Podcasts about North Atlantic oscillation

A weather phenomenon in the North Atlantic Ocean of fluctuations in the difference of atmospheric pressure at sea level between the Icelandic Low and the Azores High

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Best podcasts about North Atlantic oscillation

Latest podcast episodes about North Atlantic oscillation

To Etherea and Beyond
To Etherea and Beyond - Episode 70 - Phase Swell Drone

To Etherea and Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 120:00


This is Episode 70 of To Etherea and Beyond - Phase Swell Drone. The show broadcasts on Harrogate Community Radio at 9am this Sunday 3rd November and is then available via the station's Listen Again button, and everywhere else here: https://ssyncc.com/toethereaandbeyond The show features music by: Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Yoo Doo Right, Floating Points, Alex Stolze, Four Tet, Ben Lukas Boysen, Soft Blue Shimmer, Tanukichan, North Atlantic Oscillation, Akira Kosemura, Underworld, Libra Rising, 65daysofstatic, Hongza and The Black Dog. This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration

Let's Know Things
La Niña 2024

Let's Know Things

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 17:28


This week we talk about ENSO, El Niño, and attribution science.We also discuss climate change, natural disasters, and the trade winds.Recommended Book: Titanium Noir by Nick HarkawayTranscriptThe field of attribution science, sometimes referred to as "extreme event attribution," focuses on figuring out whether and to what degree a particular weather event—especially rare weather disasters—are attributable to climate change.Severe floods and tornadoes and hurricanes all happen from time to time, which is why such events are sometimes referred to as once in a decade or once in a century disasters: the right natural variables align in the right way, and you have a disaster that is rare to the point that it's only likely to happen once every 10 or 100 years, but such rare events still happen, and sometimes more frequently than those numbers would imply; they're not impossible. And they're not necessarily the result of climate change.Folks working in this space, which is a blend of meteorology and the rapidly evolving field of climate science, do their best to figure out what causes what, and how those odds might have been impacted by the shifts we're seeing in global average temperatures in particular, and the knock-on effects of that warming, like shifts in the global water cycle; both of which influence all sorts of other planetary variables.The most common means of achieving this end is to run simulations based on historical climate data and extrapolating those trend-lines forward, allowing for natural variation, but otherwise sticking with the range of normal fluctuations that would have been expected, had we not started to churn so much CO2 and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere beginning with the industrial revolution.So if we hadn't done the Industrial Revolution the way we did it, what would our global climate and weather systems look like? They have a bunch of models with different assumptions baked into them that they have running, and they can simulate conditions, today, based on those models, and compare them with the reality of how things actually are in the real world, a world in which we did start to burn fossil fuels at a frantic rate, with all the pros and cons of that decision aggregating into our current climactic circumstances.This comparison, between a baseline, non-climate-change-impacted Earth, and what we see happening on real Earth, allows us to gauge the different in likelihoods for various weather systems and increasingly even specific weather events, like massive floods or hurricanes.It also allows us to ascertain what elements of a disaster or system are more or less likely, or the same, compared to that baseline Earth; so maybe we look at a regional heat wave and discover that it was a rare event made more likely by climate change, but that the intensity of the heat wasn't impacted—as was the case with a heat wave in Russia in 2010; climate change made the heat wave more likely, but had such a heat wave occurred, despite its low likelihood, in that non-industrial revolution scenario, the heat would have been roughly the same intensity as it was in real life.Both components of this system, attributing events and patterns to climate change, and confirming that they were not impacted, that they were just run of the mill bad luck, the consequence of natural systems, are arguably important, as while the former provides data for folks wanting to predict future climate change-related outcomes, and provides some degree of ammunition for the argument that climate change is making these sorts of things worse, which helps put a price tag on not moving faster to shift away from fossil fuels, it's also vital that we understand how climate and weather systems work, in general, and that we are able to set proper expectations as to what will change and how, as the atmosphere's composition continues to change, while also understanding what will remain the same, what various regions around the world need to be prepared for in a vacuum, leaving climate change out of it, and how our global weather systems work on a granular level, so that as outside influences like climate change, but not limited to climate change, act upon them, we can make better predictions about how that will adjust or overhaul the practical reality for people and ecosystems impacted by them.What I'd like to talk about today is a natural weather phenomenon that is expected to return soon, and how this phenomenon might change our latent, global weather patterns, for the better, for the worse, and for the neutral, and in turn how it might be changed by the climactic adjustments we're tracking using these simulations.