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Right: A false-color image of the Earth shows ocean
temperatures. El Niño's warmer waters are represented
by red and yellow. |
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Wilson has recently completed a statistical analysis of Atlantic basin hurricanes appearing between 1950 and 1998. His study, "Statistical Aspects of Major (Intense) Hurricanes in the Atlantic Basin During the Past 49 Hurricane Seasons: Implications for the Current Season," will appear in Geophysical Research Letters.
Right: Hurricane Bonnie impacts the Eastern coast of the US on August 26, 1998. For a QuickTime movie of a 3 dimensional fly-by of Bonnie, click the image. The movie was prepared by Digital Radiance from satellite imagery. "The 1998-99 La Niña appears to be winding down. Should El Niño return next spring or summer, one suspects that tell-tale signs of its impending occurrence will soon be manifested," Wilson explained. If that happens, then next year's count of major hurricanes should be less than average. However, if a long interlude follows the present La Niña, the next hurricane season may be another non-El Niño-related (NENR) season, thereby inferring 3 or more major hurricanes again, rather than an El Niño-related (ENR) season having fewer major hurricanes. |
"First is a 'less' active interval consisting of 25 consecutive seasons between the mid-1960s and the early 1990s when the annual frequency was always 3 or less. Second are portions of two 'more' active intervals, one prior to the mid-1960s and the other since the early to mid-1990s."
Hurricanes are one of Nature's most powerful and destructive forces. The vast damage they inflict make many view hurricanes as Nature gone out of control. But hurricanes result from very precise conditions - a combination of specific atmospheric pressures, ocean temperatures, and winds. By carefully studying these conditions scientists hope to be able to predict when and where hurricanes will occur. ENSO is one factor in that prediction. "El Niño" originally referred to the regional surface warming of the Pacific Ocean off of South America near Peru and Ecuador. Local fishermen had noticed that the waters occasionally became warmer around Christmas time, hence the name "the Christ child." Although El Niño has been tracked back as far as 1525, meteorologists have only known since the 1960s that this regional event has worldwide effects.
Besides ENSO, other factors that contribute to Atlantic hurricane
activity are the strength and direction of winds in the troposphere
and stratosphere, the barometric pressure in the Caribbean, rainfall
and temperature conditions in West Africa, and perhaps even global
warming.
The cold water of La Niña dominated recent weather events, including most of the 1998 hurricane season. That season produced three intense Atlantic hurricanes: Bonnie (class 3), Georges (class 4), and Mitch (class 5). Hurricane Mitch devastated the Central American countries of Nicaragua and Honduras, causing $10 billion in damage and killing over 9,000 people. |
Left:
The upper false-color globe shows El Niño (white represents
the warmest water), while the lower globe shows evidence of La
Niña (purple represents cooler water).
La Niña and El Niño seem to reflect each other - mirror opposites in their influence on the world's weather patterns. La Niña brings the same abnormal weather conditions to the Pacific region as El Niño does to the Atlantic. And while El Niño may suppress hurricane activity in the Atlantic, it seems to increase the number of hurricanes in the Pacific. The warm, wet conditions El Niño creates in the Eastern Pacific are especially conducive to the formation of intense hurricanes, or 'cyclones,' as they are called in Australia and other parts of the Western Pacific. While the 1997 hurricane season only produced one intense Atlantic hurricane, there were seven intense hurricanes in the Pacific. |
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Wilson's findings should help meteorologists make accurate predictions about hurricanes, an especially vital function since the storms are so destructive to both life and property. Statistically, another El Niño is not expected until next year or later. In the meantime, the destruction created by intense hurricanes may cause those living close to the Atlantic to see El Niño's next visit as a mixed blessing rather than solely as a curse. |
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