I was just thinking about the current Texas drought and what similarities it has with the 'dust bowl' event of the 1930s over there.
I think the Pacific was generally on the cool side back then, whilst the Atlantic was on the warm side (cold PDO, warm AMO).
So I'm wondering, what were the 1930's winters like for the UK?
Here is a relevant article extract (source is not given on the blog where it was posted):
The Dust Bowl - What Caused the Dust Bowl in the US Midwest in the 1930's?
...
Ocean Temperatures in the 1930's Were Unstable
Scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center recently used a computer model and satellite data to examine climate over the past century. In the study, cooler than normal tropical Pacific Ocean temperatures and warmer than normal tropical Atlantic Ocean temperatures created ideal drought conditions due to the unstable sea surface temperatures. The result was dry air and high temperatures in the Midwest from about 1931 to 1939.
...
Changes in sea surface temperatures create shifts in weather patterns. One way is by changing the patterns in the jet stream. In the 1930's, the jet stream was weakened causing the normally moisture rich air from the Gulf of Mexico to become drier. Low level winds further reduced the normal supply of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico and reduced rainfall throughout the US Midwest.
The Jet Stream Changed Course.
The jet stream normally flows west over the Gulf of Mexico and turns northward pulling up moisture and dumping rain onto the Great Plains. As the jet stream weakened and changed course, it traveled farther south than normal starving the Midwest of precious rain.
Such changes upstream from us would have had some effect on our own dominant patterns - am I right?
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