WEEKLY CLIMATE NEWS
30 March-3 April 2015
ITEMS OF
INTEREST
- Interactive game unveiled to build and test climate knowledge -- The NOAA Climate.gov team recently unveiled Climate Challenge, a new educational interactive game designed to help players learn more about climate science and test their knowledge about this science. This online Climate Challenge permits players to predict future climate-related conditions, which can then be compared with predictions made by experts when available. One climate-related quest will be posted per month and the player with an answer coming closest to actual values will be that month's winner. [NOAA News]
- High-quality maps of April temperature and precipitation normals across US available -- The PRISM Climate Group at Oregon State University's website has prepared high-resolution maps depicting the normal maximum, minimum and precipitation totals for April and other months across the 48 coterminous United States for the current 1981-2010 climate normals interval. These maps, with a 800-meter resolution, were produced using the PRISM (Parameter-elevation Regressions on Independent Slopes Model) climate mapping system.
- April weather calendar for a city near you -- The Midwestern Regional Climate Center maintains an interactive website that permits the public to produce a ready to print weather calendar for any given month of the year, such as April, at any of approximately 270 weather stations around the nation. (These stations are NOAA's ThreadEx stations.) The entries for each day of the month includes: Normal maximum temperature, normal minimum temperature, normal daily heating and cooling degree days, normal daily precipitation, record maximum temperature, record minimum temperature, and record daily precipitation; the current normals for 1981-2010.
- 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.
CURRENT
CLIMATE MONITORING
- Reflector antenna on soil moisture mapper spacecraft begins to spin -- Following additional successful tests, the 20-foot reflector antenna on NASA's new Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite was put into its intended spin mode last week. Additional tests of the rotating antenna will be conducted next week. This orbiting SMAP spacecraft will produce high resolution global maps of soil moisture designed to improve understanding of the Earth's water and carbon cycles. [NASA Global Climate Change News]
- Spring snowmelt occurs earlier in Wyoming -- A scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and her colleagues have found that the snowmelt season across the Fremont Lake Basin in northwestern Wyoming currently (2000 to 2013) ends approximately 16 days earlier that during the interval from 1972 to 1999. They base their findings upon snow maps generated from data collected from NASA's Landsat, Terra and Aqua satellites along with ground-based stream discharge measurements and daily temperature and precipitation records. [NASA Earth Observatory]
- Changing climate causes shifts in planting zones -- Changes in the national Plant Hardiness Charts due to changes in temperature associated with changing climate over the last several decades are documented. The familiar Plant Hardiness Charts used by gardeners to determine the survivability of trees and perennial plants contain ten-Fahrenheit degree planting zones across the contiguous United States based upon average minimum winter temperatures across the nation. The Plant Hardiness Chart using the most recent 1981-2010 climate normals is compared with one using the 1971-2000 old normals, which resulted in a national chart displaying the differences between the two charts. With higher winter temperatures these planting zones have been displaced slightly northward over the last several decades. [NOAA Climate.gov News]
- Rapid thinning of the Antarctic ice shelves is underway -- In research conducted by Scripps Institution of Oceanography using satellite radar altimetry observations, the thickness of Antarctica's floating ice shelves have decreased by up to 18 percent in several areas during the last two decades. [University of California San Diego News Center]
CLIMATE
FORCING
- More frequent big thunderstorms increases rainfall in the tropics -- Using data collected from NASA satellites, scientists from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science and NASA have found that an increase in the frequency of large organized thunderstorms appears to be responsible for the increase in rainfall across some of the wettest tropical regions over the western Pacific. These storms are referred to as "organized deep convection."
[NASA Earth Observatory] [NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies Research News]
- Weakening summer storms could lead to more persistent heat extremes -- A team of researchers from Germany's Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research has found that storm activity across parts of the United States, Europe and Asiatic Russia have significantly weakened over the last several decades, which has then apparently resulted in the intensification of heat extremes similar to the 2010 heat wave in Russia that caused devastating crop failures and wildfires. Weaker winds have been found in the upper air jet stream and in weather systems in the Northern Hemisphere have reduced the transport of cooler and more humid air from off the oceans and into the continents. Rapid warming in the Arctic may be helping drive the changes in atmospheric circulation. [Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research News]
CLIMATE
AND SOCIETY
- 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:
- 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)
- 2 April 1970...The last snowstorm of the 1969-70 winter
season came to an end at Chicago, IL as 10 .7 inches of snow fell -- a
final contribution to the season's amount of 77 inches, which set a new
all-time snow season record for the city. (Intellicast)
- 2 April 1975...A severe storm over the northeastern US
began on this day and blasted the area for the next 3 days. Wind gusts
reached 87 mph at West Harpswell, ME and Boston, MA recorded its lowest
April pressure on record (28.68 inches). Tides along the coast ran 2 to
4 feet above normal and anywhere from 1 to 4 feet of snow fell from
western New York to northern Maine with the higher elevations receiving
the most. (Intellicast)
- 3 April 1955...Record snow fell across north-central
Wyoming and south-central Montana as Sheridan WY established a 24-hour
snowfall record with 26.7 inches. (The Weather Doctor)
- 3 April 1996...Marquette, MI recorded 12.6 inches of snow
on this day to raise its seasonal snowfall to 250.8 inches -- the
city's snowiest winter ever. The old record was 243.8 inches set back
in 1981-82. The snowfall for the month now stood at 43.4 inches -- the
snowiest April on record for the city as well. (Intellicast)
- 4 April 1933...Pigeon River Bridge, MN reported 28 inches
of snow, which established the state 24-hour snowfall record. (4th-5th)
(The Weather Channel)
- 4 April 1955...A severe 3-day spring snowstorm ended over
north central Wyoming and south central Montana. Sheridan, WY had near
blizzard conditions for 43 hours and recorded 22.7 inches of snow in 24
hours on the 3rd to set a new 24-hour snowfall
record. Billings, MT had a storm total of 42.3 inches, a new single
storm snowfall record. (Intellicast)
- 4 April 1973...Sandia Crest, NM reported a snow depth of 95
inches, a record for the state of New Mexico. (The Weather Channel)
- 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)
Return to DataStreme
ECS website
Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2015, The American Meteorological Society.