El Nino
A periodic reversal of the pattern of mid-Pacific ocean currents is known as the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). This phenomenon involves the warming of ocean temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific, leading to changes in atmospheric circulation patterns and global weather impacts. These events typically occur every 2-7 years and can have significant effects on weather patterns worldwide.
The reversal of oceanic currents in the equatorial Pacific is commonly called El Niño. This phenomenon involves a periodic warming of sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific, which can disrupt normal weather patterns globally. El Niño events typically occur every few years and can have significant impacts on climate, marine ecosystems, and weather-related phenomena.
Both: Tidal currents that flow from the tropics will be warm, and if they flow from the poles will be cool.
The Humboldt of the Pacific coast of South America
500 000 thousands
There are five major currents on Earth: the North Atlantic Current, the South Atlantic Current, the North Pacific Current, the South Pacific Current, and the Antarctic Circumpolar Current.
makes a ksunami.
yes, but the Indian Ocean DOES NOT have stronger currents than the Pacific Ocean..:{D
Along Canada's west coast, the surface temperatures of the Pacific Ocean rarely get warmer than 15ºC. The ocean temperatures in the North Pacific tend to be warmer than those in the South Pacific. This seems strange because the surface waters in the South Pacific are definitely warmer.
I have heard there is a place in the pacific ocean where all the "overboard" garbage in the worlds oceans accumulated as all currents eventually end there.
EI Nano is warm oceanic currents in south pacific ocean
pacific