—The El Niño-Southern Oscillation, or ENSO phenomenon, is the monicker we've given to a collection of sea surface temperature and wind variations in the Pacific Ocean that, largely unpredictably, tweak the patterns of these systems from time to time, influenced by and influencing a large number of other, micro- and macro-scale systems around the world.Most directly, ENSO dictates how warm it will be across the tropics and subtropics, El Niño bringing warm waters to the surface of the relevant oceans and the Southern Oscillation referring to air pressure variations spanning the ocean between Tahiti and Darwin, Australia, low pressure tending to occur over warm bodies of water, and higher pressure over colder bodies of water.When the water in this part of the Pacific, the central and east-central equatorial pacific, is warmer, on the surface, that reduces atmospheric pressure thereabouts, which in turn reduces the strength of the Pacific trade winds. That reduction, among other things, decreases rainfall over parts of Australia, India, and Indonesia, while upping the same, while also stoking additional cyclone risk, in the tropical Pacific Ocean.Fundamental to understanding why this is a big deal is understanding that this tweak in water and atmospheric conditions causes low level surface trade winds, which usually blow from east to west, to either stop blowing or barely blow, or in some cases to reverse direction.If you think about how weather patterns form, determining everything from who gets rain and how much, to what temperatures are like in a given area—because those winds pull warm or cold air along with them as they pass over warmer or cooler parts of the planet, like mountains and glaciers, but also deserts and tropical rain forests—it becomes clear why this change-up is such a big deal.There's a neutral phase of this phenomenon that typically occur between warmer and colder phases, and during that neutral phase, we usually see other, similar systems that are interconnected and predicated on still other geographic and atmospheric variables, like the Pacific-North American teleconnection pattern, and the North Atlantic Oscillation, having more of an impact on global weather and water cycle patterns.When this system is in a warmer El Niño state, though, that tends to cause a lot of heat waves throughout tropical regions in particular, while also spiking global surface temperatures for around a year, with all the secondary consequences of suddenly jolting the global thermostat higher: melting glaciers and ice caps, increasing the range of disease-carrying pests, messing with planting seasons; things like that.The opposite side of this coin, La Niña, can also be quite disruptive though, its influence defined by cooler waters rising to the surface in that part of the Pacific, warmer waters headed westward where they have less influence on this component of the world's thermostat and weather machine, and that drop in water temperature in this part of the ocean tends to reset many of the dials that are turned up by El Niño, moderating some of the weather patterns that are amplified by those warmer waters and returning the trade winds to their normal settings, while also reducing global temperatures to what we might think of as their default.But the next La Niña phenomenon—which experts in this space say will likely arrive sometime in the next few months, June or July of 2024, marking a quick transition away from the record-setting El Niño system we've been living through since July of 2023, which has been designated the fourth most extreme in recorded history—this anticipated new La Niña setup will follow a truly intense opposite pattern, which means if it's not strong enough, it may not counteract all of the warming brought about by its precursor El Niño system, which means the next El Niño system could compound upon this outgoing one, in terms of its globe-heating effects.There are also concerns that, because of that strong El Niño, and it arriving at a period of human-caused warming—two forces raising the temperature on the thermostat simultaneously, basically—there's a chance that the moderating force of this La Niña might run up against an insurmountable variable adjustment, even if it is otherwise powerful enough; meaning, this ENSO phenomenon could contribute to a long term, even permanent increase in global temperatures because its warming effects are mirroring another, external warming effect caused by us and our greenhouse gas emissions.We don't know exactly what that would mean in practice and long-term, but it could lead to more. and more extreme versions of what we've seen this past year: namely a surge in weather disasters like extreme droughts and floods and wildfires that never really end; just bigger and bigger surges, combined with higher and higher temperatures.And again, that's possible even if the La Niña pattern that's set to arrive is of a normal, non-weak strength, because of how potent this outgoing El Niño has been, and because its effects may be compounded by climate change.If the new La Niña does prove potent enough to counteract this outgoing