'Little Ice Age' is on the way.

The so-called Arctic Express, the frigid northern wind that brought record low temperatures to the central United States in December, 1996, could be the harbinger of a "little ice age," predicts Ernest Kung, chairman of the Atmospheric Sciences Department, University of Missouri, Columbia. His research indicates North America can expect a natural cold period for the next 20 or so years as the jet stream from Alaska and western Canada turns its persistent fury on the lower 48 states.

Kung emphasizes the long-range nature of his data. "This is not the daily weather. About every 15 to 25 years, you can recognize a change in the patterns of the global circulation of the atmosphere." During the 1970s, which many people describe as a little ice age, temperatures tended to be below normal, the winters colder and with heavier precipitation, culminating in the bitter winters of the late 1970s. Three consecutive winter seasons from 1976 to 1979 were among the coldest on record for the central and eastern U.S. There were unprecedented occurences such as snow in Miami, and record low temperatures and snowfalls were common from Kansas City, Mo., to Boston. Many of those records still stand today.

Since then, there has been a warm period. North America has enjoyed a temperate interval marked by mild winters with moderate precipitation. Kung's research indicates oceanic surface temperatures play a crucial role in the world's weather patterns. The surface temperature of the tropical and northern regions of the Pacific Ocean "is the key to the weather we get here. If the ocean is unusually warm, it tends to create high pressure." A huge mass of high pressure, like the one now in the central Pacific, forces the jet stream to move around it, to the north. From there, the high pressure front curls around Alaska and flows southward, bringing...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT