The specific linkages seem likely to include UV variability
driving sea level pressure and modulating Pacific Ocean states.
Not exact matches
The research, an analysis of
sea salt sodium
levels in mountain ice cores, finds that warming
sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific Ocean have intensified the Aleutian Low
pressure system that
drives storm activity in the North Pacific.
In addition, there is a
sea level pressure (SLP) ridge over Greenland that
drives strong northerly winds through the Fram Strait, facilitating ice export.
The polar changes in
sea level pressure seem to be
driven by ozone and UV interactions in the stratosphere.
And it appears to be
driven by
Sea Level Pressure, timed with the NPI: http://bobtisdale.blogspot.com/2009/12/north-pacific-ocean-heat-content-shift.html
«clearly
driven by a top down solar mechanism involving UV / ozone interactions causing changing
sea level pressure at the poles.»
The climate seems clearly
driven by a top down solar mechanism involving UV / ozone interactions causing changing
sea level pressure at the poles.
In central North America, the cooler winters were primarily due to changes in the northerly winds
driven by increased
sea level pressure on the west coast of North America.