1. Stronger trade winds stall climate change

    Increased Pacific winds are sending excess heat into the deep ocean and likely playing a role in the current hiatus in global warming.

    • Climate

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  2. Plowing snow in New Hampshire: How do cold winters and climate change intersect?

    It was so cold! (How cold was it?)

    How does the U.S. winter of 2013–14 rank against its predecessors? And was it a harbinger of more cold winters to come for parts of the country, or simply an outlier at a time of largely warming winters?

    • Climate,
    • Weather

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  3. Midwest cold wave: Ice fog in frigid air produces sun dogs

    Cold but brief

    Last week’s Arctic outbreak brought some of the coldest air in decades across the U.S. Midwest and South. But interestingly, it didn’t last as long as historic cold waves of the late 20th century.

    • Climate

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  4. Drought puts California water supply at risk: Photo of Lake Mead, Nevada/Arizona

    California dryin’

    In parts of California and Oregon, 2013 was the driest calendar year on record, with no sign of relief on the horizon. NCAR scientists are examining how water and energy use intersect across this drought-prone region and how the nexus could evolve in a future climate.

    • Climate

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  5. Warming hiatus? Map showing changes in global temperature since late 1970s

    Inside the warming hiatus

    The globally averaged surface air temperature hasn’t risen much in the last 15 years, but new research confirms ample heating of Earth, which becomes evident when looking at certain times of year and in particular locations, including deep in the ocean.

    • Climate

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