Testing a relationship: Arctic warming and China's summer monsoon
(Phys.org) —In the late 1970s, eastern China experienced a shift in
the summer monsoon circulation causing a "North-drought/South-flood"
trend. In two related studies, researchers at Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory and China Meteorological Administration found a climate
linkage that explains this phenomenon, and they tested six global
climate models to see if they captured it. The observed rainfall trend
coincides with rising Arctic temperature and reduced Arctic sea ice in
the last three decades. While the atmospheric linkage between
interdecadal summer precipitation changes in China and the Arctic spring
warming can be established from observations, only one climate model
was able to simulate both the recent decadal trends as well as their
linkages. The two studies showed the importance of Arctic and mid- to
high-latitude warming on the long-term variability of the East Asian
summer monsoon.
http://phys.org/news/2013-10-relationship-arctic-china-summer-monsoon.html#nwlt
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