Warming Brings Severe Winters
source: http://www.skepticalscience.com/2010-2011-Earths-most-extreme-weather-since-1816.html
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- coolplanet
- added this
The atmospheric circulation in the Arctic took on its most extreme configuration in 145 years of record keeping during the winter of 2009 - 2010. The Arctic is normally dominated by low pressure in winter, and a "Polar Vortex" of counter-clockwise circulating winds develops surrounding the North Pole. However, during the winter of 2009 - 2010, high pressure replaced low pressure over the Arctic, and the Polar Vortex weakened and even reversed at times, with a clockwise flow of air replacing the usual counter-clockwise flow of air. This unusual flow pattern allowed cold air to spill southwards and be replaced by warm air moving poleward. Like leaving the refrigerator door ajar, the Arctic "refrigerator" warmed, and cold Arctic air spilled out into "living room" where people live. A natural climate pattern called the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), and its close cousin, the Arctic Oscillation (AO) were responsible. Both of these patterns experienced their strongest-on-record negative phase, when measured as the pressure difference between the Icelandic Low and Azores High.
The extreme Arctic circulation caused a bizarre upside-down winter over North America--Canada had its warmest and driest winter on record, forcing snow to be trucked in for the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, but the U.S. had its coldest winter in 25 years. A series of remarkable snow storms pounded the Eastern U.S., with the "Snowmageddon" blizzard dumping more than two feet of snow on Baltimore and Philadelphia. Western Europe also experienced unusually cold and snowy conditions, with the UK recording its 8th coldest January. A highly extreme negative phase of the NAO and AO returned again during November 2010, and lasted into January 2011. Exceptionally cold and snowy conditions hit much of Western Europe and the Eastern U.S. again in the winter of 2010 - 2011. During these two extreme winters, New York City recorded three of its top-ten snowstorms since 1869, and Philadelphia recorded four of its top-ten snowstorms since 1884. During December 2010, the extreme Arctic circulation over Greenland created the strongest ridge of high pressure ever recorded at middle levels of the atmosphere, anywhere on the globe (since accurate records began in 1948.) New research suggests that major losses of Arctic sea ice could cause the Arctic circulation to behave so strangely, but this work is still speculative.
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- tags:
- Climate Change, Global Warming, Snowmageddon
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- recommended by:
- Vierotchka
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SFirman
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=7HnGx9BHfq8#t=20s
Save the Rain Forrest.
- 3 months ago
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SFirman
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coolplanet
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SFirman:
Very important point!
And recently it's been found that temperate and boreal forests provide an equally important role in sequestering carbon from the atmosphere.
It appears that wherever on Earth the trees are located the land and climate do better.
This is why it makes so much sense to plant as many trees locally as possible. - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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Milieu
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With apologies to Irving Berlin, Bing Crosby, and Danny Kaye
"I'm Dreaming of a White Easter
Just like the ones we never had..." - 3 months ago
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Milieu
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coolplanet
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"the Polar Vortex weakened and even reversed at times, with a clockwise flow of air replacing the usual counter-clockwise flow of air. This unusual flow pattern allowed cold air to spill southwards and be replaced by warm air moving poleward."
Talk about a polar shift!
Come on people. We need to discuss this. - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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coolplanet
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aiI8_mSDpc
It's Cold Again
Good video explaining what's going on.
1-4-11 - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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Vierotchka
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coolplanet:
Godfrey Bloom is an idiot! My husband is from West Texas where they have had plenty of snow every winter.
- 3 months ago
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Vierotchka
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coolplanet
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Vierotchka:
It amazes me that politicians like Bloom and the skinhead guy can so passionately debate climate change before congress without an inkling of scientific knowledge whatsoever.
This is why China is becoming the new superpower -- most of its leaders are scientists. - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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coolplanet:
Is that why they jail environmentalists?
- 3 months ago
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JanforGore
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Gravity_Man
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JanforGore:
Environmentalists interfere with the little-known Money Jetstream... that flows abnormally high out of sight of the normal Worker Class.
