Expert makes sense of weird weather
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Weird weather phenomena may bring strong storms this spring, according to a UW-Madison weather expert
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March 4, 1999
Web posted at: 10:15 AM EST

Blame it on La Niña and you may be wrong.
If forecasts of unusually wild weather this spring come true, lesser-known forces like "zonal jet streams" and "Bermuda highs" will be responsible, according to University of Wisconsin-Madison weather expert Thomas Achtor.
These lesser-known phenomena triggered this unseasonably mild winter, including February's unseasonably warm temperatures, says Achtor. They may also bring strong storms this spring, he says.
Achtor, a senior research program manager with the Space Science and
Engineering Center, said La Niña years typically bring colder-than-normal
temperatures to central and eastern North America. La Niñas are defined by
a sharp cooling of water in the central equatorial Pacific -- the opposite
of El Niño conditions the year before.
Indeed, some ferocious cold of minus 70 degrees Fahrenheit or more has struck Alaska
and Canada, but bitter cold never plunged southward. Achtor said the cold
air was bottled up because the jet stream has been in a strong east-to-west
holding pattern, forging straight east through the Pacific Ocean and North
America with almost no fluctuation.
A stronger than normal "Bermuda high," or an anticyclone that funnels warm,
moist air inland from the Atlantic Ocean, is also keeping things
interesting, Achtor said. Combined with the zonal jet stream, this could
pump unusually high amounts of moisture into already volatile conditions.
"The strength of these two systems means we will likely see a very active
storm season with more precipitation that normal," Achtor said.
Achtor and others at SSEC track global weather patterns through the
Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies.
For more information, contact Thomas Achtor, (608)263-4206, email: thomas.achtor@ssec.wisc.edu.
Copyright 1999, Environmental News Network, All Rights Reserved
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