WEEKLY CLIMATE NEWS
DataStreme ECS WEEK 9: 1-5 November 2010
ITEMS
OF INTEREST
- An ocean climate center is opened in California --
Officials with NOAA’s Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary
recently opened its new Ocean Climate Center at the Sanctuary's
headquarters in San Francisco, CA. This Ocean Climate Center is
designed to serve as a resource center for helping Bay Area scientists
and the public understand about climate variability and change in the
Sanctuary and the surrounding ocean. The Gulf of the Farallones
National Marine Sanctuary is located in the waters of the eastern North
Pacific just off California's Golden Gate, which marks the entrance to
San Francisco Bay. [NOAA
News]
- Multiple contracts awarded for scientific and
technical support services --
Last week NOAA awarded three Indefinite Delivery Indefinite
Quantity contracts, to several firms for scientific and technical
services to support the agency’s key mission and its five line offices
(NOAA’s Satellite and Information Service, National Marine Fisheries
Service, National Ocean Service, National Weather Service and the
Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research). These investments are to
fund scientific research and climate monitoring. [NOAA
News]
CURRENT
CLIMATE STATUS
- Record setting storm moves across Midwest -- An
early season winter storm traveled across the nation's midsection
during much of last week, accompanied by locally heavy rain, severe
thunderstorms, snow, blizzard conditions and strong gusty winds. The
storm was particularly memorable because it deepened rapidly, resulting
in a pressure that fell to a sea level pressure reading of 955.2
millibars (28.21 inches of mercury) at Bigfork, MN on Tuesday
afternoon. This reading represents the second lowest pressure for a
land station for an extratropical cyclone (midlatitude low-pressure
system) for the continental United States. Equivalently, this
measurement corresponds to the pressure seen in a Category 3 hurricane
on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. In addition, all time record low
pressure for the states of Minnesota and Wisconsin. [NWSFO
Duluth]
A visible image from the NOAA GOES satellite on Tuesday shows an image
of this powerful storm. Note the characteristic comma shaped cloud
pattern that surrounded the storm that was located over Minnesota. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
CURRENT
CLIMATE MONITORING
- Highlighting NASA' "A-Train" satellite formation
-- A feature article describes the convoy of four NASA
satellites that the agency currently uses to monitor and understand
Earth's changing climate. Dubbed the "A-Train" because the formation of
satellites passes across the equator early each afternoon, the A-Train
fleet currently includes Aqua, CloudSat, Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and
Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) and Aura
satellites. Several additional satellites are planned to be added to
this fleet. [NASA’s
Earth Science News Team]
- Tagging of narwhals shows continued warming of
southern Baffin Bay --
Scientists from the University of Washington and from the
Greenland Institute of Natural Resources participating in a NOAA-funded
expedition to the narwhal summering grounds in Melville Bay, West
Greenland tagged these medium-sized toothed Arctic whales with
satellite transmitters to collect environmental information. The
temperature data collected from these transmitters indicate continued
warming of these ocean waters during the last several years. [NOAA
News]
- Determining if South Pole ice is melting --
Scientists at the GFZ German Research Centre for
Geosciences have been monitoring the mass variations in the ice mass
covering Antarctica through the continuous gravity data collected by
the German-American GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment)
satellite mission. These researchers have found that significant
regional differences in the ice sheet, especially near the South Pole.
They also note that the fluctuations of ice mass of the Antarctic ice
sheet were due to precipitation variations associated with El Niño. [EurekAlert!]
