The Weather Whirlwind of the Past
Pacific OceanThu Sep 26 2024
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Living 20,000 years ago, during the peak of the last ice age. The world was vastly different, with sea levels 130 meters lower and the missing liquid locked away as ice. Despite these changes, the continents and their oceanic surroundings, including the Pacific, looked eerily similar to what we see today. One tiny marine creature, the foraminifera, played a crucial role in shaping our understanding of the past. These single-celled organisms, with an astonishing lifespan of just one month, recorded information about the climate around them as they floated at the top of the ocean. Thousands of years later, scientists have extracted their tiny shells from the Pacific Ocean seabed, revealing the secrets of El Niño's past behavior.
The study's findings are both fascinating and worrying. By analyzing the chemical fingerprints in the foraminifera shells, researchers discovered that extreme El Niño events could become 40 to 50 percent more frequent in the future. This increased frequency would likely bring unusual wildfires, air turbulence, and heavy rainfall. Scientists believe that global warming, or "climate forcing," is the primary driver behind this shift. As our planet continues to warm, it's essential to understand how El Niño will respond to these changes.
El Niño is often described as a powerful heat pump that alters the Earth's temperature. However, global warming is like a mighty hammer, capable of drastically changing the stability of our planet's temperature. The study's co-lead author, Kaustubh Thirumalai, likens El Niño to the "currency" of climate change, emphasizing its significant impact on the planet's day-to-day, seasonal, and yearly cycles.
https://localnews.ai/article/the-weather-whirlwind-of-the-past-d4e04e15
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