- 3 months ago
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Gravity_Man
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mikem0487
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I just hope that we can get the politics out of science and the money out of politics so that objective scientific evidence like this can rise above all the BS you hear on the main-stream media.
If you get the money out of politics than you will get politics out of science because their will not be money to hide the voices of these scientist who are just going by the empirical evidence they have found. - 3 months ago
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mikem0487
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coolplanet
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mikem0487:
I'm hoping we get the stupid out of conservatives!
Republicans gave us the National Park System and defended the theory of evolution in the early 20th Century.
What the hell happened??? - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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Bu bu but, it's cold so how can it be warm?... ;-)
How ironic it is that in this part of the woods we will actually have harder winters due to more Arctic ice melt. But then that's because of changing wind and weather patterns caused by it connected to ocean circulation as well. So you are correct, we do need to educate ourselves on this. That is actually the biggest stumbling block regarding this.
- 3 months ago
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JanforGore
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coolplanet
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JanforGore:
The trade winds 'migrated' far north of Hawaii about 5 years ago and now VOG (volcanic smog) has rendered the Big Island more polluted than LA on a bad day.
So much for paradise! - 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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coolplanet
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Climate change deniers have always used snowfall and cold weather to ridicule global warming. We need to educate ourselves and debunk the deniers.
- 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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SFirman
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coolplanet:
How do you debunk the deniers? Last winter when the East Coast set records for snow, I turned Sean Hannity on. I rarely watch Fox, but he was laughing about global warming because of all the snow..I didn't watch much, but I got to thinking about all his viewers that would believe anything he said.
- 3 months ago
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SFirman
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coolplanet
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http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2011/0205/Winter-s-freezing-so-what-s-with-Arct...
Winter's freezing, so what's with Arctic sea ice?
An unusually warm January has limited the return of Arctic sea ice, whose extent set a record low for the month. The ice's ability to reflect sunlight back into space has a significant influence on climate worldwide.
Much of the US continues to dig out from record snows and shivers from unusually frigid temperatures. But at the top of the world, an unusually warm January has limited the return of Arctic sea ice, whose extent set a record low for the month, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo.
Indeed, through January, the season's sea-ice return is closely tracking that of ice during the winter of 2006-2007, according to data the center released earlier this week. The below average return of sea ice then contributed to a record low summer-ice extent during the 2007 melt season.
Climate scientists keep close tabs on the Arctic Ocean's ice – particularly during the sun-drenched melt season – because the ice's ability to reflect sunlight back into space has a significant influence on climate worldwide, more so than Antarctica's sea ice, researchers say.
Top 10 global weather events of 2010
Antarctica's sea ice builds quickly during its winter months and extends over large areas of the ocean surrounding the continent, even as the Arctic Ocean's ice retreats.
But Antarctic sea ice shrinks quickly during its melt season, covering only a tiny fraction of the area it spans during the Austral winter, when it's dark. Arctic Ocean sea ice, by contrast, typically extends over much of the Arctic Ocean, even through the melt season, reflecting sunlight and keeping the region cooler than it otherwise would be.
In January, Arctic sea ice covered 13.6 million square miles of ocean, nearly 20,000 square miles below the previous record low in January 2006 and some 490,000 square miles below the 1979-2000 average.
The drivers for January's record low extent, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center, included a natural climate pattern known as the Arctic Oscillation, as well as residual heat from the Arctic Ocean, captured and retained during the previous melt season.
When the Arctic Oscillation is in a negative phase, wind patterns change in ways that can permit frigid Arctic air to plunge farther south than usual, accounting for below-normal winter temperatures in much of the US in January, including the South.
At the same time however, Arctic temperatures can run above normal during a negative phase. In January, much of the region experienced temperatures between 4 and 11 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, according to the NSIDC.
As February began the oscillation switched to a positive phase, which could speed ice growth for a period, according to the center.
But the prognosis for ice extent during the upcoming melt season isn't good, according to Mark Serreze, who heads the NSIDC.
