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Research links intensifying wet and dry swings to the atmosphere's sponge-like ability to drop and absorb waterGlobal weather records show hydroclimate whiplash has swelled globally by 31% to 66% since the mid-20th century, the international team of climate researchers found—even more than climate models ...
Moisture sweeping down the coast will drench much of California, including areas that burned severely just a month ago.
On Friday, the storied coastal road had dissolved into a river of mud and debris after a powerful rainstorm sent those burned hillsides careening toward the ocean, turning canyons into rivers of mud ...
“Hydroclimate whiplash” – or rapid swings between intensely dry and extremely wet periods of weather – is happening more often worldwide, according to a new study. What the science ...
(Getty Images) Rapidly alternating from wetter to drier weather thanks to human-driven climate change is what climatologist Daniel Swain has called “hydroclimate whiplash.” And, he warns ...
And climate scientists call this hydroclimate whiplash. I know it's a nerdy term, but it basically means rapid swings between super wet and super dry conditions. And new research out this week ...
8, 2024. Edmar Barros/AP, FILE Researchers found that this volatility, also known as "hydroclimate whiplash," has become more frequent and will increase significantly as global temperatures rise.
The impact of human-caused climate change has resulted in weather conditions ripe for wildfires across the U.S.
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