Earth’s most prominent rainfall feature creeping northward
July 2nd, 2009 - 12:43 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 2 (ANI): A new research has determined that the rain band near the equator that determines the supply of freshwater to nearly a billion people throughout the tropics and subtropics has been creeping north for more than 300 years, probably because of a warmer world.
If the band continues to migrate at just less than a mile (1.4 kilometers) a year, which is the average for all the years it has been moving north, then some Pacific islands near the equator - even those that currently enjoy abundant rainfall - may be drier within decades and starved of freshwater by mid-century or sooner.
The prospect of additional warming because of greenhouse gases means that situation could happen even sooner.
The findings suggest “that increasing greenhouse gases could potentially shift the primary band of precipitation in the tropics with profound implications for the societies and economies that depend on it.”
“We’re talking about the most prominent rainfall feature on the planet, one that many people depend on as the source of their freshwater because there is no groundwater to speak of where they live,” said Julian Sachs, associate professor of oceanography at the University of Washington and lead author of the research paper.
“In addition many other people who live in the tropics but farther afield from the Pacific could be affected because this band of rain shapes atmospheric circulation patterns throughout the world,” she added.
The band of rainfall happens at what is called the intertropical convergence zone.
There, just north of the equator, trade winds from the northern and southern hemispheres collide at the same time heat pours into the atmosphere from the tropical sun.
Rain clouds 30,000 feet thick in places proceed to dump as much as 13 feet (4 meters) of rain a year in some places.
The band stretching across the Pacific is generally between 3 degrees and 10 degrees north of the equator depending on the time of year. (ANI)
- Changing rainfall pattern may deprive billion people of water - Aug 10, 2009
- Ocean temperature patterns in tropics and subtropics will change rainfall patterns - Feb 27, 2010
- Global warming likely to impact rainfall patterns - Mar 01, 2010
- India launching satellite to study tropical climate - Sep 10, 2011
- Soot on Tibetan snow causes rainfall over India, China - Mar 04, 2011
- Soot on Tibetan snow 'causes more rainfall over India and China' - Mar 04, 2011
- How hot was earth 50 million years ago? - Jul 06, 2011
- Freak diversion of jet stream propels freezing conditions - Dec 23, 2010
- Extreme summers will be commonplace by mid-century - Feb 17, 2012
- Typhoon Talas leaves at least 18 dead in Japan - Sep 04, 2011
- Rising Indian Ocean levels may worsen flooding in India - Jul 14, 2010
- Indian rocket hurls aloft four satellites - Oct 12, 2011
- Sea levels rising in parts of Indian Ocean: Experts - Jul 14, 2010
- Greenhouse emissions led to increase in extreme rains, says study - Feb 17, 2011
- Top 10 global weather events in 2010 - Jan 14, 2011
Tags: abundant rainfall, atmospheric circulation patterns, equator, greenhouse gases, groundwater, intertropical convergence zone, mid century, mile 1, oceanography, pacific islands, planet one, profound implications, rain band, rain clouds, rain shapes, research paper, subtropics, trade winds, tropical sun, tropics