Even if the ice were to reach a winter expanse nearer normal, "a lot of that ice is thin, first-year stuff, and it's going to tend to melt out easily" come spring, he says.
Indeed, he adds, the thickness of the ice heading into the melt season is a bigger factor than overall winter extent in determining how severe the spring melt-back is likely to be. Researchers over the past several years have documented a decline in older ice and an increase in thinner ice at the start of the melt season.
"We know right now, that we'll be continuing that pattern" heading into the 2011 melt season, he says.
Nor is he looking for help from the Arctic Oscillation. While the strong negative this winter has kept things relatively toasty during an Arctic winter, it historically has tended to set up conditions that kept ice in the Arctic Ocean basin during the melt season. Winds also would spread the ice out, allowing more ice to grow in the wide cracks between floes.
Until last year, that is.
In a paper published Jan. 29 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, a team led by Julienne Stroeve, also with the NSIDC, found that last winter's strongly negative Arctic Oscillation had its own unusual circulation pattern, which ultimately provided no help in retaining ice during the 2010 melt season. Instead, last melt season registered the third lowest summer-ice extent on record.
"It appears we're entering a new regime where old rules don't apply anyone," he says.
Since satellites began tracking Arctic sea-ice extend continuously in 1979, the maximum and minimum sea-ice extents have been steadily shrinking, when stacked against their 1979 to 2000 averages.
Researchers attribute the long-term to a self-reinforcing trend, or feedback, associated with global warming. As ice cover shrinks during the melt season, more of the ocean, darker than the ice, is exposed to absorb sunlight and retain it as heat. As fall arrives, the ocean releases the heat, slowing the return of sea ice.
Indeed, researchers are exploring the possibility that increases in ice loss could be driving the Arctic Oscillation into a negative phase more often than not. The jury is still out, Serreze says.
February 5, 2011
- 3 months ago
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coolplanet
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coolplanet
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coolplanet:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/25/science/earth/25cold.html?pagewanted=all
While the Northeast Shivers, the Arctic has been Freakishly Warm
Judging by the weather, the world seems to have flipped upside down.
For two winters running, an Arctic chill has descended on Europe, burying that continent in snow and ice. Last year in the United States, historic blizzards afflicted the mid-Atlantic region. This winter the Deep South has endured unusual snowstorms and severe cold, and a frigid Northeast is bracing for what could shape into another major snowstorm this week.
Yet while people in Atlanta learn to shovel snow, the weather 2,000 miles to the north has been freakishly warm the past two winters. Throughout northeastern Canada and Greenland, temperatures in December ran as much as 15 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit above normal. Bays and lakes have been slow to freeze; ice fishing, hunting and trade routes have been disrupted.
Iqaluit, the capital of the remote Canadian territory of Nunavut, had to cancel its New Year’s snowmobile parade. David Ell, the deputy mayor, said that people in the region had been looking with envy at snowbound American and European cities. “People are saying, ‘That’s where all our snow is going!’ ” he said.The immediate cause of the topsy-turvy weather is clear enough. A pattern of atmospheric circulation that tends to keep frigid air penned in the Arctic has weakened during the last two winters, allowing big tongues of cold air to descend far to the south, while masses of warmer air have moved north.
The deeper issue is whether this pattern is linked to the rapid changes that global warming is causing in the Arctic, particularly the drastic loss of sea ice. At least two prominent climate scientists have offered theories suggesting that it is. But others are doubtful, saying the recent events are unexceptional, or that more evidence over a longer period would be needed to establish a link.
Since satellites began tracking it in 1979, the ice on the Arctic Ocean’s surface in the bellwether month of September has declined by more than 30 percent. It is the most striking change in the terrain of the planet in recent decades, and a major question is whether it is starting to have an effect on broad weather patterns.
Ice reflects sunlight, and scientists say the loss of ice is causing the Arctic Ocean to absorb more heat in the summer. A handful of scientists point to that extra heat as a possible culprit in the recent harsh winters in Europe and the United States.
More at link
Published: January 24, 2011 - 3 months ago
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coolplanet