It seems that the clouds have started to shift towards the poles, causing some interesting changes in the tropics.
Brocken Inaglory/WikimediaRecent satellite data shows that clouds have been retreating toward the poles, and that they’re also growing higher. Find out what these changes mean for your cloud watching afternoons!
If you are a weather addict like me, one of life’s simple pleasures is cloud watching. (This one looks like a bunny. This one looks like a pony. That one looks like a cumulonimbus—get out the umbrellas!) Scientists have also been watching them, with decades of records from satellites.
Guess what! They’ve discovered that the clouds are shifty. Overall they have been retreating toward the poles. A new paper published in Nature examines weather satellite data between 1983 and 2009. It shows that the cloud cover in the middle latitudes (the U.S., Europe, and most of Asia) is heading away from the equators. Similarly, the middle latitude storm tracks that bring rainfall have been withdrawing north and south as well. If you enjoy clear, sunny skies and not mowing the lawn very often, this is great news. If you fret that the desert is coming to get you, it’s time to move along.
This isn’t the only change that has been happening. The satellites are also showing that cloud tops are growing higher. In other words, the clouds are not only running away, they are piling up on each other in the retreat.
This finding only confirms other scientific findings that weather patterns have shifted over the last thirty-five years. In particular, the tropics have grown. Scientists have shown since 2007 that the three tropical weather zones—the jungles, savannas/monsoon lands, and deserts—have expanded by between 2° and 4.8° latitude, roughly 172 miles toward the poles. This is part of Earth’s overall warming pattern over the past century.
As the tropical weather expands, the sub-tropical weather shifts as well. Here in the US, that means the middle latitude clouds have been migrating north like a flock of birds.
Of course, it’s all very slow, taking decades. So get your cloud watching in while you can—that one over there looks like a duckbill platypus.
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