
That water, that is flowing from the North Atlantic Ocean into the Arctic provides evidence that the Arctic Ocean is warming! How the SSTs (sea surface temperatures) reflect to this global warming problem, we are trying to get after that Igor V. Polyakov’s report, made with his colleagues at the International Arctic Research Center at University of Alaska. AS Terry Gerlach from the Cascades Volcanoes Observatory in Washington state, USA says: “global volcanic CO2 output at 0.2 billion tons a year. This is less than 1% of man-made CO2 pollution.” Some third oppinion, that of Michael Storey from the Roskilde University in Denmark “There are obvious lessons from this,” he says. “The rate at which greenhouse gases are now being added to the atmosphere exceeds by far the rate of 55 million years ago,” he warns.
Half of the years after 2009 should be warmer than any time in recorded history, British scientists claim, as it was told few hours ago. That strong substained theory alarm how El Nino takes warm water from its usual home in the western Pacific and moves it to the coasts of North and South America and how this process reflect to the Pacific SSTs. The Pacific Decadal Oscillation makes high- and low-pressure zones in the atmosphere over the North Pacific flip-flop back and forth, which also causes shifts in warm and cold ocean water, as the british sciencists are continuing their long term observing of this global problem.
And..if the global warming is responsible for that increasing hurricane frequency in the North Atlantic, how come we’ve had only one tropical storm and one sub-tropical storm so far this year;is that a sign for something that may comes?!? By the Greg Holland’s of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado circumstantial report, there is subjection between that scale of hurricanes for the last century. Holland and his colleague Peter Webster of the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta ” the two hikes are clear ” (see Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2007.2083).
The National Science Foundation (NSF) and affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison and NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) in Asheville, N.C., reported that “It’s going to serve a purpose as being the only globally consistent data set around. The caveat of course, is that it only goes back to 1983.”
If you need more profound information, see here
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August 10th, 2007 at 5:43 am
by James Elsner of Florida State University in the August 23 2006’s issue of Geophysical Research Letters, the journal of the American Geophysical Union, found that a correlation between average air temperatures during the June through November hurricane season and sea surface temperatures that help fuel hurricanes winds. Elsner says his work “helps provide verification of a linkage between atmospheric warming caused largely by greenhouse gases and the recent upswing in frequency and intensity of Atlantic hurricanes, including Katrina and Rita.”
August 11th, 2007 at 6:42 am
Starting May 3 2007, the near real-time SST data and chart are produced twice-weekly during the mornings (U.S. Eastern Time) of every Monday (using AVHRR data from the previous Thursday through Sunday) and Thursday (using AVHRR data from the previous Monday through Wednesday). Previously, the SST data and chart were produced twice-weekly on every Tuesday (using AVHRR data from the previous Saturday through Monday) and Saturday (using AVHRR data from the previous Tuesday through Friday).
August 12th, 2007 at 2:51 pm
Wanna give you few moe words up on the hot topic,thati havefound from one journal :”Oceanographers are working hard to understand how processes in the ocean help to keep the Earth’s climate stable,” St. Laurent said. “We are aware that the climate is warming, but we don’t yet fully understand how the changes will affect society. Our work will result in better models for predicting how the ocean will affect the climate in the future and a better understanding of sea-level rise, weather patterns such as El Nino, and the impact of these events on fisheries.”
May 9th, 2008 at 11:37 am
[…] in rainfall caused by the Austral-Asia monsoon and El NiƱo-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) (see this) . These and more catastrophic facts were found at simulators studies how climate change could […]