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- An abnormal warming of surface ocean waters in the eastern tropical
Pacific
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- Winds push the surface water toward the west.
- As the water moves west it heats up even more because it's exposed
longer to the sun.
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- Meanwhile in the eastern Pacific along the coast of South America an upwelling
occurs.
- Upwelling is the term used to describe when deeper colder water from
the bottom of the ocean moves up toward the surface away from the
shore.
- This nutrient-rich water is responsible for supporting the large fish
population commonly found in this area.
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- Because the wind push surface water westward toward Indonesia, the sea
level is roughly half a meter higher in the western Pacific than in the
east.
- So you have warmer, deeper waters in the western Pacific and cooler,
shallower waters in the east near the coast of South America.
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- The different water temperatures of these areas effects the types of
weather these two regions experience.
- In the east the cool water cools the air above it, and the air becomes
too dense to rise to produce clouds and rain.
- In the western Pacific the air is heated by the water below it,
increasing the buoyancy of the lower atmosphere thus increasing the
likelihood of rain.
- This is why heavy rain storms are typical near Indonesia while Peru is
relatively dry.
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- El Nino happens when weakening trade winds (which sometimes even reverse
direction) allow the warmer water from the western Pacific to flow
toward the east.
- This flattens out the sea level, builds up warm surface water off the
coast of South America, and increases the temperature of the water in
the eastern Pacific.
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- The deeper, warmer water in the east limits the amount of nutrient-rich
deep water normally surfaced by the upwelling process.
- Since fish can no longer access this rich food source, many of them die
off.
- The different water temperatures tend to change the weather of the
region.
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- What happens to the ocean also affects the atmosphere.
- Tropical thunderstorms are fueled by hot, humid air over the oceans.
- The hotter the air, the stronger and bigger the thunderstorms.
- As the Pacific's warmest water spreads eastward, the biggest
thunderstorms move with it.
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- The clouds and rainstorms associated with warm ocean waters also shift
toward the east.
- So, rains which normally would fall over the tropical rain forests of
Indonesia start falling over the deserts of Peru, causing forest fires
and drought in the western Pacific and flooding in South America.
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- The Earth's atmosphere responds to the heating of El Niņo by producing
patterns of high and low pressure which can have a profound impact on
weather far away from the equatorial Pacific.
- For instance, higher temperatures in western Canada and the upper
plains of the United States, colder temperatures in the southern United
States. The east coast of southern Africa often experiences drought
during El Nino.
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- http://kids.earth.nasa.gov/archive/nino/
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