In early March, the strongest wave of tropical convection ever measured (known as the Madden Julian Oscillation) by modern meteorology moved into the western Pacific from Indonesian waters bringing an outbreak of 3 tropical cyclones, including deadly category 5 Pam which ravaged the south Pacific islands of Vanuatu. This extreme outburst of tropical storms and organized thunderstorms pulled strong westerly winds across the equator, unleashing a huge surge of warm water below the ocean surface. Normally, trade winds blow warm water across the Pacific from the Americas to Australia and Indonesia, pushing up sea level in the west Pacific. When the trade winds suddenly reversed to strong westerlies, it was as if a dam burst, but on the […]
Saturday, May 2nd, 2015
Super El Nino Likely as Huge Warm Water Wave Hits West Coast, Extreme Marine Die Off Developing
Author:
Source: Daily Kos
Publication Date: Thu Apr 30, 2015 at 07:00 AM PDT
Link: Super El Nino Likely as Huge Warm Water Wave Hits West Coast, Extreme Marine Die Off Developing
Source: Daily Kos
Publication Date: Thu Apr 30, 2015 at 07:00 AM PDT
Link: Super El Nino Likely as Huge Warm Water Wave Hits West Coast, Extreme Marine Die Off Developing
Stephan: This is what climate change looks like, and it is going to affect our lives in myriad ways great and small. The steady relative constancy of Earth's meta-systems is being severely disrupted, and the world will never be the same again. In this case it should offer California a reprieve, although a compromised one, as the report describes, which is at least one bit of good news.