El Niño, that may help with short-term temperature changes, but we're then likely to see a substantially more severe hurricane season; which is normally what happens during these periods of change, La Niña conditions making hurricanes more likely, but it could be even more severe than usual because of lingering oceanic heat from the El Niño, which popped temperatures in the Atlantic to 2 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the average temperature from the past three decades—and oceanic heat is what powers hurricanes, informing how big and destructive they can become.Last year's Atlantic Ocean hurricane season was already above-average in terms of the number of hurricanes and their strength because of that heat, but the amalgamation of variable-tweaks inherent in a La Niña transition make hurricanes more likely, whatever the ocean's temperature, so the combination of, likely, more hurricanes, plus far warmer than usual oceanic temperatures, means more, but also potentially a lot more powerful, hurricanes this season.We've been watching these systems and transitions for a while now, and our science related to them—including our ability to predict what they're going to do, and how much—has gotten pretty good over the last few decades.But all of these systems and all of their variables are interconnected, each and every piece touching each and every other piece of the planet's cycles and ecosystems and compositions; so there's a lot we're not tracking, a lot we're not tracking with the resolution we'd need for it to be valuable in this regard, and a lot of entanglements and relationships we're not even aware of, yet.In particular, the impact that climate change is having on these systems, directly and indirectly, is a big question mark in all these computations.Yes, we understand all of this better than a few decades ago, and yes, our simulations and models have gotten pretty solid, and are getting better by the day as we develop better formulae and software, and deploy more fancy satellites and other tracking tools that allow us to keep tabs on the relevant variables in an up-to-the-second manner.But because of how complex all of this is, it's a truly chaotic jumble of systems, and because of how we're scrambling to play catch-up, the world changing around us faster than we're learning about those changes—these sorts of systems are evolving even as we come to understand how they work; so our most up to date information is always a little bit out of date, leaving us prone to new unknowns and larger shifts than we'd anticipated based on our existing data.Human-amplified climate change, then, is fiddling with all the knobs and switches, changing how these phenomena work right before our eyes, and each new system and cycle is part known, part complete surprise because of how even tiny changes can make huge differences when compounded by these spirals and cascades of cause and large-scale, multifaceted effect.In other words, we have a good sense of what we need to be worried about and watching for during this probable upcoming transition, and we maybe have some things to look forward to, alongside a few other things to worry about and prepare for.We'll also be watching to see how much global temperatures come down, as that will tell us to what degree this outgoing El Niño has been tweaking those temperatures, and to what degree climate change is to blame for the disconcerting numbers we've been seeing in this regard.But we'll also be watching to see how everything is being amplified and compounded by all of these interconnected effects, as it may be, still allowing for ups and downs and other variations year to year, that these patterns, and others like them, will lead to wider, broader, more dramatic swings for the foreseeable future because of all those changes, natural and human-caused.Show Noteshttps://www.reuters.com/business/environment/el-nino-end-by-june-la-nina-seen-second-half-2024-says-us-forecaster-2024-05-09/https://www.axios.com/2024/05/09/el-nino-la-nina-hurricane-seasonhttps://www.vox.com/climate/24145756/la-nina-2024-el-nino-heat-hurricane-record-temperature-pacifichttps://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/ninonina.htmlhttps://theconversation.com/la-nina-is-coming-raising-the-chances-of-a-dangerous-atlantic-hurricane-season-an-atmospheric-scientist-explains-this-climate-phenomenon-228595https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Ni%C3%B1o%E2%80%93Southern_Oscillationhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%E2%80%932023_La_Ni%C3%B1a_eventhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_event_attributionhttps://www.usgs.gov/faqs/how-can-climate-change-affect-natural-disastershttps://archive.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch9s9-1-2.htmlhttps://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R47583https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/scientists-can-now-blame-individual-natural-disasters-on-climate-change/https://www.vox.com/climate/2024/2/28/24085691/atlantic-ocean-warming-climate-change-hurricanes-coral-reefs-bleachinghttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Ni%C3%B1o%E2%80%93Southern_Oscillationhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%E2%80%932023_La_Ni%C3%B1a_eventhttps://theconversation.com/is-climate-change-to-blame-for-extreme-weather-events-attribution-science-says-yes-for-some-heres-how-it-works-164941 This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit letsknowthings.substack.com/subscribe

