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La Niña and its impacts: Facts and speculation
Glantz, M.H. (Ed.) (2002). La Niña and its impacts: Facts and speculation. United Nations University Press: Tokyo. ISBN 92-808-1071-5. 271 pp.

Available in  Author 
    VLIZ: Climatology and meteorology MET.43 [103848]

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

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  • Glantz, M.H., editor

Abstract
    La Niña and Its Impacts is based on a meeting of researchers, forecasters, and users of La Niña forecasts, held at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. La Niña, the result of air-sea interaction, can briefly be described as the appearance of cold surface water in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean. While people around the globe have become familiar with El Niño and its impacts, its counterpart, La Niña, is not so well known. Researchers at this La Niña Summit indicated that for many societies La Niña events can be as devastating as those of El Niño. The overriding purpose of the Summit was to draw attention to the importance of improving our understanding of the La Niña phenomenon, identifying what is known, what is not yet known, and what societies need to know in order to prepare for La Niña’s impacts. This volume provides the current state of the science of forecasting La Niña as well as case studies of La Niña impacts around the world and in different economic sectors. La Niña and Its Impacts presents updated La Niña Summit papers to introduce the reader to La Niña and offers a glimpse of the state of scientific knowledge about cold events and their impacts in developing as well as industrialized societies.

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