- 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
- Volcano watch from space -- A visible
image made from the MODIS sensor on NASA's Aqua satellite late last
week shows the plume of ash and condensed water from the Shiveluch
Volcano that is currently erupting in Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula. The
ash plume reached an altitude of approximately six miles and was being
carried toward the southeast over the western North Pacific Ocean by
upper tropospheric winds. [NASA
GSFC]
- Planet's wildfires are modeled --
Researchers at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies
have developed a new and more accurate global wildfire model that has
been used to study the long-term history of wildfire burning across the
planet. Testing their model against satellite records, they have found
that past trends indicate both climate and human activity have had a
major effect on wildfire activity. However, they foresee that during
the rest of the 21st century, changes in temperature and moisture could
play a major influence upon wildfire trends, with a modest increase by
approximately five percent, if trends in human activity do not change. [NASA
GISS]
- Variable summer rainfall in Southeast linked to
climate change --
Climate researchers from Duke University; the University of
Texas, the Georgia Institute of Technology and NOAA's Climate
Prediction Center have analyzed six decades of weather data from the US
and Europe. These researchers have concluded that an intensification of
the summertime North Atlantic subtropical high-pressure system, or
"Bermuda High", which may be caused by increased global temperatures,
appears to have increased the variability of summertime precipitation
patterns. Summers now range from extremely wet to extremely dry. [EurekAlert!]
- Increased global temperatures could affect
Northern and Southern Hemisphere storms differently --
An atmospheric scientist from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology reports that increased global temperatures will affect
the energy available to fuel midlatitude storms and these changes
appear to depend upon hemisphere and season. Storms in the Southern
Hemisphere could become more severe throughout the year, while Northern
Hemisphere storms would be more intense in winter, but weaker in
summer. The changes in the storminess could lead to possible increases
in air pollution. [MIT
Media Relations]
- Increased shipping in Arctic likely to accelerate
climate change --
A researcher at the University of Delaware and colleagues
warn that as the Arctic warms and the ice cover shrinks, new shipping
lanes across the previously ice covered polar ocean would increase the
shipping, which would increase pollution and accelerate additional
warming. [University
of Delaware]
- Improvements made in prediction of world's
smoggiest days --
Researchers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the
California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have found that by
identifying a key chemical reaction affecting pollutant formation in
smoggy air, they have been able to improve their computer generated
predictions of the occurrence of smog in many of the world's urban
areas. [NASA
JPL]
CLIMATE
AND THE BIOSPHERE
- Changing climate impacts mountain vegetation -- In
a study conducted by researchers at the University of California at
Davis, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the US Geological Survey,
changes in climate over the last 60 years appears to have had a
significant effect on mountain vegetation especially at low elevations.
These findings run counter to earlier expectations that high-elevation
communities would be more sensitive to increased global temperatures. [USGS
Newsroom]
- New map displays disappointing global distribution
of life-saving mangrove forests --
A high-resolution, satellite-based global map was produced
by the US Geological Survey of the world's mangrove forests following
the deadly 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean basin. This new map shows
that the mangrove forests, often regarded as an important ecosystem
because they safeguard human life and properties from tsunamis and
storm surges, are scarcer than previously estimated. [NASA’s
Earth Science News Team]
CLIMATE
FORECASTS
- Louisiana coastal islands are in trouble from sea
level rise, hurricanes, and an oil spill -- Researchers from
the University of New Orleans and Tulane University warn that the
Chandeleur Islands-Biloxi Marsh system east of the mouth of the
Mississippi River and Grand Isle to the west appear to be in major
trouble. These islands and their ecosystems are facing losses due to
sea level rise and local subsidence, flooding from hurricanes and the
unknown toll from the recent BP oil spill. [Geological
Society of America]
PALEOCLIMATE
RECONSTRUCTION
- Assessing carbon dioxide patterns when last Ice
Age ended -- Researchers at the University of Florida who
have been studying isotopic composition of fossil fish teeth report
that the large quantities of carbon sequestered in the cold waters of
the Southern Ocean near Antarctica during the last Ice Age were
suddenly released into the atmosphere during the transition to the
current interglacial period beginning approximately 14,000 years ago. [University
of Florida News]
CLIMATE
AND SOCIETY
- Call to action issued as rising seas threaten
archaeological sites -- Concerned that rising sea levels due
to changing climate could cause the loss of thousands of archaeological
sites in coastal areas around the world, archaeologists from the
Smithsonian Institution, Southern Methodist University and of the
University of Oregon have issued a call to action for scientists to
assess those sites most at risk. They propose development of a Cultural
Resource Vulnerability Index of these sites so informed decisions could
be made about how to preserve or salvage them. [EurekAlert!]
