• 'Rivers in the sky' have drenched California, yet even more extreme rai

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 7 22:10:11 2024
    XPost: ca.environment, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-04-25/atmospheric-rivers- could-pound-california-with-more-extreme-rain

    For years, scientists have said that atmospheric rivers can either make
    or break the water supplies of thirsty California cities and farms.

    For the last two winters, a steady succession of these giant “rivers in
    the sky” have dumped record-breaking and drought-busting precipitation
    across the state, while simultaneously causing catastrophic floods,
    landslides, and dangerous blizzards.

    But now, new research has found that these recent atmospheric rivers
    pale in comparison to some of the monster storms that battered ancient California — a sobering revelation that suggests to some experts that
    the state could be revisited once again by such cataclysmic storms.

    “Our findings show that atmospheric river activity exceeds what has
    occurred since instrumental record keeping began,” said Clarke Knight, a
    U.S. Geological Survey research geographer and the lead author on the
    study that detailed — for the first time — atmospheric river activity
    dating back 3,200 years. “This is important because it suggests the
    latent potential of our area to experience storms beyond those that we
    have seen today.”

    Although few people had even heard of atmospheric rivers just a couple
    of decades ago, research into the mammoth vapor trails has proved
    critical to California water planning and public safety.

    The study’s findings do not bode well for a state whose flood
    infrastructure was severely strained last year, when a train of
    atmospheric rivers breached numerous levees, flooded communities and re-
    filled once dry Tulare Lake. The findings also up the ante for state
    efforts to capture stormwater as climate change causes more
    precipitation to fall as rain instead of snow and ushers in a new era
    of more frequent and prolonged drought.

    Climate California logo
    How climate change is disrupting California's storms
    Here’s a look at how humanity’s heating of the planet affects
    California’s storms, snowpack and more.

    • California’s storms are projected to become more extreme »

    • How the latest storms fueled California’s snowpack recovery »

    • Tracking water supplies: How much water does the state have stored? »

    • Read more Climate California coverage »

    Knight and her fellow researchers arrived at their conclusion after
    analyzing ancient layers of mud from Leonard Lake in Mendocino County.
    The team was able to determine when more sediment had been pushed into
    the lake, indicating periods of higher precipitation.

    Then, using data for atmospheric rivers over the last 60 years, the
    researchers found a “strong correlation” between their sediment findings
    and modern storms, allowing them to model that link through the rest of
    the mud layers to reconstruct historical atmospheric river activity,
    Knight said. Their research was published Thursday in the journal
    Nature.

    The research provides the most historical context to date for the
    state’s rainfall variability, and found that the region “consistently registered extreme precipitation over a 3,200-year period.”

    Knight said this new hydrologic data can better inform climate modeling
    and projections, providing a historical record 20 times longer than
    what’s been available.

    Although the team’s research focused on Northern California — where the
    state typically sees the the most atmospheric rivers — she said it’s
    fair to conclude that the southern half of the state would have seen
    similarly extreme rainfall in its ancient climate given the widespread
    effects of large atmospheric rivers.

    Previous research has shown that the average atmospheric river
    transports more than twice the flow of the Amazon River. The prospect
    of even larger storms hitting California is a concerning one, experts
    say.

    Daniel Swain, a UCLA climatologist who was not involved in the USGS
    study, said the paper provides “direct physical evidence” of
    atmospheric river activity more extreme than anything seen in recent
    California history — well beyond the Great Flood of 1862, which
    reconfigured the state’s landscape.

    He said the research “re-emphasizes the perils of assuming that the
    extremes we saw in the 20th century are representative of the kinds of
    extremes that are possible in this part of the world.”

    “It’s an indication that — even if we didn’t have to contend with
    climate change — we should still be circumspect about the risks that
    are posed by extremes because we know that the climate system ... can
    throw big, bad things at us periodically,” Swain said. “I don’t find
    that at all reassuring.”

    The continuing climb of global average temperature due to humanity’s
    burning of fossil fuels also threatens to exacerbate matters.

    “Adding energy into the system through greenhouse gas emissions is
    basically like shaking the soda can ... and adding a little bit more
    energy into the system, allowing these extremes to be a little bit more extreme,” said Cody Poulsen, a graduate student researcher at the
    Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s Center for Western Weather and
    Water Extremes, who also was not involved in the Nature study.

    Swain has posited that every degree increase in global temperature
    increases the risk of an “ARkStorm Scenario” — originally projected as a once-in-a-thousand-years megaflood event. But these new USGS findings
    may indicate that bad-case-scenario modeling isn’t extreme enough, he
    said.

    For a state that is grappling with more frequent and severe periods of
    drought, the last two wet winters have come as a rare bounty. However,
    many Californians may be surprised to learn that these two wet seasons
    fall within the realm of natural variability. They may also be surprised
    to learn that this year has delivered more atmospheric rivers than the
    previous year, which caused far more damage and disruption.