CycloPod
Episode 16: Dr. Pierre Josso & Dr. Tim van Peer

CycloPod

Play Episode Play 21 sec Highlight Listen Later Feb 8, 2024 41:58


Our first cyclopod of 2024 is another live episode, where we are joined by Pierre Josso, from the BGS at Keyworth, and Tim van Peer, from the University of Leicester. Tune in to hear about their exploits investigating the origins and implications of Milankovitch cyclicity in the Pb-isotope data from an Atlantic deep-sea iron manganese nodule from offshore West Africa (Josso et al., 2021, EPSL). The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 15: Dr. Anya Crocker

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 29:25


We are back with our 15th CycloPod Episode! This time we are joined by Anya Crocker, who is a research fellow in Palaeoceanography and Palaeoclimate at the University of Southampton. In this podcast, we hear about Anya's 2022 Nature Geoscience paper looking at astronomically controlled Saharan aridity in the Late Miocene, with surprising insight into how long there has been a desert in this region. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.Link to Anya's UoS profile: https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5x689g/doctor-anya-crockerLink to 2022 Nat Geo paper: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-022-00990-7

Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 481

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2023 180:00


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 481. In this edition we heard music by ABC, Arjen Lucassen's Supersonic Revolution, Camel, Different Light, Elephant Plaza, Enslave The Zombie, Gazoota, North Atlantic Oscillation, A Multitude Of One, UK, Govinda, Hadal Sherpa, I Am The Manic Whale, Balletto Di Bronzo, Teramaze, Martin Miller, The Brain, Region, Sound Of Strangers & Sinead O'Connor.

uk brain abc region towers govinda different light martin miller arjen lucassen north atlantic oscillation progzilla i am the manic whale
Kscope
Kscope Podcast 157 - The Promise of Springtime

Kscope

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2023 35:16


THE Kscope Podcast 157 - The Promise of Springtime NEW SHOOTS! We hear about the next chapter of ENVY OF NONE via ALEX LIFESON (of Rush) and ALF ANNIBALINI … a trip to the principality because GODSTICKS have a new single out; … to Scotland to celebrate 10 years of ‘Fog Electric' by NORTH ATLANTIC OSCILLATION; … huge THE PINEAPPLE THIEF news; ... EMPYRE have an album out and are adding to their tour dates, and we keep the high-octane cinematic rock going with a proper old singalong from O.R.k. so... breathe deeply and SMELL THE AIR!   Tracklist; Godsticks - Mayhem (from This is What a Winner Looks Like) May 26th Envy of None - Dumb (Der Dummkopf Remix) (from That Was Then EP) June 9th The Pineapple Thief - Judge the Girl (from How Did We Find Our Way book set) June 23rd O.R.k. - Consequence (feat. Elisa) Orchestral Mix (from Screamnasium) OUT NOW Empyre - Quiet Commotion (from Relentless) OUT NOW North Atlantic Oscillation - Soft Coda (from Fog Electric)   For more on the Kscope podcast visit http://www.kscopemusic.com/podcasts FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA FACEBOOK http://www.facebook.com/Kscopemusic​​ INSTAGRAM http://www.instagram.com/kscopemusic TWITTER http://www.twitter.com/kscopemusic​​ WEBSITE http://www.kscopemusic.com

