«Northern
Hemisphere summer monsoon intensified by mega-El Niño / southern oscillation and Atlantic multidecadal oscillation»
Not exact matches
This
summer, scientists produced a report finding that the
monsoon amounted to an «efficient smokestack» for Asian pollution, spreading it «throughout the entire Northern
Hemisphere.»
If the aerosols are dispersed primarily in the Northern
Hemisphere, the greater cooling in this hemisphere can also diminish the summertime heating that drives the northward migration of monsoon winds over Africa up to the Ethiopian highlands where the Blue Nile is supplied with its summer fl
Hemisphere, the greater cooling in this
hemisphere can also diminish the summertime heating that drives the northward migration of monsoon winds over Africa up to the Ethiopian highlands where the Blue Nile is supplied with its summer fl
hemisphere can also diminish the summertime heating that drives the northward migration of
monsoon winds over Africa up to the Ethiopian highlands where the Blue Nile is supplied with its
summer floodwaters.
At the same time, the buildup of greenhouse gases, coming mainly from developed countries in the northern
hemisphere, has a very different effect on the Indian
summer monsoons: it acts to make them stronger.
The broad comparability between the HML paleo - proxies, Chinese speleothem δ18Orecords, and the northern
hemisphere summer insolation throughout the Holocene, suggests that solar insolation exerts a profound influence on ASM [Asian
summer monsoon] changes.
During
summer, the Asian
Monsoon is not only important for Asia but affects weather patterns over the entire northern
hemisphere.
The East Asian
summer monsoon and desertification in Eurasia is driven by fluctuating Northern
Hemisphere ice volume and global sea level during the Ice Age, as shown in a study published in Nature Communications.
This intensification has resulted in significantly greater global
summer monsoon rainfall in the Northern
Hemisphere than predicted from greenhouse - gas - induced warming alone: namely a 9.5 % increase, compared to the anthropogenic predicted contribution of 2.6 % per degree of global warming.
In the second half of the 20th century, the levels of rain recorded during the Northern
Hemisphere's
summer monsoon fell by as much as 10 per cent, researchers say.
The team calculated the average
summer monsoon rainfall in the Northern
Hemisphere between 1951 and 2005.