La Niña conditions finally arrived last month, and for us powder hounds, that’s big news. The tropics might be thousands of miles away, but shifts in the Pacific’s sea surface temperatures can ...
It’s official: a weak La Niña came into fruition in late December and is expected, with significant uncertainty, to last until sometime between February and April, the U.S. National Oceanic and ...
After months of forecasts, La Niña has officially developed, meaning drier and warmer weather for the remaining winter months in South Carolina. Then again, maybe not. Although the weather ...
NOAA has declared a much-anticipated La Niña climate pattern to be underway, but the event is a bit unusual, as regions of the world have been experiencing La Niña-like conditions for months.
After a bit of a waiting game, La Niña conditions have finally materialized, characterized by below-average ocean temperatures in the Pacific, according to the Climate Prediction Center.
A La Nina pattern could suggest that our "winter temperatures" and wet conditions that we have been experiencing might not be long lasting as we get later into the winter season. However ...
First predicted to form last summer, climate troublemaker La Niña has developed at last, federal climate scientists announced Thursday morning. However, the pattern is a weak one, and isn't ...
StormTRACKER meteorologist Lydia Blume explains what La Niña conditions are and what that means for the northern Plains for the rest of the winter in terms of temperatures and precipitation.