STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012

Large-scale climate patterns influenced temperature and weather patterns around the globe in 2011. In particular, a moderate-to-strong La Nina at the beginning of the year dissipated during boreal spring but reemerged during fall. The phenomenon contributed to historical droughts in East Africa, the...

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Main Authors: CRETAUX, Jean-Francois, SWEET, William, CROUCH, Jake, TAKAHASHI, Taro, CUNNINGHAM, Stuart A., TAYLOR, Michael A., DE JEU, Richard A. M., TEDESCO, Marco, DEMIRCAN, M., THEPAUT, Jean-Noel, DERKSEN, C., THIAW, Wassila M., DIAMOND, Howard J., THOMPSON, Philip, DLUGOKENCKY, Ed J., THORNE, Peter W., DOHAN, Kathleen, TIMMERMANS, M. L., DOLMAN, A. Johannes, TOBIN, Skie, DORIGO, Wouter A., TOOLE, J., DROZDOV, D. S., TRACHTE, Katja, DUGUAY, Claude, TREWIN, Blair C., DUTTON, Ellsworth, TRIGO, Ricardo M., DUTTON, Geoff S., TROTMAN, Adrian, ELKINS, James W., TUCKER, C. J., EPSTEIN, H. E., ULUPINAR, Yusuf, FAMIGLIETTI, James S., WAL, Roderik S. W., FANTON D'ANDON, Odile Hembise, WERF, G. R., FEELY, Richard A., VAUTARD, Robert, FEKETE, Balazs M., VOTAW, Gary, FENIMORE, Chris, WAGNER, Wolfgang W., FERNANDEZ-PRIETO, D., WAHR, John, FIELDS, Erik, WALKER, D. A., FIOLETOV, Vitali, WALSH, J.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/141212
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12278/141212
https://doi.org/10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1
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spelling ftoskarbordeaux:oai:oskar-bordeaux.fr:20.500.12278/141212 2023-05-15T13:58:54+02:00 STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012 CRETAUX, Jean-Francois SWEET, William CROUCH, Jake TAKAHASHI, Taro CUNNINGHAM, Stuart A. TAYLOR, Michael A. DE JEU, Richard A. M. TEDESCO, Marco DEMIRCAN, M. THEPAUT, Jean-Noel DERKSEN, C. THIAW, Wassila M. DIAMOND, Howard J. THOMPSON, Philip DLUGOKENCKY, Ed J. THORNE, Peter W. DOHAN, Kathleen TIMMERMANS, M. L. DOLMAN, A. Johannes TOBIN, Skie DORIGO, Wouter A. TOOLE, J. DROZDOV, D. S. TRACHTE, Katja DUGUAY, Claude TREWIN, Blair C. DUTTON, Ellsworth TRIGO, Ricardo M. DUTTON, Geoff S. TROTMAN, Adrian ELKINS, James W. TUCKER, C. J. EPSTEIN, H. E. ULUPINAR, Yusuf FAMIGLIETTI, James S. WAL, Roderik S. W. FANTON D'ANDON, Odile Hembise WERF, G. R. FEELY, Richard A. VAUTARD, Robert FEKETE, Balazs M. VOTAW, Gary FENIMORE, Chris WAGNER, Wolfgang W. FERNANDEZ-PRIETO, D. WAHR, John FIELDS, Erik WALKER, D. A. FIOLETOV, Vitali WALSH, J. 2012 https://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/141212 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12278/141212 https://doi.org/10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1 en eng American Meteorological Society 0003-0007 https://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/141212 doi:10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ Planète et Univers [physics]/Sciences de la Terre/Océanographie Article de revue 2012 ftoskarbordeaux https://doi.org/20.500.12278/141212 https://doi.org/10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1 2022-09-13T22:31:25Z Large-scale climate patterns influenced temperature and weather patterns around the globe in 2011. In particular, a moderate-to-strong La Nina at the beginning of the year dissipated during boreal spring but reemerged during fall. The phenomenon contributed to historical droughts in East Africa, the southern United States, and northern Mexico, as well the wettest two-year period (2010-11) on record for Australia, particularly remarkable as this follows a decade-long dry period. Precipitation patterns in South America were also influenced by La Nina. Heavy rain in Rio de Janeiro in January triggered the country's worst floods and landslides in Brazil's history. The 2011 combined average temperature across global land and ocean surfaces was the coolest since 2008, but was also among the 15 warmest years on record and above the 1981-2010 average. The global sea surface temperature cooled by 0.1 degrees C from 2010 to 2011, associated with cooling influences of La Nina. Global integrals of upper ocean heat content for 2011 were higher than for all prior years, demonstrating the Earth's dominant role of the oceans in the Earth's energy budget. In the upper atmosphere, tropical stratospheric temperatures were anomalously warm, while polar temperatures were anomalously cold. This led to large springtime stratospheric ozone reductions in polar latitudes in both hemispheres. Ozone concentrations in the Arctic stratosphere during March were the lowest for that period since satellite records began in 1979. An extensive, deep, and persistent ozone hole over the Antarctic in September indicates that the recovery to pre-1980 conditions is proceeding very slowly. Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations increased by 2.10 ppm in 2011, and exceeded 390 ppm for the first time since instrumental records began. Other greenhouse gases also continued to rise in concentration and the combined effect now represents a 30% increase in radiative forcing over a 1990 baseline. Most ozone depleting substances continued to fall. The global ... Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Arctic OSKAR Bordeaux (Open Science Knowledge ARchive) Antarctic Arctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection OSKAR Bordeaux (Open Science Knowledge ARchive)
op_collection_id ftoskarbordeaux
language English
topic Planète et Univers [physics]/Sciences de la Terre/Océanographie
spellingShingle Planète et Univers [physics]/Sciences de la Terre/Océanographie
CRETAUX, Jean-Francois
SWEET, William
CROUCH, Jake
TAKAHASHI, Taro
CUNNINGHAM, Stuart A.
TAYLOR, Michael A.
DE JEU, Richard A. M.
TEDESCO, Marco
DEMIRCAN, M.
THEPAUT, Jean-Noel
DERKSEN, C.
THIAW, Wassila M.
DIAMOND, Howard J.
THOMPSON, Philip
DLUGOKENCKY, Ed J.
THORNE, Peter W.
DOHAN, Kathleen
TIMMERMANS, M. L.
DOLMAN, A. Johannes
TOBIN, Skie
DORIGO, Wouter A.
TOOLE, J.
DROZDOV, D. S.
TRACHTE, Katja
DUGUAY, Claude
TREWIN, Blair C.
DUTTON, Ellsworth
TRIGO, Ricardo M.
DUTTON, Geoff S.
TROTMAN, Adrian
ELKINS, James W.
TUCKER, C. J.
EPSTEIN, H. E.
ULUPINAR, Yusuf
FAMIGLIETTI, James S.
WAL, Roderik S. W.
FANTON D'ANDON, Odile Hembise
WERF, G. R.
FEELY, Richard A.
VAUTARD, Robert
FEKETE, Balazs M.
VOTAW, Gary
FENIMORE, Chris
WAGNER, Wolfgang W.
FERNANDEZ-PRIETO, D.
WAHR, John
FIELDS, Erik
WALKER, D. A.
FIOLETOV, Vitali
WALSH, J.
STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
topic_facet Planète et Univers [physics]/Sciences de la Terre/Océanographie
description Large-scale climate patterns influenced temperature and weather patterns around the globe in 2011. In particular, a moderate-to-strong La Nina at the beginning of the year dissipated during boreal spring but reemerged during fall. The phenomenon contributed to historical droughts in East Africa, the southern United States, and northern Mexico, as well the wettest two-year period (2010-11) on record for Australia, particularly remarkable as this follows a decade-long dry period. Precipitation patterns in South America were also influenced by La Nina. Heavy rain in Rio de Janeiro in January triggered the country's worst floods and landslides in Brazil's history. The 2011 combined average temperature across global land and ocean surfaces was the coolest since 2008, but was also among the 15 warmest years on record and above the 1981-2010 average. The global sea surface temperature cooled by 0.1 degrees C from 2010 to 2011, associated with cooling influences of La Nina. Global integrals of upper ocean heat content for 2011 were higher than for all prior years, demonstrating the Earth's dominant role of the oceans in the Earth's energy budget. In the upper atmosphere, tropical stratospheric temperatures were anomalously warm, while polar temperatures were anomalously cold. This led to large springtime stratospheric ozone reductions in polar latitudes in both hemispheres. Ozone concentrations in the Arctic stratosphere during March were the lowest for that period since satellite records began in 1979. An extensive, deep, and persistent ozone hole over the Antarctic in September indicates that the recovery to pre-1980 conditions is proceeding very slowly. Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations increased by 2.10 ppm in 2011, and exceeded 390 ppm for the first time since instrumental records began. Other greenhouse gases also continued to rise in concentration and the combined effect now represents a 30% increase in radiative forcing over a 1990 baseline. Most ozone depleting substances continued to fall. The global ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author CRETAUX, Jean-Francois
SWEET, William
CROUCH, Jake
TAKAHASHI, Taro
CUNNINGHAM, Stuart A.
