WEEKLY CLIMATE NEWS
26-30 March 2012
ITEMS OF
INTEREST
- Reconstructing past climates -- Scientists
from many disciplines have developed a variety of methods that use
proxy indicators such as tree rings, ice cores and ocean cores to
reconstruct past climates, some extending back thousands of years. For
more details on paleoclimatology, or the study of past climates, and
available data sets, please read this week's Supplemental
Information…In Greater Depth.
-
Phenological events of note -- While astronomical spring commenced with the occurrence of the vernal equinox early last Tuesday morning (on 20 March 2012), several reoccurring phenological events also are used to note the onset of spring. These include:
- Buzzards return to Hinckley -- According to local reports from Hinckley, OH, spring occurred on Thursday morning 15 March 2012 at 7:44 AM EDT when the first buzzard returned to roost at the Cleveland Metroparks Hinckley Reservation. According to legend, the buzzards return on the 15th of March of every year for nearly 200 years. [Cleveland.com]
- Swallows return to Capistrano -- Legend indicates that swallows return to the Mission at San Juan Capistrano in southern California every St. Joseph's Day (19 March). The return of the swallows appears to be sporadic, with some reports of sightings near the Mission. [Los Angeles Times]. The 54th annual Swallows Day parade was held on Saturday 24 March 2012.
- Assessing the "Great Warm Wave" of March 2012 -- The recent exceptional "Great Warm Wave" that resulted in numerous record high temperatures across the eastern two-thirds of the nation during the last two weeks is described by Bob Henson of UCAR (University Corporation for Atmospheric Research) Communications who offers his picks for the 10 top facets of this anomalous event. [NCAR/UCAR AtmosNews]
- New features added to NASA's "Eyes on the Earth" visualization -- An improved version of NASA's "Eyes on the Earth" interactive virtual reality visualization that has several new features including a simplified interface. The visualization delivers data from NASA's fleet of Earth satellite that permit the images to be viewed on home computers. Event time lines and recent updates to global sea level height and surface temperature datasets are now available on "Eyes on the Earth 2.0." [NASA JPL]
In addition, a new free iPhone app called "Earth Now" is available from NASA that provides visualizations of near-real-time global climate data from NASA's Earth science satellite fleet. [NASA Global Climate Change]
- Modification to popular hurricane scale announced -- NOAA's National Weather Service recently announced that minor modifications to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale will be made in mid-May 2012 that will adjust the threshold wind speeds for several of the hurricane categories so as to help resolved issues associated with wind speed unit conversions. These adjustments will be made only to thresholds for category 3, 4 and 5 hurricanes. [NASA Hurricane Page] See also [NOAA's National Hurricane Center ]
- Tsunami Awareness Week -- NOAA and the National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (a partnership between NOAA, the United States Geological Survey, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the National Science Foundation, and the 28 U.S. Coastal States, Territories, and Commonwealths) have designated this upcoming week (25-31 March 2012) as National Tsunami
Awareness Week. Tsunami awareness training exercises will be conducted
for the states and territories along the Pacific that is called Pacific Tsunami Exercise (PACIFEX
12) and for Florida, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands called 2012 Atlantic Tsunami Exercise (LANTEX12).
Open houses will be held at the National Weather Service's tsunami
warning centers in Alaska and Hawaii, along with various community
activities in coastal states. The Governor of Alaska has proclaimed
this coming week as Tsunami Awareness Week in Alaska. This week
coincides with the 48th anniversary of the series of devastating
tsunamis that struck southeastern Alaska following several earthquakes.
[Governor's
Office for State of Alaska]
CURRENT
CLIMATE MONITORING
- Snow accumulates across the Washington Cascades -- During the first two weeks of March 2012, a series of winter storms that originated in the Gulf of Alaska brought locally heavy snow to the Pacific Northwest, with four to six feet of new snow accumulating along the windward (west-facing) slopes of the Cascade Range in Washington. The locally heavy snowfall and the below average temperatures across the Northwest appear to be consistent with the La Niña event that lingers.
