WEEKLY WATER NEWS
Thanksgiving Week: 24-28 November 2008
This is Thanksgiving Break for the Fall 2008 offering of the DataStreme
Water in the Earth System course. This Weekly Water News contains new
information items and historical data, but the Concept of the Week is repeated
from Week 11.
Have a happy and safe Thanksgiving Week from the AMS WES Central Staff and
Ed Hopkins!
Water in the News:
- Eye on the tropics --- With two weeks remaining in the official
hurricane seasons in the North Atlantic (including the Gulf of Mexico and the
Caribbean Sea) and the eastern North Pacific, no tropical cyclone activity was
detected this past week. However, tropical cyclone activity was reported in the
southern Indian Ocean, which is somewhat unusual as the Southern Hemisphere is
currently experiencing spring. Tropical Storm Anika formed early last week off
Java and dissipated several days later along the northwest coast of Australia.
Information on this tropical storm can be found on the
NASA
Hurricane Webpage. Another system identified as Tropical Storm 3S formed
south of south of the Cocos Islands during the week and weakened the following
day. Additional information on this system appears on the
NASA
Hurricane Webpage.
- A review of October's weather -- Scientists at NOAA's National
Climatic Data Center recently reported that October 2007 was the ninth warmest
October on record for the 48 coterminous United States. The Northeast was
unseasonably warm, with Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Rhode
Island having their warmest October in the 113-year period of record that began
in 1895 when a sufficiently dense nationwide climate observation network was
formed. However, statewide temperatures across Washington, Oregon and
California were below the 113-year average for October. The Southwest,
including Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah, had below average precipitation
totals for October, while the upper Midwest and the northern Plains, as well as
Kentucky and Vermont reported much above average October precipitation.
Unfortunately, 35 percent of the contiguous U.S. remained in
moderate-to-exceptional drought at the end of the month. The 2007 fire season
was the second worst on record according to the National Interagency Fire
Center, exceeded only by last year's record fire season [NOAA
News]
The National Climatic Data Center has posted a listing of some of the notable
extremes in temperature, precipitation and other weather elements across the
nation for the recently completed month of
October
2007. Some additions to this list may be made in subsequent weeks.
- A final official US winter forecast is issued -- Forecasters at the
Climate Prediction Center released their final US winter outlook for the winter
season (the three months of December 2007 through February 2008). These
forecasters continue to foresee a higher than average probability that much of
the nation should experience above average winter temperatures, except for
sections of the West and northern New England. Southern Texas appeared to have
the highest probability of an unseasonably warm winter. The West, which
included the Pacific Coast, the northern tier of states from the interior
Northwest to the Dakotas, along with northern New England, could have equal
chances for above or below average temperatures. The forecasters also
anticipate high probabilities of drier than average conditions across the
southern tier of states, extending from southern California to the Southeast,
regions that are currently experiencing severe to exceptional drought
conditions. On the other hand, the Pacific Northwest and sections of the
Midwest should have better than even changes of a wetter than average winter.
The forecasters are basing their outlook on what they see as a continuation of
the current La Niña event in the planetary scale atmospheric and oceanic
circulation regimes into early 2008. [NOAA
News]
- Kenyan flooding monitored -- Images obtained from the Advanced Land
Imager on NASAs Earth Observing-1 satellite shows the magnitude of the
flooding that occurred on Kenya's Nzoia River earlier in November. [NASA Earth
Observatory]
- Impact of mountains on clouds and precipitation patterns seen from space
-- A MODIS image made from data collected from the NASAs Terra
satellite earlier this month shows a pattern of snow over Russia's Ural
Mountains with a lack of snow downwind of these mountains. The image also shows
some thin high level clouds that were affected by flow over the mountain
barrier. [NASA Earth
Observatory]
- Ocean observing satellite mission receives an award -- NASA and the
US Department of the Interior recently presented the annual William T. Pecora
Awards to NASA's Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) mission team and Samuel N.
