Extreme Weather Tied To Arctic Ice Loss
One expert's take on
the extreme winter worldwide:
It's the first day of spring, but
winter remains firmly entrenched over the eastern half of the U.S.,
where temperatures of 5 - 25°F below average have been the rule all
week. The culprit is the jet stream, which has taken on an unusually
contorted shape that is allowing cold air to spill down over the Eastern
U.S. and Western Europe, but bringing near-record warmth to portions of
Greenland...
Unusual winter jet stream patterns tied to Arctic sea ice loss
Unusual
jet stream contortions in winter have become increasingly common in
recent years, according to a March 2013 paper by Tang et al., "Cold winter extremes in northern continents linked to Arctic sea ice loss"...
They theorized that sea ice loss in the Arctic promotes
more evaporation, resulting in earlier snowfall in Siberia and other
Arctic lands. The earlier snow insulates the soil, allowing the land to
cool more rapidly. This results in a southwards shift of the jet stream
and builds higher atmospheric pressures farther to the south, which
increases the odds of cold spells and blocking high pressure systems
that can cause extended periods of unusually cold and snowy weather in
the mid-latitudes.
you truly are out of your fucking mind
ReplyDeleteyeah, because meteorology is CRAZY.
ReplyDeleteThere are certain "tipping point" events which have almost unimaginable consequences. There was once an immense fresh-water lake across much of Canada and the northern U.S., contained to the east by a massive ice dam. During one slightly warmer than usual thaw caused a breech in the dam, which turned into a torrent, emptying the entire contents of the lake in a matter of days. Not only did we get the cool standing rock formations of WI Dells, but the sudden influx of cold, fresh water into the ocean basically shut down ocean currents, resulting in much colder northern latitudes and much warmer tropics. Just like a pile of sand, grains can be dropped one by one with no effect, until one seemingly random grain will cause an unstoppable cascade, causing the pile to crumble. There was nothing special about that one grain; it's just the nature of randomness.
ReplyDelete