By Shanna Hanbury It’s official: a weak La Niña came into fruition in late December and is expected, with significant ...
These weeks-long precipitation pauses are a normal part of winter for this region. Over the past 20 years, the average length ...
NOAA has declared that a La Niña is underway. This cool weather event is likely to be shorter and weaker than usual, but will ...
La Nina is the opposing end of the spectrum from El Nino, an oscillation between cooler and warmer than normal waters in the ...
Weather patterns across the U.S. and the world from October through December resembled patterns from previous La Niña events.
It is just the start of 2025, but the U.S. is already seeing extreme weather across the country, from the wildfires raging in ...
It's not great news for the Gulf Coast and other storm-prone regions: La Niña is associated with more tropical activity in ...
The Pacific Northwest, Midwest and Northeast are expected to face above-average precipitation, according to NOAA. States with ...
La Niña, the periodic cooling of Pacific Ocean waters, has finally arrived, but forecasters predict it is weak and unlikely to cause as many weather problems as typically seen.
El Niño and La Niña are two opposing climate conditions in the Pacific Ocean that affect the weather across the globe. Trade winds in the Pacific tend to blow from east to west, pushing warm ...
One likely contributor to warming since June 2023 is El ... Pacific Ocean. Over a period of months, the warming spreads to other regions of the world, where it can play havoc with sea-surface ...