-Caveat Lector-

 http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/orst-hfs091599.html

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 14 SEPTEMBER 1999

 Contact: George Taylor
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 541-737-5705
 Oregon State University

 Hurricane Floyd signal of a new weather era?

 CORVALLIS, Ore. -- The same long term climatic forces that
 Wednesday will cause Hurricane Floyd to ravage the Florida coast is
 also the culprit behind other weather events literally around the
 world -- ranging from a wet, cool winter projected this year for
 Portland, Ore., to better salmon conditions in the Pacific
 Northwest and normal rain for the drought-stricken Sahel region of
 Africa.

 But those forces also suggest a 15-20 year period of more regular
 and destructive hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean and resulting
 decades of destruction for coastal cities of the United States.

 This process, which scientists just began to understand in the
 early 1990s, is sometimes called a thermohaline circulation pattern
 or "conveyor belt" of ocean waters that has implications for El
 Ninos, La Ninas and countless other global impacts, said George
 Taylor, the state climatologist at Oregon State University and
 president of the American Association of State Climatologists.

 "This hurricane season started late, but it's already had about an
 average amount of hurricane activity and it's only halfway over,"
 Taylor said. "It's going to be a very busy hurricane season, just
 as four of the last five years have been. And the Pacific Northwest
 is going to have its sixth year in a row of wetter than average
 weather. This is not a coincidence. If you want to understand what
 is happening, you have to look at some of the climate forces that
 are driving it."

 What's happening, Taylor believes, is that a conveyor belt of ocean
 circulation which operates over vast distances has kicked into a
 higher level of activity -- a pattern that began about 1995 and
 generally lasts around 20 to 25 years before it quiets down again.
 It's a pattern separate from, and not to be confused with possible
 global warming caused by the greenhouse effect.

 When this conveyor belt of ocean waters is most active, Taylor
 said, it tends to produce warmer water in the Atlantic Ocean and
 cooler waters in the Pacific. Unusually warm water, as any
 meteorologist can tell you, is the fuel of more frequent and
 violent hurricanes. And cold water in the Pacific Ocean tends to
 produce the type of "La Nina" years that, among other things, makes
 Oregon even colder and rainier than usual in the winter. The fish
 love it, but no one else does -- except some diehards like Taylor.

 "When the conveyor belt is in high gear, the Atlantic tends to be
 warmer than usual and the Pacific is cooler," Taylor said. "Then
 the cycle seems to die down for about 20 years."

 The correlation is particularly strong for Atlantic Ocean
 hurricanes, Taylor said. The quietest four year period of the last
 50 years was from 1991-94, but then 1995 had the largest number of
 hurricanes since storms were first named in the early 1950s. The
 latest four year period is the busiest on record.

 These theories, Taylor said, were first developed with some
 pioneering work by oceanographers and climate experts Wallace
 Broeker and William Gray in the early 1990s. They identified a
 global scale current that operates on a time scale of several
 decades and affects world weather patterns.

 When it's active, this "conveyor belt" transports warm ocean water
 from the Pacific through the Indian Ocean and into the Atlantic
 Ocean. In the North Atlantic, this warm water, which is now very
 salty due to evaporation during the journey, cools and sinks,
 setting up a subsurface countercurrent that transports cooler water
 back to the Pacific and Indian Ocean.

 The end result, Taylor says, is more El Nino events when the
 conveyor belt is inactive, and more La Nina events -- or cool
 Pacific Ocean phases -- when the conveyor belt is really moving.

 "Since the theories were developed, we've identified several things
 that correlate most closely to high levels of conveyor belt
 activity," Taylor said. "Certainly one of the most prominent is
 Atlantic Ocean hurricanes. Also very clear is more La Nina years,
 and wetter, cooler conditions in the Pacific Northwest. In fact, we
 have a graph showing the tight correlation between severe hurricane
 seasons like the one we're now having, and wet winter conditions in
 Portland, Ore.

 "Following the very dry 1975-94 period, which saw two significant
 statewide droughts in Oregon and 10 consecutive dry years, we are
 now completing the fifth consecutive above average year for
 precipitation in the Pacific Northwest," he said.

 Taylor said it's still not certain what causes the "conveyor belt"
 to kick into gear. One likely candidate is fluctuations in the
 sun's magnetic field, which affects the amount of solar energy
 reaching the Earth and tends to change on a 20-27 year cycle.

 What is far more certain, he said, is the implication of the trend
 once it's clearly underway.

 Among other things, it means that East Coast and Gulf Coast cities
 are in for at least 15 more years of unusually frequent and
 destructive hurricanes. And that residents of traditionally soggy
 Oregon and Washington will have very wet, snowy winters with some
 regularity.

                              ###


 EDITOR'S NOTE: More information about the weather cycles referred
 to in this story can be obtained at the web site of the Oregon
 Climate Service, which is http://www.ocs.orst.edu/. An interesting
 color graphic which could be downloaded to illustrate the story,
 showing the pattern of ocean currents, is at this web site address:
 http://www.ocs.orst.edu/reports/conveyor1.GIF




.

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to