    Recently, researchers confirmed that 51 atmospheric rivers hit the West
    Coast during the 2023-24 rainy season — significantly more than the 38 atmospheric rivers that hit during the 2022-23 rainy season, according
    to new data from the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes.

    In California specifically, 44 atmospheric rivers made landfall from
    October through March, up from 31 during last year’s rainy season, said
    Chad Hecht, a center meteorologist.

    But even though there were more atmospheric rivers this rainy season,
    fewer of the storms measured strong or extreme on the center’s strength
    scale compared to the season before that.

    “It’s not the quantity, it’s the quality,” Hecht said.

    For example, 12 strong, extreme or exceptional atmospheric river storms
    hit California between October 2022 and March 2023. These heavier storms
    tend to bring news-making rain and snow. This season, however, the state recorded only five.

    “If you compare it to last year, ... this [water] year was a couple of
    strong storms, but it’s a lot more weaker,” Hecht said. “But the
    abundance of weak-to-moderate [atmospheric rivers] kind of helped keep
    us on trajectory to hit that normal [precipitation levels].”

    As of this month, records for both statewide precipitation and the
    snowpack across the Sierra Nevada stood at about 105% of average for
    this time of year — which Hecht called shockingly close to average.

    “This year was abnormally normal,” Hecht said. “We like to talk about California being the land of extremes, where it’s either extremely dry
    or extremely wet. This year was abnormal because it was fairly close to
    normal through April 1,” the date that typically marks the end of
    California’s wet season.

    However, Southern California has seen a more anomalous water year, with
    its yearly rainfall well over 140% of average across many coastal areas, according to the California Water Watch.

    Hecht said one strong, slow-moving atmospheric river in early February
    had an outsized effect on the region’s rainfall, and he noted that many
    areas were also hit by thunderstorms during what he called “overly
    productive” weak atmospheric river storms.

    The systems aren’t typically accompanied by thunderstorms, but several
    systems were this season, driving locally historic rainfall and flash
    flooding in several areas, including San Diego and Oxnard.

    Hecht said it’s not immediately clear why so many atmospheric rivers
    this season included thunderstorms, but he said higher ocean surface temperatures — a signature of the El Nińo weather pattern — could have
    helped spur the unstable convective pattern.

    Even with many water measurements pointing to an overall average water
    year thus far, federal officials recently issued a major disaster
    declaration for nine counties after the deadly February atmospheric
    river storms.

    Knowing that further rainfall extremes are possible, Swain said he hopes
    state officials can better prepare for emergencies, or at least better understand the possible risks.

    “If we don’t correctly estimate the risk to begin with ... it’s awfully
    hard to have an accurate discussion about costs and benefits of any
    particular intervention,” Swain said.

    But, he noted that climate change is still expected to further stretch
    those natural extremes.

    “It’s reasonable to interpret the 20th century as actually getting kind
    of lucky in California, in the sense that we didn’t see something worse
    ... just through random, natural variability,” Swain said. “The 21st
    century? It’s a heavily loaded die.”


    --
    We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
    stupid people won't be offended.

    Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

    No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
    Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.

    Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
    fiasco, President Trump.

    Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
    The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
    queer liberal democrat donors.

    President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Loran@21:1/5 to Leroy N. Soetoro on Sat Jun 8 10:27:02 2024
    XPost: ca.environment, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:
    “It’s reasonable to interpret the 20th century as actually getting kind of lucky in California, in the sense that we didn’t see something worse
    ... just through random, natural variability,” Swain said. “The 21st century? It’s a heavily loaded die.”

    Guess what's in store next:

    It's on, we're now in the early stages of a Heinrich Event leading up to
    full glaciation shortly:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-1q5cW_V3M

    TRIPLE CATASTROPHE - 6000-Year Cycle Happening Now

    https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adh8369
    Heinrich event ice discharge and the fate of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation

    YUXIN ZHOU HTTPS://ORCID.ORG/0000-0002-3523-8524 AND JERRY F. MCMANUS HTTPS://ORCID.ORG/0000-0002-7365-1600Authors Info & Affiliations
    SCIENCE
    30 May 2024
    Vol 384, Issue 6699
    pp. 983-986
    DOI: 10.1126/science.adh8369

    Editor’s summary
    Will ice mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet caused by climate
    warming disrupt large-scale ocean circulation? Zhou et al. reconstructed iceberg production rates during the massive calving episodes of the last glacial period, called Heinrich events, when icebergs did affect ocean circulation. The authors found that present-day Greenland Ice Sheet
    calving rates are as high as during some of those events.

    https://cosmosmagazine.com/science/could-the-day-after-tomorrow-come-true/

    A German scientist has echoed the warnings of the film The Day After
    Tomorrow, finding that a major oceanic circulation system is becoming
    more unstable – with concerning implications for the climate.

