WEEKLY CLIMATE NEWS
5-9 April 2010
ITEMS OF
INTEREST
- 50th anniversary of first weather satellite hailed
-- Last Thursday, officials from NOAA and NASA took time to
celebrate the 50th anniversary of the launch of TIROS-1 (Television
Infrared Observation Satellite), the first satellite dedicated to
weather observation. The officials not only hailed the launch of this
satellite as an example of the strong partnership between their two
agencies, but as an event that "forever changed weather forecasting." [NOAA
News] [NASA]
- TV weathercasters assume role of science educators
--
In a large survey conducted by George Mason University’s
Center for Climate Change Communication of over 550 television
weathercasters, nearly two-thirds of the responding weathercasters
reported that they are interested in reporting on climate change, with
many indicated that they were filling a role as informal science
educators, not only on-air but at speaking events, blogs, radio and in
newspaper columns. In addition, approximately 61 percent of the
weathercasters felt disagreement remained among scientists concerning
the global warming issue, 54 percent felt that global warming is
happening, with 25 percent indicating no change was occurring, while 21
percent did not know yet. Weathercasters claimed that state
climatologists represented the most trusted source of information on
climate change (85 percent), while politicians were the least trusted
(4 percent). [George
Mason University] - "Brain freezer tease"
--
Test your knowledge of the Earth's permanent ice and its
link with an interactive quiz site developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. [NASA
JPL] - Summer teacher research fellowship
--
Cassie Gurbisz, Program Manager for the University of
Maryland Center for Environmental Sciences has announced that COSEE
(Centers for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence) Coastal Trends is
looking to fill a summer teacher research fellowship position for this
coming summer 2010. Middle or high school science teachers are
encouraged to apply through 15 May 2010 at http://www.coseecoastaltrends.net/programs/scientisteducatorpartnership/teacherresearchexperience/
or contact Cassie at cgurbisz@umces.edu. - "GOES"
movie made of second March flooding event in Northeastern States --
Scientists with the NASA GOES Project at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center produced a movie of images made by sensors on
GOES-12 (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) taken
during the last 11 days in March 2010 of the storm that produced
excessive rain and caused flooding across New England and the Middle
Atlantic States. [NASA
GOES-P] - Preliminary data released on high
river flows across the Northeast --
The US Geological Survey released a preliminary report last
week of the flow rate and height of rivers across the Northeastern
States obtained from the Survey's network of stream gauges during last
month's excessive rain event. This event resulted in record stage and
discharge levels on several New England rivers. [USGS
Newsroom] - Remote-controlled airplane
tested --
Engineers, scientists and aviation technicians from NASA’s
Dryden Research Center have been mounting a variety of instruments on
NASA's Global Hawk, a 44-foot remotely controlled aircraft that will be
able to fly for 30 hours at altitudes to 65,000 feet. This aircraft
will participate in the Global Hawk Pacific campaign, a series of up to
five scientific research flights over the Pacific Ocean and Arctic
regions that will sample the chemical composition of the troposphere
and stratosphere, as well as to make "ground truth" observations for
instruments onboard NASA’s Aura satellite. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
CURRENT
CLIMATE STATUS
- Temperature anomalies for boreal winter mapped
from satellite data -- Scientists at NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center and the USGS Land Processes Distributed Active Archive
Center have assembled maps from data collected by the MODIS sensor on
NASA's Terra satellite that show the land surface temperature anomalies
(the arithmetic difference between observed and average temperatures)
across the globe for the three months of December 2009 through February
2010, which corresponds to meteorological winter in the Northern
Hemisphere. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
CURRENT
CLIMATE MONITORING
- New European "ice" satellite prepared for launch
-- The European Space Agency's CryoSat-2 satellite, a
satellite in the Earth Explorer mission series that will monitor the
global ice fields, was recently placed on the rocket that has been
scheduled to be launched this Thursday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan. New observational techniques will permit measurements of
how the thickness of the floating sea ice and the vast Antarctic and
Greenland ice sheets is changing over time. [ESA]
- An All-Hazards Monitor--
This Web portal provides the user information from NOAA on
current environmental events that may pose as hazards such as tropical
weather, fire weather, marine weather, severe weather, drought and
floods. [NOAAWatch]
- Global and US Hazards/Climate Extremes --
A review and analysis of the global impacts of various
weather-related events, including drought, floods and storms during the
current month. [NCDC]
CLIMATE
FORCING
- Shifts in carbon absorption by forest canopies
modeled -- Scientists with the US Department of
Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service, the US Forest Service and
Rutgers University recently reported on their results from a their
efforts at calibrating the Canopy Conductance Constrained Carbon
Assimilation (4C-A) computer model, which generates carbon balance
estimates for tree canopies. These researchers claim that some of the
forest [EurekAlert!]
