The Atlantic Ocean is cooling down at a record speed and scientists don’t know why

Now, oceans are evidently susceptible to many weather changes throughout the year. Typically during this time, the Atlantic’s temperatures are expected to rise in part because of human-caused climate change, but in another part because of a complex weather pattern called El Niño.

 

 

El Niño refers to a warming of the ocean surface or above-average hotter temperatures in the ocean.

The Atlantic Ocean has been setting new heat records since March 2023, and one large reason for this is an especially strong El Niño that passed during 2023 and 2024.

But it now seems that the Atlantic’s El Niño is likely to be replaced by its counterpart La Niña, which is when ocean temperatures are unusually cold a little too early.

Both these weather patterns are incredibly complex and are susceptible to trade winds, solar heating, and rainfall which makes them difficult to predict.

However, the sudden shift in the Atlantic’s temperatures and its presumed transition into La Niña — which is typically predicted to start in September — has experts quite baffled.

“We’ve gone through the list of possible mechanisms, and nothing checks the box so far,” said Frans Philip Tuchen, a postdoctoral student at the University of Miami, to the New Scientist.

These unprecedented changes are evidently a cause for concern for the environment.

The NOAA says that changes in the El Niño and La Niña weather patterns could impact rainfall in surrounding continents, and that Atlantic Niños have been shown to increase the likelihood of hurricanes near the Cape Verde islands.

According to Michael McPhaden at NOAA, it could also influence the ocean’s cycles – with the Atlantic potentially delaying the Pacific Ocean’s La Niña in ‘a tug of war’ as the Pacific ‘tries to cool itself and the Atlantic tries to warm it’.

So far, whether or not the Atlantic is fully developing into La Niña is still being monitored.

If it does, then predictions on the climate for surrounding areas could change for the remainder of the year.

Related Posts

THE K9 WOULDN’T LEAVE HIS SIDE—EVEN AT THE FUNERAL

I didn’t think I’d cry that hard. Not in front of all those people. But when Rex—my uncle’s retired K9 partner—jumped onto the casket, something broke in…

I Asked My Neighbor to Clean Up After She Used My BBQ — The Next Day She Stuck Rules for My Property on My Door and Demanded I Follow Them

I didn’t think much of it. Just being neighborly, right? Well, I was very, very wrong. One weekend, my husband, David, and I decided to take our…

AT 60, I FOUND LOVE AGAIN 9 YEARS AFTER LOSING MY HUSBAND – AT THE WEDDING, MY LATE HUSBAND’S BROTHER STOOD UP AND YELLED, “I OBJECT!”

That moment shifted something inside me. I realized I still had a purpose. Over the next few years, I began rebuilding my life. I painted, I traveled,…

Elon Musk’s shocking photo sparks wild rumors

The photo, initially shared on X (formerly Twitter), turned out to be a manipulated image. Despite confirmation from fact-checkers and media outlets that the picture was altered,…

Why Nobody Should Be Eating Salmon Anymore

Characteristics of salmon Salmon are migratory fish, living in both fresh and salt water environments. They are born in freshwater rivers, move to the ocean to mature…

My Husband Blamed Me When Our Joint Account Overdrafted – I Was Shocked to Find Out the Real Reason Posted onApril 9, 2025 ByadminNo Commentson My Husband Blamed Me When Our Joint Account Overdrafted – I Was Shocked to Find Out the Real Reason

Still locked out of the account, I texted him. “Hey, do you know why the joint account overdrafted?” The reply came almost immediately. “Yarn. Seriously, Amy. All…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *