Cold climate and weak sun activity intensify storminess in Europe (Sebastian Luening) Germany

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Link: http://diekaltesonne.de/lehren-aus-der-klimageschichte-kalte-und-schwachesonne-befeuern-sturmtatigkeit-in-europa/ Please see link above for original article, embedded hotlinks, and comments. This daily letter with analysis and reports about Earth’s climate history, written in German with some source stories in English is very interesting for all who want to learn about the science and politics related to climate change.

Lehren aus der Klimageschichte: Kälte und schwache Sonne befeuern Sturmtätigkeit in Europa Schlagwörter: Stürme - Kategorien: Allgemein, News/Termine 22. Oktober 2017 | 07:30 In unserer kleinen Sturmartikelserie schauen wir heute nach Europa. Wie haben sich die Stürme auf unserem Kontinent entwickelt, welche Trends sind erkennbar bzw. nicht erkennbar? Wir beginnen in Großbritannien. Das britische Metoffice erklärte 2014, dass es derzeit keine Hinweise auf eine Steigerung der Sturmtätigkeit in Großbritannien gebe: Climate models provide a broad range of projections about changes in storm track and frequency of storms. While there’s currently no evidence to suggest that the UK is increasing in storminess, this is an active area of research under the national climate capability. The Telegraph brachte im selben Jahr dazu einen treffenden Artikel: The storms are no different – but we are It’s not the weather that has got worse, it’s our ability to cope without the creature comforts [...] This is the worst set of storms for two decades. But two decades is not long. How far back does your memory go? In January 1993 a deep storm (the most intense system of low pressure outside the tropics ever recorded over the north Atlantic) miraculously broke up the oil spilt from the tanker Braer. The Burns Day storm of January 1990 cut off power for half a million. The storm of 1987 blew down 15 million trees. Since history is anything before your own time, history for me includes the storm of 1953 that killed more than 300 in Britain. Who remembers 1928, when 14 drowned in London and piles of Turners wallowed in the Tate?If the effects of the winter storms today seem worse (although they are not), it is partly because power cuts now instantly deprive a generation that has grown dependent on them of technologies that didn’t exist three decades ago: chiefly mobiles and the internet. Their sudden loss brings isolation, alienation, and a desire to blame someone. Ganzen Artikel in The Telegraph lesen. Hochinteressant auch die Rekonstruktion der Sturmgeschichte in Wales für die vergangenen 4500 Jahre durch Orme et al . 2015 anhand eines Sedimentkerns. Die Autorne fanden zwölf 1


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Cold climate and weak sun activity intensify storminess in Europe (Sebastian Luening) Germany by John A. Shanahan - Issuu