[NOAA Climate Services]
- New Hawaiian hailstone record confirmed -- NOAA's National Weather Service and the State Climate Extremes Committee have confirmed a grapefruit size hailstone that fell on Oahu on 9 March 2012 represents the largest hailstone on record for the state of Hawaii. This hailstone, which measured 4.25 inches in length, 2.25 inches in height and 2 inches in width, fell from a supercell thunderstorm on the windward side of Oahu and surpassed the previous state record hailstone that measured one inch in diameter. [NOAA Features]
- Visualization tool expanded across Arctic region to explore sea ice --NOAA and its partners (US Coast Guard, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of Interior and the University of New Hampshire) are expanding the Environmental Response Management Application (ERMA®) online mapping and visualization tool to include a spatial interface designed to explore sea ice concentrations in the Arctic region so as to allow responders to prepare for potential oil spills and the effects associated with changing climate. [NOAA's National Ocean Service]
- New map designed to track underwater robotic vehicles and display marine data --The U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS®) recently launched a new online map that provides users with a "snapshot" of the current positions of underwater robotic vehicles or gliders for all IOOS regions and their partners. In addition, users can data from the historical collection of data from previous missions, extending back to 2005. [NOAA's National Ocean Service]
- UK global temperature data set updated -- Early last week the United Kingdom Meteorological Office announced that the global temperature data set (HadCRUT4 ) complied by their Office and the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit had been updated and is more comprehensive than previous versions, containing surface temperature observations on both land and sea going back to 1850. Some of the additional data were obtained from 400 more stations in the polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere. These data will be used to study long-term changes in global temperature. [UK Met Office]
- Coldest Antarctic Bottom Water layer thinning during last several decades -- Oceanographers from NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and the University of Washington report that their analysis of oceanographic survey data collected between 1980 and 2011 indicates the layer of Antarctic Bottom Water residing along the ocean floor surrounding the Antarctic continent has been thinning, which translates into the reduction in this cold water mass at an average rate of about eight million metric tons per second over the past few decades. The researchers are not certain if the reduction is cyclic or part of a longer term trend associated with global climate change. However, the Antarctic Bottom Water and associated ocean currents play a role in the transport of heat and carbon around the ocean basins, which help regulate the planetary climate. [NOAA News]
- 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 AND
THE BIOSPHERE
- Trace element appears to play major role in nitrogen cycle of tropical forests -- Researchers from the University of Georgia and Princeton University have discovered that molybdenum, a trace element plays a critical role in the nitrogen cycle of tropical forests, which feature that may be crucial as to how these forests would respond to climate change. Apparently, molybdenum is even more critical than phosphorus in how nitrogen is fixed into the ecosystem. [University of Georgia News]
PALEOCLIMATE
RECONSTRUCTION
- Confidence is shown in 3-million year old climate records -- Scientists with the US Geological Survey claim that they have confidence in the accuracy of the paleoclimate data they used to reconstruct the climate conditions during the warm Pliocene geological period that ran between 3.3 to 3 million years ago. They based their conclusions from model comparisons through the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project. [USGS Newsroom]
CLIMATE AND
SOCIETY
- New York State's offshore energy planning supported by NOAA science study -- A study entitled "A Biogeographic Assessment of Seabirds, Deep Sea Corals and Ocean Habitats of the New York Bight" prepared by New York Department of State's Ocean and Great Lakes Program and NOAA's National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science was recently released that is designed to help New York state officials make advances in managing the Empire State's coastal waters and in guiding future development of offshore wind energy projects. [NOAA News]
- India may have significantly higher potential for wind energy -- A new assessment of the wind energy in India that was conducted by the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory shows that the potential for on-shore wind energy deployment could range from 20 to 30 times greater than the current government estimate of 102 gigawatts. This finding may have significant impact on India's renewable energy strategy. [Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]
- International effort conducts study of ocean value -- An international team of scientists and economists coordinated by the Stockholm Environment Institute are conducting a major study that is attempting to measure the global ocean's monetary value and to tally those costs and savings associated with human decisions affecting the ocean's health. A professor from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science who is coauthor of the study's report entitled "Valuing the Ocean" warns that multiple threats to ocean health exist that include acidification, low-oxygen "dead zones," overfishing, pollution, sea-level rise, and warming. .... [Virginia Institute of Marine Science]
- International effort conducts study of ocean value -- An international team of scientists and economists coordinated by the Stockholm Environment Institute are conducting a major study that is attempting to measure the global ocean's monetary value and to tally those costs and savings associated with human decisions affecting the ocean's health. A professor from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science who is coauthor of the study's report entitled "Valuing the Ocean" warns that multiple threats to ocean health exist that include acidification, low-oxygen "dead zones," overfishing, pollution, sea-level rise, and warming. .... [Virginia Institute of Marine Science]
- 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 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:
- 26 March 1913...The Ohio River Basin flood reached a peak.
