Saturday, December 6, 2014

California's drought is worst for 1,200 years - but worse is to come, warn scientists

California's drought is worst for 1,200 years - but worse is to come, warn scientists

·        Current short-term drought  worse than any previous span of consecutive years of drought without reprieve
·        It comes as California is experiencing a wet start to December that could result in 12-inches (30 cm) of rain and severe snow over next two weeks
·        Experts say there is 'no doubt' we are entering a new era where humans have changed the climate system


California's three year drought is the worst seen for over 1200 years, researchers have found.
Scientists looking at the cumulative effects of temperature, low precipitation and other factors said that it all adds up to the worst conditions in more than a millennium.
The also claim that worse could be to come, with droughts almost certain to occur again in the future. 
Scroll down for video 
The dry bed of the Stevens Creek Reservoir in California: A combination of record high temperatures and sparse rainfall during California'sthree-year drought have produced the worst conditions in 1,200 years.
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The dry bed of the Stevens Creek Reservoir in California: A combination of record high temperatures and sparse rainfall during California'sthree-year drought have produced the worst conditions in 1,200 years.

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A combination of record high temperatures and sparse rainfall during California's three-year drought have produced the worst conditions in 1,200 years, according to a study accepted for publication by the American Geophysical Union (AGU). 
'The current California drought is exceptionally severe in the context of at least the last millennium and is driven by reduced though not unprecedented precipitation and record high temperatures,' the report's authors said in the study released late Thursday.
The study by the University of Minnesota and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution said that warm, dry conditions have shrunk the supply of surface water from reservoirs, streams and the Sierra Nevada snowpack in the state, even as demand from people and farms has gone up, resulting in unprecedented scarcity. 
Daniel Griffin, an assistant professor in the Department of Geography, Environment and Society at the University of Minnesota, and Kevin Anchukaitis, an assistant scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, asked the question, 'How unusual is the ongoing California drought?' and collected new tree-ring samples from blue oak trees in southern and central California. 


'California's old blue oaks are as close to nature's rain gauges as we get,' says Griffin. 
'They thrive in some of the driest environments where trees can grow in California.' 
These trees are particularly sensitive to moisture changes and their tree rings display moisture fluctuations vividly.
'We were genuinely surprised at the result,' says Griffin, a NOAA Climate & Global Change Fellow and former WHOI postdoctoral scholar.
'This is California - drought happens. 
'Time and again, the most common result in tree-ring studies is that drought episodes in the past were more extreme than those of more recent eras. 
'This time, however, the result was different.
'One thing is clear, drought is going to continue to happen. 
'This is the kind of thing we get to see in the future.'
The low water level of California's Lake Kaweah, February 5, 2014. 

Now in its third straight year of unprecedented drought, California is experiencing its driest year on record, dating back 119 years and possible the worst in the past 500 years.
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The low water level of California's Lake Kaweah, February 5, 2014. Now in its third straight year of unprecedented drought, California is experiencing its driest year on record, dating back 119 years and possible the worst in the past 500 years.
Stanford scientists explain the state of California's drought
While there is good evidence of past sustained, multi-decadal droughts or so-called 'megadroughts'' in California, the authors say those past episodes were probably punctuated by occasional wet years, even if the cumulative effect over decades was one of overall drying. 
The current short-term drought appears to be worse than any previous span of consecutive years of drought without reprieve.
It comes as California is experiencing a wet start to December that could result in 12-inches (30 cm) of rain and yards (meters) of snow over the next two weeks, according to the forecasting service Accuweather.
In October, the AGU published a study by NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City saying that the 1934 U.S. drought, which caused the upheaval known as the Dust Bowl, was the worst in 1,000 years.
With an exceptionally wet winter, parts of California might emerge from the drought this year. 'But there is no doubt,' cautions Anchukaitis, 'that we are entering a new era where human-wrought changes to the climate system will become important for determining the severity of droughts and their consequences for coupled human and natural systems.' 


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

UNTIL THE TRAITOR GOVENOR OF CALIFORNIA JERRY BROWN GETS OFF HIS CABAL ASS AND DEMANDS THE HAARP AND CHEMTRAILS ARE TAKEN DOWN ITS ONLY GOING TO GET MUCH WORSE..... I HEAR THERE A REWARD FROM AN ANON DONOR TO THOSE THAT CAN PROVE THEY CAN TAKE THESE 2 WEAPONS OUT..... GOVENOR BROWN IF YOU REALLY ARE A GOVENOR.....GET BUSY YOU SON-OF-A-BITCH......

Anonymous said...

Neil Keenan says there is a hand held device that will take these planes down. We need it now. More reports out of Arizona, tested-strontium,barium and aluminum.

Anonymous said...

Why don't these 'post doctoral' researchers make mention of the numerous weather anomalies obviously evidenced on several you tube clips showing something projected into rotating storm systems a couple hundred miles out from northwest coast of California. Somehow, it breaks up the momentum, rendering it much weakened and unable to reach 'inland'. Storm after storm is prevented from ever reaching the coast.

This is just another manipulated punative punishment by members of club sociopath who want to stick it to the farmers and growers under the guise of...you guessed it, climate change/global warming etc.

'They' are currently advocating that it takes to much water to grow almonds, and that they should be grown elswhere. Nevermind that, growing, and eating almonds is a healthier alternative than everyone taking PROZAC and every other drug big PHARMA has to offer, then urinating it into the collective wastewater, which in turn has to be chemically treated.

It is a conspiracy, I just received my new 'mandatory emergency regulations' notice along with complimentary water rate hike.


I would arrest the weather warfare culprits myself if I just knew where and when to find them.

This next statement only applies to those it concerns.
All of you members of the sick side of the Dark vs. Light equation are PURE EVIL!
I've got NO use for any of you and I'm not in the mood to exert myself to send you "Love and Light", I'm not that good or that type.

I have to work real hard, and overtime to keep my 'Rambo' spirit in PC check.
The Prozac in the water supply has not taken the edge off me.
I am an angry mature female filled with righteous indignation, waiting for all of you to self destruct.

Now, you wizards go get yourselves more rain barrels and non-plastic refillable water bottles, and please move away from food growing areas, preferably to Death Valley or further.
Otherwise, do something to help hunt down and expose the weather mechanics in 'the act'.

Research is fine as long as it is truthful, and tells all of it.

If not, hand over your grant money and let's use it to start building LARGE reverse osmosis plants on the coast, and de-salinate the ocean water to replace the natural order of things that is being hijacked from us.