Some of the predicted impacts of climate change include: increased variability in both monsoon and
winter rainfall patterns; increases [continue reading...]
Not exact matches
The pair used data on
winter rainfall collected during the 1980s and climate - predicting computer models to extrapolate future rain - on - snow
patterns across the Northern Hemisphere.
«Changing weather
patterns are already having an impact [on flooding],» says the report, referencing the heavy
rainfall over the 2015 - 6
winter and the succession of storms — Desmond, Eva and Frank — that caused flooding in northern parts of the UK.
«Changing weather
patterns are already having an impact [on flooding],» says the report, referencing the heavy
rainfall over the 2015 - 6
winter and the succession of storms — Desmond, Eva and Frank — that
In addition, the
pattern of sea surface temperatures at low latitudes is extremely important for regional climate variations (shown, for example, by the increased likelihood of heavy
winter rainfall in California when the eastern tropical Pacific warms in El Niño events).
Jeff Knight said: «Our analysis shows that climate change likely did make a contribution to the record
rainfall in 2013 - 14 through a long - term increase in UK
winter rainfall that is not associated with changing weather
patterns.
A good match, for example, is a neighboring gridcell that has similar
rainfall patterns but is slightly warmer in the summer and
winter.
This event is associated with cold and dry conditions increasing with latitude in the North, temperature and precipitation influences on tropical and boreal wetlands, Siberian - like
winters in much of the North Atlantic, weakening of monsoon intensity, and southward displacement of tropical
rainfall patterns.