El Niño and La Niña (collectively called El Niño Southern Oscillation or ENSO) don't just affect the US. They affect the whole world. As of October 2013, the current condition is ENSO neutral, meaning we have neither El Niño nor La Niña, but are somewhere in between.
Later in 2012 maybe - we are currently in a La Nina.
The roles of the oceans in El Nino and La Nina are that they control the climate of the pacific ocean which has rising air into the clouds and comes down as rain or snow hail sleet or anything that has anything to do with that.
A common mistake is that La Nina and El Nino are actual storms. However, La Nina and El Nino are just terms used to describe either a wet, rainy season (La Nina) or a dry season (El Nino). So, La Nina's are not measured on size; it is just a term to indicate a current/soon-upcoming wet and rainy season.
El Niño did not directly cause the Dust Bowl, but it may have exacerbated the conditions that led to it. El Niño can influence precipitation patterns, potentially leading to periods of drought, which coupled with poor land management practices at the time, could have contributed to the severity of the Dust Bowl.
it's el niño and la niña - essentially the reverse phenomena
La Nina brings drought to the continent. El Nino on the other hand brings floods, rain, rising rivers and misery.
El Niño and La Niña (collectively called El Niño Southern Oscillation or ENSO) don't just affect the US. They affect the whole world. As of October 2013, the current condition is ENSO neutral, meaning we have neither El Niño nor La Niña, but are somewhere in between.
No. La Niña will bring increased precipitation to Australia. El Niño will bring drought to Australia.
La nina Actually, it's El Nino
no el nino addidas
El Nino and El Nina
No.
el nino la nina
El Nino and La Nina have many similarities. One of these are that they are caused by changing weather patterns, another is that they are associated with temperature change in the water.
La Niña is a climate pattern that describes the cooling of surface ocean waters along the tropical west coast of South America. La Nina is considered to be the counterpart to El Nino, which is characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the equatorial region of the Pacific Ocean.
la Nina