Goward of the University of Maryland in recognition of their outstanding
contributions toward understanding the Earth by means of remote sensing. The
QuikSCAT satellite has provided early detection of ocean storms and advanced
the scientific exploration of global ocean wind patterns. [NASA]
- NASA supercomputer is fast -- An announcement was made last week
that NASA's new Pleiades supercomputer at Ames Research Center, Moffett Field,
CA has been ranked as the third fastest on the on the Top500 list of the
world's most powerful computers. In addition to running projects involving
astronomy and space vehicle design, this supercomputer will run coupled
atmosphere-ocean models to assess decadal climate prediction skill for the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. [NASA
ARC]
- Lightning strikes used to predict flash floods -- A researcher at
Israel's Tel Aviv University and colleagues from other European countries are
attempting to use lightning data to predict the occurrence of flash flood
events through a system called the "Flash Project." This Flash system
could be used to provide advance warning to the public. [American
Friends of Tel Aviv University]
- Link between lightning and terrestrial gamma ray flashes investigated
--A small NSF-NASA satellite mission called the 'Firefly' CubeSat Mission
will be launched in 2010 to study the link between lightning and sudden bursts
of energy channeled upward to space called Terrestrial Gamma Ray Flashes
(TGFs). The Firefly mission is a collaboration of scientists and students at
the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, along with Siena College, Universities
Space Research Association, Hawk Institute for Space Science and University of
Maryland Eastern Shore. [NASA] [NSF News]
- Climate forecasts could provide better water management -- The U.S.
Climate Change Science Program recently released a scientific assessment report
that indicates expanding the use of seasonal to interannual climate forecasts
could assist decision makers in improving their management of water resources
especially in areas of the nation prone to drought or semi-arid conditions. [NOAA
News]
- Official US winter forecast is issued -- Forecasters at NOAA's
Climate Prediction Center released their official US winter outlook for the
upcoming winter season (the three months of December 2008 through February
2009). These forecasters foresee a higher than average probability that the
nation's midsection, extending from the southern Plains to the western Great
Lakes should experience a better than equal chance of above average winter
temperatures. They also felt that the rest of the coterminous US would have
approximately equal chances of below or above average winter temperatures. The
forecasters also anticipate high probabilities of drier than average conditions
across the southern tier of states, stretching from southern Arizona eastward
to Florida and the coast of the Carolinas. On the other hand, the southern
Plains, along with the Ozarks of southern Missouri and northern Arkansas should
have better than even changes of a wetter than average winter. The forecasters
are basing their outlook on what they consider planetary scale atmospheric and
oceanic circulation regimes that do not exhibit El Niño or La
Niña events. [NOAA
News]
- A global review of October's warm weather -- Preliminary analysis of
worldwide combined ocean and land temperatures by scientists at NOAAs
National Climatic Data Center indicates that the recently completed month of
October 2008 had the second highest combined October temperature since a
sufficiently dense and reliable network began in 1880. They also found that the
globally averaged land surface temperature for October 2008 was the highest on
record for October, while that month's global ocean surface temperature was the
sixth highest. [NOAA
News]
- Buffer zones could help protect West Coast salmon from pesticides --
NOAA Fisheries Service recently issued a biological opinion to the US
Environmental Protection Agency that found diazonin, malathion, and
chlorpyrifos, three chemicals used in pesticides, as being agents that are
likely to jeopardize more than two dozen populations of salmon on the West
Coast listed as either endangered or threatened. This opinion calls for buffer
zones next to salmon streams where the chemicals are used. [NOAA
News]
- National system of marine protected areas launched -- The U.S.
Departments of Interior and Commerce jointly released the final version of
"Framework for the National System of Marine Protected Areas of the United
States," which represents the culmination of a cooperative multi-agency,
multi-year effort to protect the nations natural and cultural marine
treasures through a National System of Marine Protected Areas. [NOAA
News]
- Reducing turbulent flow in pipes -- Scientists at Germany's Max
Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization and the Dutch Technical
University in Delft have found that the turbulent fluid flow in pipes
disappears with time, contrary to the commonly held idea that it remains
unstable. [Max
Planck Society]
- Renewable energy from water currents -- A University of Michigan
engineer has built a machine that he claims works like a fish to convert
vibrations in fluid flow in rivers into renewable power. [University of
Michigan News]
- Salinity of Chesapeake Bay could be altered by sea level rise --
Researchers from Penn State University and the University of Maryland warn
that projected changes in global sea level may affect the salinity of various
parts of Chesapeake Bay, the nation's largest estuary. [EurekAlert!]
