has been updated to reflect a clarification from the Associated Press. Please see our note, below.

This past year was chillier than usual in the eastern United States. But everywhere else on Earth, it was hot. Hotter, in fact, than it has been in the 134 years since scientists started keeping track of average global temperatures.

Earlier this morning, NASA confirmed that 2014 broke all global warming records since 1880. The National Climatic Data Center compiled the data and posted a full report online. The embedded video below is what some of that data looks like—an incredible (and colorful) time-lapse of the planet transitioning from cold to hot.

This news certainly will not silence climate deniers (if John Oliver couldn’t do it, nobody can). John R. Christy, a well-known climate skeptic, told The New York Times this morning that 2014 broke warming records by only “a few hundredths of a degree, well within the error margin of global temperature measurements.” Christy failed to mention that, according to a data analysis conducted by John Grego at the University of South Carolina, the 10 hottest years since 1880 have all occurred in the past 20 years.

The odds of that happening at random are 650 million to 1.

It is important to note that 2014 was not supposed to be this hot. The warmest years typically coincide with El Niño, an oscillating weather pattern that occasionally dumps heat into the atmosphere. The time-lapse visualization from NASA (above) shows just how much the planet has warmed since 1880.