If you live in a city where a meteorologist mentions an "La Niña" or "El Niño" it is important to distinguish the difference ...
After months of teasing, a La Niña winter has finally started – but we don’t blame you if you haven’t noticed.
also typical of La Niña. Wetter than normal conditions likely continue in the Northwest and Midwest and parts of the Northeast through March. More precipitation coupled with colder weather could ...
Overall, not surprisingly, folks wanting an early spring better head south, which is already seeing springlike signs.
Spring warmth that is projected for March and April means we need to be ready for the possibility of an active start to the ...
We are halfway through winter and after an exceptionally warm start, North America’s winter is transitioning toward more ...
La Niña has arrived and is likely to be impacting the winter season, including how much snow and rain New England might see ...
La Niña has arrived, and its global ripple effects are already taking shape. Cooler-than-average sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific, combined with stronger trade winds, are ...
also typical of La Niña. Wetter than normal conditions likely continue in the Northwest and Midwest and parts of the Northeast through March. More precipitation coupled with colder weather could ...
A La Niña climate pattern has officially ... states along the East Coast and the Northeast up to Maine. Which Regions Could Face Cool, Wet Weather? The Pacific Northwest, Midwest and Northeast ...
That tends to lower average global temperatures, while also encouraging weather extremes that ... spate of wildfires across the Northeast. The latest episode of La Niña emerged in December ...