TAYLOR, Michael A.
DE JEU, Richard A. M.
TEDESCO, Marco
DEMIRCAN, M.
THEPAUT, Jean-Noel
DERKSEN, C.
THIAW, Wassila M.
DIAMOND, Howard J.
THOMPSON, Philip
DLUGOKENCKY, Ed J.
THORNE, Peter W.
DOHAN, Kathleen
TIMMERMANS, M. L.
DOLMAN, A. Johannes
TOBIN, Skie
DORIGO, Wouter A.
TOOLE, J.
DROZDOV, D. S.
TRACHTE, Katja
DUGUAY, Claude
TREWIN, Blair C.
DUTTON, Ellsworth
TRIGO, Ricardo M.
DUTTON, Geoff S.
TROTMAN, Adrian
ELKINS, James W.
TUCKER, C. J.
EPSTEIN, H. E.
ULUPINAR, Yusuf
FAMIGLIETTI, James S.
WAL, Roderik S. W.
FANTON D'ANDON, Odile Hembise
WERF, G. R.
FEELY, Richard A.
VAUTARD, Robert
FEKETE, Balazs M.
VOTAW, Gary
FENIMORE, Chris
WAGNER, Wolfgang W.
FERNANDEZ-PRIETO, D.
WAHR, John
FIELDS, Erik
WALKER, D. A.
FIOLETOV, Vitali
WALSH, J.
author_facet CRETAUX, Jean-Francois
SWEET, William
CROUCH, Jake
TAKAHASHI, Taro
CUNNINGHAM, Stuart A.
TAYLOR, Michael A.
DE JEU, Richard A. M.
TEDESCO, Marco
DEMIRCAN, M.
THEPAUT, Jean-Noel
DERKSEN, C.
THIAW, Wassila M.
DIAMOND, Howard J.
THOMPSON, Philip
DLUGOKENCKY, Ed J.
THORNE, Peter W.
DOHAN, Kathleen
TIMMERMANS, M. L.
DOLMAN, A. Johannes
TOBIN, Skie
DORIGO, Wouter A.
TOOLE, J.
DROZDOV, D. S.
TRACHTE, Katja
DUGUAY, Claude
TREWIN, Blair C.
DUTTON, Ellsworth
TRIGO, Ricardo M.
DUTTON, Geoff S.
TROTMAN, Adrian
ELKINS, James W.
TUCKER, C. J.
EPSTEIN, H. E.
ULUPINAR, Yusuf
FAMIGLIETTI, James S.
WAL, Roderik S. W.
FANTON D'ANDON, Odile Hembise
WERF, G. R.
FEELY, Richard A.
VAUTARD, Robert
FEKETE, Balazs M.
VOTAW, Gary
FENIMORE, Chris
WAGNER, Wolfgang W.
FERNANDEZ-PRIETO, D.
WAHR, John
FIELDS, Erik
WALKER, D. A.
FIOLETOV, Vitali
WALSH, J.
author_sort CRETAUX, Jean-Francois
title STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
title_short STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
title_full STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
title_fullStr STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
title_full_unstemmed STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2011 Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Vol. 93, No. 7, July 2012
title_sort state of the climate in 2011 special supplement to the bulletin of the american meteorological society vol. 93, no. 7, july 2012
publisher American Meteorological Society
publishDate 2012
url https://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/141212
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12278/141212
https://doi.org/10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
op_relation 0003-0007
https://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/141212
doi:10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12278/141212
https://doi.org/10.1175/2012BAMSStateoftheClimate.1
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