КАЗ
РУС
QAZ
ENG
قازاقشا
09.36.2012  
Astana to put into operation about 5 million sq m of housing in coming years Apple seeks change to 'essential' patent licence rules CICA military-diplomatic experts met in Almaty Bulgaria simplifies visa regime for Kazakhstani citizens Polymetal consolidates big Siberian gold deposit Jamaica melts down illegal guns in crime crackdown Strike in France expected to ground many overseas flights 35 passengers evacuated from broken bus Dormitory burned out to the ground in Kostanay Oil refinery in Shymkent caught fire

 
02 September 2010, 18:44
Huge snowfall caused by rare clash of weather events
ASTANA. September 2. KAZINFORM  Scientists have shown that a severe snowfall in North America and Northern Europe in the winter of 2009-2010 was caused by a rare, once in a century, collision of two weather systems. Kazinform refers to BBC.

They concluded the harsh winter and heavy snow was an example of hard to predict weather events, not a change in climate.

The research was published in Geophysical Research Letters.

In the winter of 2009-2010 much of Northern Europe experienced heavy snow and temperatures were at the lowest they had been for nearly 30 years. At the same time, record snowfall hit Washington DC and other parts of America's "Mid-Atlantic states".

Some news reports took the extreme cold weather as evidence against climate change.

By analysing 60 years of snowfall measurements and satellite data, researchers concluded the anomalous weather conditions were caused by an unusual combination of an El Nino event and the rare occurrence of a strongly negative North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO).

El Nino events result from a periodic warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean coupled with changes in the atmosphere. El Ninos move storm systems in the Northern Hemisphere towards the equator. They occur every few years and can be predicted up to a few seasons in advance.

The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is climatic phenomenon resulting from shifts in atmospheric pressure between two regions above the North Atlantic Ocean. Large changes can only be forecast a week or two weeks in advance.

When the NAO enters a strongly negative phase, cold air repeatedly comes down from the Arctic. This affects eastern North America, and Western Europe.

Richard Seager, a meteorologist with the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University, US, is one of the lead authors of the paper.

"The NAO was probably as negative as it's ever been in the instrumental record, which goes back to the early 1800s. This was a once in a century type of event," he told BBC News.

"The NAO on its own doesn't cause much precipitation in America. It just makes it cold. The El Nino makes the US wetter than normal so combined with the NAO it caused the precipitation in America to fall as snow," he told BBC News.

The researchers also believe it is unlikely this combination will occur in the near future. Data from tree rings have shown that these same conditions caused by the same combination of weather systems happened over 200 years ago in the winter of 1783 - 1784 in Northern Europe and North America.

Many people have concluded the extreme winter in 1783/84 was caused by the eruption of an Icelandic volcano. But the researchers believe it was caused by the same combination of weather events that caused last year's harsh winter. Kazinform refers to BBC. See www.bbc.co.uk for full version


Comments (0)
User name:
:*


 


Copyright © Kazinform, 2012
Use of information materials without written permission of administration of the company is prohibited.