- Ocean acidification represents the "evil twin" of
global warming --
Researchers at Australia's ARC Centre of Excellence for
Coral Reef Studies warn that increased emissions of carbon dioxide due
to human activity are driving dangerous changes in the chemistry and
ecosystems of the global oceans resulting in ocean acidification that
would occur in combination of global warming due to the increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. [ARC
Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies]
CLIMATE
IMPACTS ON THE BIOSPHERE
- Reducing yield loss from stressed crops is
addressed -- Plant researchers at Iowa State University have
been investigating how plants react to environmental stress in an
effort to develop strategies that would either reduce the loss in plant
yield or increase yield during times of stress imposed upon the plants
by climate change. [Iowa
State University]
- Bacteria can play a vital role in an important gas
cycle associated with climate change --
Researchers at the United Kingdom's University of Essex
have found that several types of bacteria tend to consume isoprene
released into the atmosphere. Isoprene, an important industrial gas,
reacts with other atmospheric constituents to produce ozone or to
prolong the lifetime of atmospheric methane, both greenhouse gases. The
isoprene-degrading bacteria appear to be concentrated around coastal
zones, where algae produce marine isoprene. [EurekAlert!]
CLIMATE
FORECASTS
- Comparing current and century's end spring melt --
At the end of last month, the nonprofit group Climate
Central unveiled an interactive tool that could be used to visualize
the changes in the projected areas of subfreezing average March
temperatures across the nation from currently (2010s) compared to the
2090s. These projections can be made using low and high emissions
scenarios and the user can select a state in addition to the
continental US. [EurekAlert!]
PALEOCLIMATE
RECONSTRUCTION
- Collapse of ancient Khmer population center may
have been influenced by climate -- Dendrochronologists from
Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory report that
their analysis of several proxy indicators such as tree rings and
archaeological remains would indicate that several decades of severe
drought interrupted by intense monsoonal rain over 600 years ago across
Cambodia may have contributed to the fall of the nation's ancient Khmer
civilization at Angkor. [EurekAlert!]
- Could ice sheet melt have been a trigger for the
"Big Freeze"?
A research team that included a member of the United
Kingdom's University of Sheffield claim that the rapid global cooling
period approximately 13,000 years ago known as the "Big Freeze" or
Younger Dryas could have been caused by the melting of the large
Laurentide ice sheet over North America, which would have channeled
sufficient meltwater into the Arctic Ocean to shut down the northern
continuation of the Gulf Stream and cause a large drop in temperatures
across Europe. [EurekAlert!]
CLIMATE AND
SOCIETY
- First national limits placed on tailpipe emissions
from new vehicles -- The Federal Government has imposed the
first national limits on greenhouse gas emissions from cars and
light-duty trucks when it tightened the fuel efficiency standards on
these vehicles based on rules proposed by the US Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and the US Department of Transportation. [Houston
Chronicle]
- Website for human dimensions of climate change --
An interagency effort within the US federal government
that included NOAA, the Bureau of Land Management and the US Forest
Service, has resulted in a website called HD.gov (for
HumanDimensions.gov) that provides users, such as natural resource
managers, with information on the human dimensions on a variety of
topics of interest such as climate change. [HD.gov] - Earthweek
--
Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com]
Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Concept of the Week: Extending the
Historical North American Drought Record
Through history, drought has been a major concern for many
people as the lack of adequate water can adversely affect agriculture,
and in the extreme case, the availability of potable (drinkable) water.
The Case in Point for Chapter 9 describes the migration of ancient
peoples across the semiarid Southwest due to what may have been major
drought conditions. During the last century, the "Dust Bowl" era
drought in the 1930s created many problems in this country. The effects
of this seven-year long drought were made worse by poor agricultural
techniques and land management. The effect of the drought on the nation
was also exacerbated by the coincident Great Depression. Drought
remains a problem today across Texas and the West Coast as we can see
from inspection of the current weekly US National Drought Monitor
produced by the National Drought Mitigation Center.
How do the current drought events compare with earlier
droughts? A time series of computed Palmer Drought Severity Index
(PDSI) values began in 1895 when a sufficiently dense climate network
was established. During the 20th century, several episodes of drought
have had a major national impact. The exceptional drought that
developed in the early 1930s extended across much of the nation
resulting in the "Dust Bowl" era. The PDSI time series shows that the
1930s drought was the worst in the last century, with nearly 80 percent
of the nation experiencing moderate to extreme drought in 1934. During
the 1950s, the southern Plains and the Southwest also experienced a
major drought, when 50 to 60 percent of the nation was under drought
conditions.