    A study published in Nature Climate Change observes that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) – a massive ocean current
    system that circulates through the Atlantic – may have been losing
    stability over the past century, due to the influx of melted freshwater
    into the ocean.

    This is concerning because the AMOC is responsible for the Gulf Stream,
    a swift current that brings warm water masses from tropical regions to
    the northern hemisphere. Because it redistributes heat, this circulation
    system is not only responsible for creating mild temperatures across
    Europe but also influencing weather systems across the world.

    “The Atlantic Meridional Overturning really is one of our planet’s key circulation systems,” says Niklas Boers, the study’s author from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Free University Berlin
    and Exeter University.

    If it collapses, it could have impacts such as significantly cooling
    Europe and affecting tropical monsoon systems.

    “We already know from some computer simulations and from data from
    Earth’s past, so-called paleoclimate proxy records, that the AMOC can
    exhibit – in addition to the currently attained strong mode – an alternative, substantially weaker mode of operation,” Boers says.

    https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.14877

    Machine-learning prediction of tipping and collapse of the Atlantic
    Meridional Overturning Circulation
    Shirin Panahi, Ling-Wei Kong, Mohammadamin Moradi, Zheng-Meng Zhai,
    Bryan Glaz, Mulugeta Haile, Ying-Cheng Lai
    Recent research on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
    (AMOC) raised concern about its potential collapse through a tipping
    point due to the climate-change caused increase in the freshwater input
    into the North Atlantic. The predicted time window of collapse is
    centered about the middle of the century and the earliest possible start
    is approximately two years from now. More generally, anticipating a
    tipping point at which the system transitions from one stable steady
    state to another is relevant to a broad range of fields. We develop a machine-learning approach to predicting tipping in noisy dynamical
    systems with a time-varying parameter and test it on a number of systems including the AMOC, ecological networks, an electrical power system, and
    a climate model. For the AMOC, our prediction based on simulated
    fingerprint data and real data of the sea surface temperature places the
    time window of a potential collapse between the years 2040 and 2065.

    https://www.wgbh.org/news/commentary/2021-03-24/weve-known-for-years-global-warming-could-lead-to-a-new-ice-age-why-is-no-one-doing-anything

    Call it a cascade of calamitous events.

    According to scientists, a “cold blob” of water has formed south of Greenland. The blob’s origins can be traced to rapidly melting glaciers, which in turn is the consequence of global warming. The blob could
    impede the flow of the Gulf Stream, which carries warm water north. And
    if that happens, the temperature in Europe may drop steeply, hurricanes
    may become more intense, and sea levels on the East Coast of the United
    States may rise even more rapidly than they are already.

    “We’re all wishing it’s not true,” Peter de Menocal, a scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, told The New York Timesearlier
    this month. “Because if that happens, it’s just a monstrous change.”

    A monstrous change indeed — and one that we’ve known about for decades.
    The possibility that climate change could flip and, in just a matter of
    years, plunge part of the world into a new ice age is something that has occasionally made its way into the media. Yet the world has done very
    little about it.

    http://www.longrangeweather.com/climate_change.htm

    Recently, John Coleman, the founder of the Weather Channel, stated that, "manmade global warming is the GREATEST SCAM IN HISTORY!"

    He went on to add, "I am amazed, appalled and highly offended by this
    theory of global warming based on fraudulent science."

    He said this, folks, not me. (But, I certainly agree with Dr. Coleman.)

    Coleman’s climatological opinion has been recently supported by a top observatory that has been measuring a rather dramatic decrease in
    sunspot activity. These scientists are predicting that global
    temperatures will drop by at least two degrees in the next 20 years.

    Our friend, Robert Felix, author of "Not By Fire, But By Ice," believes
    that this significant cool down could possibly be the start of at least
    another "Little Ice Age," possibly a new GREAT ICE AGE, which is overdue following 11,500 years of generally warmer than normal global temperatures.

    This latest period of naturally-occurring warming peaked a decade ago in
    1998. It was the strongest such cycle of warming since the days of Leif Ericcson around 1,000 A.D. At the time, the mighty Vikings were actually farming parts of Greenland growing wheat, vegetables and raising cattle.
    They actually grew tomatoes and grapes!

    Robert Felix gives this warning: "Living in the northern U.S. could
    eventually be hazardous to your health!"

    He goes on to say, "the next major ice age could begin any day...next
    week, next month or next year." (Get that snowblower tuned-up.)

    Felix believes that someday soon we’ll be "buried beneath nine stories
    of ice and snow as the bitter climate of Greenland descends upon Canada, Britain, Norway, Sweden, the U.S. and other northern regions ---
    practically overnight."

    It’s all part of a dependable, predictable, natural cycle of climate
    that returns "like clockwork" every 11,500 years.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)