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    Unusual La Niña may be forming in the Atlantic: ‘almost unprecedented’

    By Alix Martichoux,

    2024-08-25

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3GI1a8_0v9WTeGb00

    (NEXSTAR) – As we await the arrival of La Niña in the Pacific , there may be one already brewing in the Atlantic.

    Researchers still need to collect temperature data throughout August to determine if a La Niña has in fact formed over the equator in the Atlantic Ocean, but this summer has already been unusual, said Franz Philip Tuchen, a postdoctoral associate with the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies.

    The year started with record high sea surface temperatures, topping 86 degrees, before quickly and dramatically cooling off. This type of whiplash is more dramatic than any year before, Tuchen recently wrote .

    La Niña is set to arrive later than expected: Here’s when

    “It’s almost unprecedented in the time series that we have, and that’s longer than 40 years,” he told Nexstar.

    If the Atlantic sea surface temperatures stay where they were around June and July, it’ll officially constitute a La Niña in the Atlantic.

    Unlike the La Niña patterns we’ve seen take hold in the Pacific repeatedly in recent years , we haven’t seen a La Niña in the Atlantic in over a decade. The last time we saw an Atlantic La Niña was the summer of 2013, Tuchen said.

    Sick of summer? NOAA releases fall weather predictions

    Another big difference between Pacific and Atlantic La Niñas is the scope of their impacts. While a Pacific La Niña has global weather implications, including all around the U.S. , “everything is a bit smaller” with an Atlantic La Niña, Tuchen explained. They don’t last as long and really only have regional weather impacts.

    A strong La Niña would impact rain over northeastern Brazil and western Africa – the land masses closest to the equatorial Atlantic – but not here in the States.

    Meanwhile, a La Niña in the Pacific usually means dry, warmer-than-average conditions across the southern half of the United States, more precipitation for the Pacific Northwest and Ohio Valley, and extra-cold weather for northern states. It can also fuel strong hurricanes.

    That type of La Niña is favored to form this fall and strengthen as we head into the winter.

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

    For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

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    Ginger bug
    08-28
    Mother Nature at her finest
    Two Dogs
    08-27
    Hahahaha... I predicted this & other stuff about the weather about 24 years ago & most people laughed at me. I made another prediction about the Atlantic "conveyor belt" & was told it was impossible & that I was ignorant. Well guess what? A year ago the scientists confirmed my prediction. These really aren't predictions. It's only common sense. The last "prediction" I mentioned was that the Atlantic ocean "conveyor belt" would start slowing it's normal flow rate & could eventually change directions. I was told BS. The primary reasons for its current direction of flow is temperature and salinity. Because more fresh water ice is melting the salinity is changing because there is less and less salt in the ocean & we all know the temp is changing . It's not rocket science to all the people who said I was an idiot. Every single "prediction" I made about the weather and related subject matter either has or is in the process of coming true. I'm posting this simply to tell people to think.
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