What about farther back in history? Sophisticated tree-ring
analysis techniques allow researchers to extend the drought record
across a large section of North America farther into the past. In 1998,
Edward R. Cook at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory along with colleagues at Arizona and Arkansas reconstructed
past drought conditions across the nation based upon annual tree-ring
data obtained from a network of 388 climatically sensitive tree-ring
sites. From these data, time series of annual summertime (June-August)
PDSI values were determined back to 1700 at 155 grid points across the
nation. These gridded tree-ring chronologies were calibrated with PDSI
chronologies generated by instrumental records at selected Historical
Climate Network stations commencing in the late 19th century. The
researchers found that the 1930s drought was the most severe drought to
hit the nation since 1700.
By 2004, the series was expanded to 835 tree-ring sites,
primarily across the West, where exactly dated annual tree-ring
chronologies were obtained. The new grid covered most of North America
with a latitude-longitude spacing of 2.5 degrees. In addition to the
286 grid point PDSI time series, annual contour maps of PDSI were
constructed that span much of the continent. This work permitted
extension of the spatial and temporal coverage of the drought
reconstruction into not only Canada and Mexico, but back 2000 years.
From this more recent data-set they produced an online "North American
Drought Atlas." They found several "megadroughts" in North America that
were even more severe than the 1930s drought. In addition to being more
severe, some droughts extended over several decades, considerably
longer than those of the 20th century. One such megadrought was in the
16th century, an event that along with another megadrought into the
early 17th century has been implicated by some researchers in the
hardships encountered by British settlers in the Virginia area, such as
the disappearance of the Roanoke Colony.
Concept of the Week: Questions
(Place your responses on the Chapter Progress Response Form
provided in the Study Guide.)
- The 1930's Dust Bowl era drought [(does),
(does not)] appear to
be the most intense across the nation of any in the last two thousand
years.
- The "North American Drought Atlas" is based on 835 sites
where trees in climatically sensitive areas produce [(monthly),(annual),(biennial)]
growth rings.
Historical Events:
- 5 April 1926...A reported 0.65 inches of rain fell in one
minute at Opid's Camp, CA (Intellicast)
- 5 April 1945 ...The temperature at Eagles Nest, NM plunged
to 36 degrees below zero to establish an April record for the
continental United States. (Sandra and TI Richard Sanders - 1987)
- 5 April 1989...Unseasonably hot weather prevailed in the
southwestern U.S. Afternoon highs of 100 degrees at Santa Maria, CA and
105 degrees in Downtown Los Angeles established records for the month
of April. (The National Weather Summary)
- 6 April 1886...Detroit, MI recorded its biggest snowfall in
24 hours when 25.4 inches fell. (Intellicast)
- 6 April 1989...Unseasonably hot weather prevailed in
California. Afternoon highs of 91 degrees in Downtown San Francisco, 93
degrees at San Jose, 98 degrees at San Diego, 103 degrees at Santa
Maria, 104 degrees at Riverside, and 106 degrees in Downtown Los
Angeles established records for the month of April. (The National
Weather Summary)
- 6 April 1990...The last measurable snowfall of the 1989-90
season occurred at Valdez, AK. This brought the season snowfall to a
whopping 560.2 inches, breaking the old record of 517 inches set back
in the 1928-29 season. (Intellicast)
- 8-10 April 1958...A global 48-hour precipitation record was
established at Aurere, La Reunion Island, when 97.1 in. of rain from a
tropical cyclone fell on the Indian Ocean island. (The Weather Doctor)
- 8 April 1989...Two dozen cities in the southwestern U.S.
reported new record high temperatures for the date. Phoenix, AZ equaled
their record for April of 104 degrees established just the previous
day. (The National Weather Summary)
- 9 April 1983...Hottest day in Malaysian historical record,
as the temperature reached at Chuping, Malaysia reached 101 degrees, a
record that was tied nine days later. (The Weather Doctor)
- 9 April 2000...A record April snowfall of 14.6 in. shut
down Montreal, Quebec. Snow removal contracts had ended on 1 April.
(The Weather Doctor)
- 9 April 1995...Glasgow, MT recorded 12.2 inches of snow in
24 hours, its greatest 24-hour snowfall on record. (Intellicast)
- 10 April 1985...A late season cold snap in the east set
record low April temperatures in the following cities: Asheville, NC,
23 degrees; Beckley, WV, 11 degrees; Elkins, WV, 3 degrees. April
record lows were tied in Raleigh-Durham, NC (23 degrees) and Roanoke,
VA (20 degrees). (Intellicast)
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ECS website
Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2010, The American Meteorological Society.