El Niño - Past, Present, and Future - Presentation Transcript
El Niño: Past, Present, and Future Stephanie Smith Chirley Quillian Derryl Carter
Introduction
El Niño is a disruption of the ocean-atmosphere system originating in the Tropical Pacific having important consequences for weather and climate around the globe. (1)
During El Niño, warmer than average sea surface occur in the Equatorial central and eastern Pacific. (2)
This causes a change in wind patterns, which causes a shift in where the most rainfall occurs. (2)
El Niño Visually in the Equatorial Pacific (1) The white arrows are surface water motion. The black arrows are air movement. The colors indicate sea surface temperatures, with warmer colors associated to warmer temperatures.
El Niño’s Beginnings
Peruvian fishermen first coined the term more than 100 years ago to describe the unusually warm waters that would occasionally form along the coast of Ecuador and Peru. (4)
As it usually occurred near Christmas, the name given to it was El Niño, spanish for “the boy child”, referring to Christ. (3)
Senor Dr. Luis Carranza write a small article on the phenomenon, calling attention to it in 1891. His article was then referenced in an 1895 talk given at the 6 th International Geographical Congress in London. (4)
Observations and Recordings
In 1923, Sir Gilbert Walter came to realize that El Niño was a large scale pattern extending over the entire tropic Pacific region. (3)
He began taking oldest records began in the early 20 th century with the beginning of measuring the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), the difference between surface air pressure of the city of Darwin, Australia and Tahiti in French Polynesia. (3)
Since, it has been realized that day to day weather means that the SOI cannot be used from month to month, and is better suited in more long-term observations. (3)
Today’s Recordings
Based on satellites and ocean buoys recording surface temperatures
Etc etc, more present stuff
Info
It is believed that El Niño conditions suppress the development of hurricanes and tropical storms in the Atlantic. (2)
Abnormal ocean currents during El Niño bring warm waters eastward from the western Pacific and leave low tides in the western Pacific. Both can cause the bleaching and death of corals, damaging the balance of these ecosystems. (2)
Scientists study El Niño in the tropical Pacific Ocean because it is the most common and powerful predictor of seasonal climate change. (2)
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s Role in Monitoring El Niño
Since 1982, have had two polar-orbiting satellites obtaining information to produce sea surface temperatures.
Scientists generate monthly average rainfall charts from satellite information.
Satellites also monitor surface winds.
Recent experimental chart depicting regions of potential coral bleaching.
Info
The time between events is irregular, but they tend to recur every three to seven years. (3)
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