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Is Weird Winter Weather Related to Climate Change?
Tue, 2014-02-25 14:57 — Kathy GilbeauxNASA Goddard Space Flight Center
The polar jet stream may be driving a "hemispheric pattern of severe weather."
submitted by Paul Pritchard
e360.yale.edu - by Fred Pearce - February 24, 2014
Scientists are trying to understand if the unusual weather in the Northern Hemisphere this winter — from record heat in Alaska to unprecedented flooding in Britain — is linked to climate change. One thing seems clear: Shifts in the jet stream play a key role and could become even more disruptive as the world warms.
This winter’s weather has been weird across much of the Northern Hemisphere. Record storms in Europe; record drought in California; record heat in parts of the Arctic, including Alaska and parts of Scandinavia; but record freezes too, as polar air blew south over Canada and the U.S., causing near-record ice cover on the Great Lakes, sending the mercury as low as minus 50 degrees Celsius in Minnesota, and bringing sharp chills to Texas.
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