- 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 not only into 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:
- 2 November 1946...A heavy wet snow began to cover the
Southern Rockies. Up to three feet of snow blanketed the mountains of
New Mexico, and a three-day snowstorm began at Denver, CO. By the time
it ended, this storm had dropped 31 inches, making it the second
greatest snowfall ever in city history and causing roofs to collapse.
(David Ludlum)
- 2 November 1961...The temperature at Atlanta, GA reached 84
degrees to establish a record for November. (The Weather Channel)
- 2 November 1966...A storm brought 18 inches of snow to
Celia, KY in 24 hours. It tied the state 24-hour snowfall record first
established at Bowling Green. (The Weather Channel)
- 2 November 1988...A very intense low pressure system
brought heavy rain, snow, and high winds, to parts of the northeastern
U.S. Portland, ME established a record for November with 4.52 inches of
rain in 24 hours, and winds along the coast of Maine gusted to 74 mph
at Southwest Harbor. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
- 3 November 1890...The temperature at Los Angeles, CA
reached 96 degrees, a November record for 76 years. (David Ludlum)
- 3 November 1927...The "Great Vermont Flood" began as a
two-day rain of up to 9 inches put rivers in western New England over
their banks. Somerset, VT was deluged with 8.77 inches of rain to
establish a 24-hour record for the state. (3rd-4th)
(The Weather Channel) (Intellicast)
- 3 November 1989...Cold weather prevailed in the central
U.S. The low of 7 above zero at Marquette, MI was their lowest reading
of record for so early in the season. (The National Weather Summary)
- 4 November 1983...The temperature at Billings, MT soared to
77 degrees, a new record for the data and month. (Intellicast)
- 4-5 November 1966...The River Arno surged above flood stage
and caused irreparable damage to much of the architectural and art
treasure of Florence, Italy. Millions of historical library volumes
were either damaged or destroyed. More than 15,000 vehicles were also
destroyed. Roughly two-thirds of Florence was flooded, 113 people died
and 30,000 were made homeless by the flooding on both the Arno and Po
rivers. (Accord Weather Calendar) (Wikipedia)
- 5 November 1977...A slow moving storm produced five to nine
inch rains across northern Georgia causing the Toccoa Dam to burst. As
the earthen dam collapsed, the waters rushed through the Toccoa Falls
Bible College killing three persons in the dorms. Thirty-eight persons
perished at a trailer park along the stream. Eighteen bridges were
washed out in Madison County. (David Ludlum)
- 5 November 1987...Heavy rains in California's Death Valley
National Park washed out many park roads. As much as 1.20 in. of rain
fell at Scotty's Castle, compared with the annual rainfall average of
2.28 in. Up to 8000 people attending a recreational encampment were
stranded. (Accord Weather Calendar)
- 5 November 1991...Elkins, WV dropped to 8 degrees, the
coldest so early in the season. Pittsburgh, PA dropped to 11 degrees
also the coldest so early. Jackson, KY fell to 17 degrees, a daily
record. (Intellicast)
- 6 November 1988...A powerful low-pressure system over the
Great Lakes Region continued to produce snow across parts of the Ohio
Valley and the Great Lakes Region. Snowfall totals along the shore of
Lake Superior reached 24 inches, with three feet of snow reported in
the Porcupine Mountain area of Upper Michigan. Marquette, MI
established a November record with 17.3 inches of snow in 24 hours.
(The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
- 6 November 1989...Unseasonably warm weather prevailed in
the south central and southeastern U.S. The high temperature of 89
degrees at the Dallas/Fort Worth Airport in Texas equaled their record
for November. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
- 6 November 1994...Downtown San Francisco, CA was drenched
with 6.19 inches of rain in 24 hours to set an all-time record for the
city.
- 7 November 1986...Temperatures reached a daily record 86
degrees at New Orleans, LA, equaling the highest ever for November.
(Storm Data) (Intellicast)
Return to DataStreme
Earth Climate Systems website
Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2010, The American Meteorological Society.