
The above picture is from the Wikipedia Pacific Decadal Oscillation Event. This is what a West Coast wet weather cycle looks like: cold water off of Japan and warm across the West Coast. Note how this is during an el Nino cycle. But we are in the exact opposite, a very long, persistent la Nina cycle which shows no sign of letting up. The global warming model does not have room for a persistent cold cycle like this one. Instead, they focus on the fact that the water running off of Japan’s east coast is unusually warm. Which is true and quite curious considering that this coincides with the Great Tohoku Earthquake that destroyed so much of eastern Japan in 2011 which happens to be the time when the oscillation began. The long drought in California is being blamed on the ocean being hot when it actually is caused by a COOLING Pacific, not a hot one. Continue reading →
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Tagged as Atlantic Decadal Oscillatioin, Atlantic Ocean, California, drought, East Coast, El Nino, global warming, Japan, La Nina, Medieval Warm Cycle, Medieval Warm Period, Midwest, NOAA, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, Pacific Ocean, solar activity, solar wind, sun, sun spot activity, West Coast