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The latest forecast indicates La Niña conditions could return just in time for winter despite El Niño-Southern ...
Both of these cycles have longstanding climate patterns. Scientists stunned after satellite data unveils new information ...
El Niño phases typically result in fewer TCs in the North Atlantic Ocean compared to La Niña phases, and TC intensity increases during an El Niño phase while landfall probability increases in a ...
El Niño brings warm waters to the eastern Pacific; La Niña brings cool waters there. These changes disrupt rainfall, storms, and temperatures worldwide -- causing floods, droughts, and shifts in ...
The latest analysis from the National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center revealed that La Niña is no more.
While it’s too early to guarantee El Niño won’t return next winter (2025-2026), if we ruled it out, then parts of the country that are continuing to see expanding drought like the Southwest ...
Conventional knowledge in California about whether significant rainfall is in store for any given year has largely been tied up in the climate patterns of El Niño and La Niña. But a new study ...
El Niño and La Niña are climate phenomena that are generally associated with wetter and drier winter conditions in the Southwestern United States, respectively. In 2023, however, a La Niña year proved ...
It’s official: a weak La Niña came into fruition in late December and is expected, with significant uncertainty, to last until sometime between February and April, the U.S. National Oceanic and ...
New modeling research has shown that the natural global climate phenomena known as El Niño and its cold counterpart, La Niña, have been occurring for the last 250 million years.
El Niño and La Niña are powerful weather events that affect the U.S. Here's the difference and what La Niña could mean for Arizona weather this year.