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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 5 page paper that provides an overview of El Nino and La Nina. Global impacts are measured on a year by year basis since 1991. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFsci007.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
2000-01, 2007-08, 2010-11. B. For each of those years listed describe the associated impact for a specific place in North America. Be specific in the type of impact
and how it is measured. 1. 1991-92: EN The emergence of a moderately strong El Nino pattern in 1991 - 1992 was responsible for an uncommonly cold winter in
Northern Arizona, with a higher than average degree of winter precipitation associated also with colder temperatures (Reynolds et al., 2003). 2. 1994-95: EN In 1994 - 1995,
California endured the deadliest swath of winter storms in the history of the state (Reynolds et al., 2003). The storms occurred as the result of a particularly potent El Nino
pattern, and during the period between January and March of 1995, excessive precipitation and winter runoff brought about catastrophic flooding and mudslides, resulting in a total of 1.95 billion US
dollars in damage (Reynolds et al., 2003). 3. 1995-96: LN La Nina weather patterns are typically associated with drought conditions for the United States, but the 1995
- 1996 La Nina was an exception, perhaps because it was a relatively weak pattern only briefly emerging between two El Nino patterns. Steamboat Springs, Colorado, a ski resort town,
experienced a near record snowfall of 448 inches as early as August; typically, snow doesnt even begin to fall in the region until September (Ross, 2010). 4. 1997-98:
EN As a result of the warm water surface temperatures stemming from 1997 - 1998s strong El Nino pattern, South Florida experienced a swath of winter storms that included
a number of deadly tornados and water spouts (Suplee, 2011). Records indicate that global damage from these storm systems resulted in as much as 33 billion US dollars in damages
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