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Authors
Aaron Levine
Adam B. Smith
Adam Lang
Adam Sobel
Adapted from the Fifth National Climate Assessment
Ahira Sánchez-Lugo
Alison Stevens
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Understanding Climate
Explainers, factsheets, reports, and other resources
241-250 of 280 results
State of the Climate: 2011 Stratospheric Temperature
July 10, 2012
In early 2011, stratospheric temperatures rose over the tropics due to La Nina while temperatures over the poles fell below the long-term average.
State of the Climate: 2011 Snow Cover in Northern Hemisphere
Caitlyn Kennedy |
July 10, 2012
In 2011, annual snow cover extent over Northern Hemisphere continents (including the Greenland ice sheet) averaged 24.7 million square kilometers, which is 0.3 million square kilometers less than the long-term average.
State of the Climate: 2011 Sea Surface Temperature
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
In 2011, La Niña and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation cooled parts of the Pacific Ocean, but unusually warm temperatures predominated elsewhere.
State of the Climate: 2011 Ocean Heat Content
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
Except for some La Niña-cooled regions of the tropical Pacific and a few other cool spots, the upper ocean held more heat than average in 2011 in the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, and Southern Oceans.
State of the Climate: 2011 Humidity
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
In 2011, Earth’s atmosphere was cooler and drier than it had been the previous year, but it was more humid than the long-term average.
State of the Climate: 2011 Global Surface Temperature
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
Despite the double-dip La Nina that occurred throughout the year, 2011 was still among the 15 warmest years on record. Including the 2011 temperature, the rate of warming since 1971 is now between 0.14° and 0.17° Celsius per decade (0.25°-0.31° Fahrenheit), and 0.71-0.77° Celsius per century (1.28°-1.39° F) since 1901.
State of the Climate: 2011 Global Sea Level
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
In 2011, global sea levels fell below the long-term trend of sea level rise, but as La Niña waned late in the year, global ocean levels began rising rapidly.
State of the Climate: 2011 Arctic Sea Ice Minimum
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
In September 2011, Arctic sea ice reached its second-lowest minimum extent in the satellite record.
The Arctic's First Ozone Hole
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
In the spring of 2011, scientists observed the largest, most severe ozone destruction ever witnessed in the Arctic since records began in 1978, due in part to the fact that CFCs stick around in the atmosphere for a very long time. Climate maps reveal the cause to be unusually persistent cold temperatures.
Double-dip La Niña
Rebecca Lindsey |
July 10, 2012
The lead character in the 2011 climate story was La Niña—the cool phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation—which chilled the central and eastern tropical Pacific at both the start and the end of the year. These natural cooling events have a long reach: many of the big climate events of 2011, including famine-inducing drought in East Africa, an above-average hurricane season in the Atlantic, and record rainfall in many parts of Australia, are common “side effects” of La Niña.
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