|
|
NOAA
ISSUES UPDATE TO 2004-05 WINTER OUTLOOK: December, January,
February Climate Outlook
With
winter approaching, NOAA issued its final U.S. winter outlook
for December 2004 through February 2005. Forecasters at the
NOAA Climate Prediction Center predict an enhanced likelihood
of cooler-than-average temperatures in much of the East, Middle
Atlantic and South; warmer-than-average temperatures in Alaska,
Hawaii and the West; wetter-than-average conditions from New
Mexico through Texas to Louisiana; and drier-than-average
conditions over the Ohio Valley and the Northwest for this
winter. The forecast implies possible improvement in drought
conditions in limited portions of the Southwest and possible
worsening dryness in the Northwest and Ohio Valley regions.
Much of the focus of what lies behind the forecast is the
continuation of a weak El Niño event in the tropical
Pacific, which NOAA scientists are closely monitoring.
Full
Story Inside
|
|
|
|
NOAA
REPORTS DRY CONDITIONS RETURN IN THE EAST, RECORD WETNESS IN
PARTS OF THE WEST, ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES IN THE SOUTH
Last month, the contiguous United States experienced its eighth
wettest October on record, with wetter-than-average conditions
across much of the nation, except the East Coast, according
to NOAA scientists.Overall, NOAA reported, temperatures and
precipitation were above average across the country in October.
|
|
News
Story Archive - Home
page stories 1999 - Present |
|
UNITED
STATES ASKS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TO ADOPT COLLABORATIVE PLAN
TO MANAGE SHARKS; NOAA Administrator Outlines Proposal that
Mirrors U.S. Fishing Rules — The United States
asked the international community to start managing shark populations
in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Gulf of Mexico. The proposal
asks other shark fishing nations to adopt procedures like those
followed by U.S. fishermen and resource managers. |
|
NOAA
Magazine
- The stories behind the headlines.
NOAA’s
Homeland Security Capabilities Continue to Strengthen and
Expand |
|
NOAA
OFFERS NEW WEB SITE ON SOCIAL SCIENCE TOOLS FOR MARINE PROTECTED
AREAS — NOAA launched a new Web site on research
techniques for examining the "human dimensions" of
marine and coastal resource management. The "Social Science
Tools and Methods for Marine Protected Areas Management"
Web site gives basic information about social science concepts
and methods, and guides managers in determining the appropriate
tools to address their specific issues. |
|
AccessNOAA
- NOAA Employees Make a Difference |
|
|
|
|
Weather
Watches, warnings, floods, hurricanes, Weather Radio...
|
Ocean
Coral reefs, tides, currents, buoys, marine sanctuaries, estuaries,
diving, spills
|
Satellites
Real-time imagery, environmental, geostationary and polar
satellites
|
Fisheries
Protecting marine mammals, sea turtles, habitats, statistics,
economics,
enforcement
|
Climate
El Niño & La Niña, global warming, drought,
climate prediction, archived weather data, paleoclimatology
|
Research
Environmental labs, air quality,
atmospheric processes, climate and
human interactions
|
Coasts
Coastal services, products, Great Lakes, coastal zone management
|
Charting
& Navigation
Nautical & navigational charts, mapping, remote sensing,
safe navigation
|
|
|
|