The Gulf Stream?
The Gulf Stream.
It is known as the Gulf Stream.
The Alaska Current is a warm-water eddy current resulting from the northward diversion of a portion of the North Pacific Current when that current meets the west coast of the North American continent. It is warmer than most sub-Arctic Pacific water with temperatures above 39° F (4° C). As such, it has a warming effect on the climate of British Colombia and southern Alaska
The Alaska Current is a warm-water eddy current resulting from the northward diversion of a portion of the North Pacific Current when that current meets the west coast of the North American continent. It is warmer than most sub-Arctic Pacific water with temperatures above 39° F (4° C). As such, it has a warming effect on the climate of British Colombia and southern Alaska
The answer you are looking for is climate change.However, the question is incorrect. Global warming is not the same as climate change. Global warming is the warming of the earth. Climate change is the result of this warming.
"Climate Change" and "Global Warming" are not the same, though related. Global Warming causes Climate Change. With Global Warming we understand the warming of the earth's global temperature. That warming has in turn an effect on the earth's global climate and on more localized climates (like the climate of England or Western US).
Western Europe's moderate climate is influenced by the warming effects of the North Atlantic Current (part of the Gulf Stream), which brings warm waters from the Gulf of Mexico. This helps to moderate temperatures and create milder winters compared to other regions at similar latitudes. Additionally, the presence of mountain ranges like the Alps and the Pyrenees help to block cold air masses from moving into the region, further stabilizing the climate.
Receives some warming effects of the north in the summer.
That would be impossible to answer. The problem is that most of "global warming" is dependent on computer models of how the climate works, using all kinds of current data to predict what the future climate will be. The problem is that the models are badly flawed; given all known data for everything before last year, the models are incapable of predicting the current conditions. The models say that the world should be warming; the data doesn't show that.
The presence of a warm ocean current can impact the climate of a region by warming the air above it, leading to milder temperatures and increased precipitation. This can result in a more temperate climate in areas near the current, affecting weather patterns and ecosystems.
No, the Humboldt Current and El Niño currents are not the same. The Humboldt Current is a cold ocean current that flows north along the western coast of South America, while El Niño is a climate phenomenon characterized by the warming of sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean which can disrupt weather patterns globally.
Approximately 97 of climate scientists believe in global warming.