Ten-inch rains over a wide area of the Ohio River Basin inundated
cities in Ohio, drowning 467 persons, and causing 147 million dollars
damage. The Miami River at Dayton reached a level eight feet higher
than ever before. The flood, caused by warm weather and heavy rains,
was the second mostly deadly of record for the nation. (David Ludlum)
- 26 March 1930...A two-day snowfall of 19.2 inches at
Chicago, IL was the greatest modern snowfall on the record books at
Chicago. (Intellicast)
- 26 March 1954...The temperature at Allakaket, AK plunged to
69 degrees below zero, setting a record for the lowest temperature ever
for March. (The Weather Channel)
- 26-28 March 2004...The first ever confirmed hurricane in the
South Atlantic Ocean, named Catarina, struck the coast of the Brazilian
states of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul with heavy rains and
winds, before dissipating over land late on the 28th. (The Weather
Doctor)
- 27 March 1931...A blizzard that struck western Kansas and
adjoining states was called the "worst since January 1888". The low
temperature of 3 degrees below zero, which was reached during the
blizzard, stands as the lowest temperature recorded so late in the
season. (Intellicast)
- 27-28 March 1964...The most powerful earthquake in US
history, the Good Friday Earthquake, rocked south central Alaska,
killing 125 people and causing $311 million in property damage,
especially to the city of Anchorage. The earthquake in Prince William
Sound, which had a magnitude of 9.2 on the Richter scale, caused some
landmasses to be thrust upward locally as much as 80 feet, while
elsewhere land sank as much as 8 feet. This earthquake and submarine
landslides also created a tsunami that produced extensive coastal
damage. A landslide at Valdez Inlet in Alaska generated a tsunami that
reached a height of 220 feet in the inlet. A major surge wave that was
approximately 100 ft above low tide caused major damage to Whittier
(where 13 died) and other coastal communities in Alaska. The first wave
took more than 5 hours to reach the Hawaiian Islands where a 10-foot
wave was detected, while a wave that was 14.8 feet above high tide
level traveled along portions of the West Coast, reaching northern
California 4 hours after the earthquake. Nearly 10,000 people jammed
beaches at San Francisco to view the possible tsunami, but no
high-amplitude waves hit those beaches. Tsunami damage reached Crescent
City in northern California. Tens of thousands of aftershocks indicated
that the region of faulting extended about 600 miles. The Alaska
Tsunami Warning Center was established in the wake of this disaster,
with a mission to warn Alaskan communities of the threat from tsunamis.
[See the 1964
Prince William Sound Tsunami page from the University of
Washington.] (Accord's Weather Guide Calendar) (US Coast Guard
Historians Office)
- 27 March 1984...A strong storm system traversing northern
Texas pulled very hot air northeastward into southern Texas. The
temperature at Brownsville, TX soared to 106 degrees, which broke not
only the monthly record high temperature but the all-time record as
well. Cotulla, TX reached 108 degrees, equaling the March record for
the U.S. (The Weather Channel) (Intellicast)
- 27-28 March 2009...A blizzard moving across the southern
Plains was responsible for new 24-hour snowfall records for the states
of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. A 30.0-inch snowfall at Pratt eclipsed
the previous Kansas 24-hour record of 24 inches set at Norcator on 26
October 1996. Freedom and Woodward in Oklahoma replaced the 24.0-inch
state snowfall record at Buffalo on 21 February 1971. In Texas, 25.0
inches fell at Follett, which broke the previous 24.0-inch record at
Plainview set on 4 February 1971. (Accord Weather Guide Calendar)
- 28 March 1902...McMinnville, TN (elevation 900 feet)
received 11.00 inches of precipitation, setting a 24-hour precipitation
record for the Volunteer State. (National Climate Data Center).
- 28 March 1955...Florida's latest measurable snowfall occurred
at Marianna when one inch of snow fell. Ground is whitened further
south in Panama City. (The Weather Doctor)
- 29 March 1879...The temperature at Los Angeles, CA climbed
to 99 degrees, which was 3 degrees higher than any other March day had
ever reached in the city. (Intellicast)
- 29 March 1886...Atlanta, GA was drenched with a record 7.36
inches of rain in 24 hours. (The Weather Channel)
- 29 March 1920...Clear Spring, MD received 31 inches of snow
in 24 hours to establish a state record. (Sandra and TI Richard Sanders
- 1987)
- 29 March 1942...The "Palm Sunday snowstorm" buried
Baltimore, MD under 22 inches of snow in 24 hours. This was the
heaviest 24-hour snowfall ever for the city for the month of March as
well as the heaviest snow for so late in the season. (Intellicast)
- 29 March 1945...Providence, RI hit 90 degrees to establish
a March record for the New England area. (The Weather Channel)
- 30 March 1977...Hartford, CT hit 87 degrees to establish a
record for the month of March. (The Weather Channel)
- 31 March 1890...Saint Louis, MO received 20.4 inches of
snow in 24 hours, which was the worst snowstorm of record for St.
Louis. (David Ludlum)
- 31 March 1954...The temperature at Rio Grande City, TX hit
108 degrees, which for thirty years was the U.S. record high for the
month of March. (The Weather Channel)
- 31 March 1992...Seattle, WA closed out its first snowless
winter ever (November through March). Las Vegas, NV recorded 4.80
inches of rain during the past month, which set 2 records -- the
wettest March ever (old record 1.83 inches set in 1973) and the wettest
month ever (old record 3.39 inches in September 1939). The normal
yearly rainfall for the city is only 4.19 inches! (Intellicast)
Return to DataStreme
ECS website
Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2012, The American Meteorological Society.