The same storm pattern that's behind the extreme weather conditions in the U.S. hit the North Pole this week and caused temperatures 50 degrees warmer than average.
Not exact matches
It follows a study by the
same authors in Nature Geoscience in June 2015 showing that
storms were also changing their «temporal
pattern» — that is, getting shorter in time, thereby intensifying.
The
same challenges (and opportunities) emerge whenever complex, evolving science underpins contentious or consequential questions — whether in discerning a human contribution to flood and
storm patterns or a chemical contribution to childhood illness.
At the
same time, routine
storm events — that winter
pattern of cold Pacific low - pressure systems every two weeks or so — are expected to become less common.