- Urban trees could help storm water infiltrate -- Researchers from
Virginia Tech, Cornell, and University of California at Davis have found that
urban forests could help play a major role in mitigating storm water runoff
since the trees permit the water to infiltrate into the ground where it
recharges the groundwater. [American Society
of Agronomy]
- Missing markers could indicate future Asian water supply problems --
Ohio State glaciologists who analyzed the radiochemistry of ice cores that
they extracted from a Himalayan ice field have found a lack of expected
radioactive signals from atomic bomb tests a half-century ago, which would
indicate ice has not accumulated on the surface of the glacier since
1944. This lack of accumulating ice during the last 64 years could have an
impact upon the water resources for people living near the Himalayans. [Ohio
State University News]
- An All-Hazards Monitor -- This Web portal provides the user
information from NOAA on current environmental events that may pose as hazards
such as tropical weather, drought, floods, marine weather, tsunamis, rip
currents, Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and coral bleaching. [NOAAWatch]
- Global and US Hazards/Climate Extremes -- A review and analysis of
the global impacts of various weather-related events, including drought, floods
and storms during the current month. [NCDC]
- Global Water News Watch -- Other water news sources can be obtained
through the SAHRA Project at the University of Arizona [SAHRA Project]
- Earthweek -- Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com] Requires
Adobe Acrobat Reader.
This Concept of the Week is repeated from Week 11.
Concept of the Week: Desertification
Desertification is one of the world's most pressing environmental issues,
threatening the existence of more than a billion people who depend on the land
for survival. In 1992, the United Nation's Conference on Environment and
Development defined desertification as "land degradation in arid,
semi-arid, and dry sub-humid areas resulting from various factors, including
climate variations and human activities." Through desertification, arable
land is transformed into desert-like land, greatly reducing or eliminating the
land's capacity to produce food. Desertification's impact on people dependent
on subsistence farming and herding is food insecurity. Often, their only option
to avoid famine is to migrate to urban areas.
According to U.N. estimates, desertification affects about 130 million
hectares (320 million acres) of land worldwide, equivalent to the combined
areas of France, Italy, and Spain. Portions of some 110 nations are impacted,
including parts of the North American Great Plains, the Pampas of South
America, the steppes of Asia, the Australia's "outback," and the
edges of the Mediterranean. But by far the most widespread and severe impact is
in Africa, where two-thirds of the continent's land area is desert or dry land.
Almost three-quarters of Africa's dry-land agricultural area is degraded to
some extent. Desertification is a very serious problem in Sub-Saharan Africa
with its considerable year-to-year variability in seasonal rainfall and
frequent long-term droughts (described on pages 83-84 of your DataStreme WES
Textbook).
The systems approach is valuable in understanding desertification in that
the process involves interactions of climate, Earth's land surface, the water
cycle, and human activity. Desertification of dry lands accelerates during
prolonged drought. Climate change can alter the frequency, duration, and
intensity of drought and thereby contribute to soil desiccation. Although
climate change may play an important role in desertification, a key factor is
human mismanagement of the soil resource. Poverty and subsistence agriculture
drive people to over-cultivate the land, quickly exhausting the soil's
fertility. Overgrazing by livestock and deforestation exacerbate an already bad
situation by removing the protective vegetative cover and exposing the topsoil
to erosion by wind and running water. Winds can transport fine topsoil
thousands of kilometers and sandstorms strip the leaves from plants and bury
crops under dunes.
Land mismanagement also impacts the local climate and water budget, speeding
up desertification. Without a vegetative cover, soil surface temperatures rise,
accelerating evaporation of water, depletion of soil moisture, and build up of
salts in the soil. Less soil moisture means that more of the available heat is
used for raising the air temperature through conduction and convection (i.e.,
sensible heating). In this way heat stress combines with moisture stress
to cut crop yields.
Concept of the Week: Questions
- Through desertification, crop productivity [(declines)
(increases)].
- Human mismanagement of the soil resource [(is)
(is not)] a key factor in desertification.
Historical Events:
- 24 November 1981...Typhoon Irma, the worst typhoon in a decade hit the
Philippines leaving 236 people dead and hundreds of thousands homeless.
- 24 November 1982...Hurricane Iwa lashed the Hawaiian Islands of Niihau,
Kauai, and Oahu with high winds and surf. Winds gusting to 120 mph caused
extensive shoreline damage. Winds at Honolulu gusted to 81 mph. Damage totaled
150 million dollars on Kauai, and fifty million dollars on Oahu. The peak storm
surge on the south shore was six to eight feet. It marked the first time in 25
years that Hawaii had been affected by a hurricane. (The Weather Channel)
- 26 November 1888...A late season hurricane brushed the East Coast with
heavy rain and gale force winds. The hurricane passed inside Nantucket and over
Cape Cod, then crossed Nova Scotia. (David Ludlum)
- 26-28 November 1898...The "Portland" storm raged across New
England producing gale force winds along the coast and heavy snow inland. A
foot of snow blanketed Boston, MA, and 27 inches fell at New London, CT. Winds
at Boston gusted to 72 mph, and wind gusts to 98 mph were estimated at Block
Island, RI. A passenger ship, the S.S. Portland, sank off Cape Cod with
the loss of all 191 persons aboard, and Boston Harbor was filled with wrecked
ships. The storm wrecked 56 vessels resulting in a total of 456 casualties.
(26th- 28th) (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)
- 27-28 November 1905...Heavy snow and wind blasted the western Great Lakes
with as much as seven inches of snow in northwestern Wisconsin and sustained
winds of 42 mph recorded at Duluth, MN for 29 straight hours and 65 mph winds
for 13 continuous hours. Severe drifting resulted. Eighteen ships were
destroyed or disabled on Lake Superior. The ship Mataafa was grounded
and broke in two in Duluth harbor. Nine of the fifteen crew of the
Mataafa froze to death despite running aground within 100 yards of the
shore. (Accord Weather Guide Calendar)
- 27-28 November 1912...Snowfall is a rare event for Florida. The record
earliest snowfall for Florida, and the only November snowfall fell during the
night across part of the interior counties in the far northwest (Madison to
Gadsden) bordering Georgia. Up to 0.5 inches of snow was reported at Mt.
Pleasant. (Accord Weather Guide Calendar)
- 27 November 1930...A terrific sandstorm in Morocco supplied the dust for
the "mud rain" on the following day that fell from northern France to
southern England. In Belgium a number of people were asphyxiated near Liege due
to poor air quality. (Accord Weather Guide Calendar)
- 28 November 1921...New England was in the midst of a four day icestorm,
their worst of record. Ice was more than three inches thick in many places
following the storm, and property damage was in the millions of dollars.
Northern New England received heavy snow with more than two feet reported in
some areas. Overnight freezing rains continued through the day at Worcester, MA
while the wind increased to a gale. Streets become impassable even on foot, and
whole towns were plunged into darkness without communication. The storm caused
$20 million damage to power lines, telephone lines and trees. (David Ludlum)
- 28 November 1960...A severe storm produced waves 20 to 40 feet high on Lake
Superior. Duluth, MN was buried under a foot of snow, and clocked wind gusts to
73 mph. The northern shore of Lake Superior was flooded, and property along the
shore was battered. Thousands of cords of pulpwood were washed into Lake
Superior, and up to three feet of water flooded the main street of Grand
Marais. Thunder accompanied the "nor'easter". (David Ludlum) (The
Weather Channel)
- 28-29 November 1995...Rivers in western Washington State experienced
near-record flooding. In Snohomish County, 2000 students could not reach school
because of flooded roads. In Duvall and Carnation, flooded roads stranded
15,000 people. (Accord Weather Guide Calendar)
Return to DataStreme WES website
Prepared by AMS WES Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email
hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2008, The American Meteorological Society.