InObscuria Podcast
Ep. 156: Floydian Slips

InObscuria Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 92:38


It's time again to set the controls for the heart of the sun and celebrate our co-host: Robert Harrison's birthday! Space out with us as we absorb a collection of songs that evoke the essence and vibes of his favorite band: Pink Floyd. While not obscure at all (they have 2 albums that are diamonds!), we shine on with snippets of similar sounds and themes by somewhat more modern bands from the 90s until today. What is it we do here at InObscuria? Every show Kevin opens the crypt to exhume and dissect from his personal collection; an artist, album, or collection of tunes from the broad spectrum of rock, punk, and metal. Robert is usually forced to test his endurance, but this week is all about songs firmly in his big bang zone. Our hope is that we turn you on to something that was lost on your ears, even with this collection of great dance songs sounding similar to one of the biggest selling rock acts of all time.Songs this week include:The McBroom Sisters – “What Do You Want From Me”from Black Floyd(2020)Porcupine Tree – “The Jokes On You” from Up The Down Stair (1993) King Buffalo – “Mammoth” from Regenerator (2022)RPWL – “Masters Of War” from The RPWL Experience (2008)Thee Oh Sees – “Carrion Crawler” from Carrion Crawler / The Dream (2011)North Atlantic Oscillation – “Ceiling Poem” from Grappling Hooks (2010)Anathema – “Your Possible Pasts / Goodbye Cruel World” from Alternative 4 (1998)Check out Robert's amazing fire sculptures and metal workings here: http://flamewerx.com/Please subscribe everywhere that you listen to podcasts!Visit us: https://inobscuria.com/https://www.facebook.com/InObscuriahttps://twitter.com/inobscuriahttps://www.instagram.com/inobscuria/Buy cool stuff with our logo on it!: https://www.redbubble.com/people/InObscuria?asc=uIf you'd like to check out Kevin's band THE SWEAR, take a listen on all streaming services or pick up a digital copy of their latest release here: https://theswear.bandcamp.com/If you want to hear Robert and Kevin's band from the late 90s – early 00s BIG JACK PNEUMATIC, check it out here: https://bigjackpnuematic.bandcamp.com/

Kscope
Kscope Podcast #150 - The Spirit of Collaboration Co-Hosted with Gavin Harrison and Bruce Soord

Kscope

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 60:20


Thanks for being there. Billy Reeves talks with Bruce Soord (The Pineapple Thief) and Gavin Harrison (Porcupine Tree, King Crimson, The Pineapple Thief) about the definition of collaboration in music, its pitfalls and advantages. Along the way we discuss the fall of Anathema, Steven Wilson's teeth-brushing proclivities and a magic guitar… …and we get to hear many of Kscope's collaborative tunes, serving as a history of the label and its family of musicians, including iamthemorning with Gav and Mariusz, Bruce with Jonas of Katatonia, Engineers and North Atlantic Oscillation.

CycloPod
Episode 12: Udara Amarathunga

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 20:56


Another milestone: the first live recorded episode of CycloPod! This month, we have Udara Amarathunga from ANU (Canberra) revealing the details about the "mystery sapropel". This podcast is based on his 2022 Nature Geoscience paper. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work atarvidtomayko.com.

cd aphrodite dew nature geoscience north atlantic oscillation
CycloPod
Episode 11: Dr. Anta-Clarisse Sarr

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 18:25


Anta-Clarisse Sarr is our guest for CycloPod Episode 11 on www.cyclostratigraphy.org. Anta-Clarisse is a postdoc in CEREGE and, there, she used a Earth System Model to study the effect of topography on Miocene monsoon systems (Sarr et al., 2022, Nature Geoscience). Her results have major implications for many of the work presented by previous CycloPod interviewees! The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 10: Jaqueline Ferreira

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022 17:59


A milestone reached: the tenth CycloPod on www.cyclostratigraphy.org already. This month, we have Jaqueline Ferreira from São Paolo (Brazil) telling us about surprising responses of Brazilian rainfall and ecosystems to astronomical forcing. This podcast is based on her 2022 Quaternary Science Reviews paper. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 9: Arne Ulfers

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2022 18:27


Our ninth CycloPod on www.cyclostratigraphy.org has Arne Ulfers as our guest (LIAG, Hannover, Germany). Half-precession cycles usually have a low-latitude origin, but can also be observed outside of the tropics. In his 2022 Quaternary Science Reviews paper, Arne figures out how far north half-precession signatures can be distinguished. Spoiler Alert: At Lake Ohrid (North-Macedonia / Albania), they are clearly expressed in lacustrine sediments of the last 1 million years. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

germany cd hannover arne aphrodite dew north atlantic oscillation
CycloPod
Episode 8: Simin Jin

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 17:04


Podcast number 8 on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is by Simin Jin (China University of Geosciences Wuhan). In her 2022 Earth and Planetary Science Letters paper, Simin investigates the most expanded Paleocene - Eocene Thermal Maximum section known to date: a siliciclastic turbidite sequence from the North Sea! The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

earth cd aphrodite north sea dew simin planetary science letters north atlantic oscillation paleocene eocene thermal maximum
CycloPod
Episode 7: Dr. Clara Bolton & Boris-Theofanis Karatsolis

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2022 25:51


The seventh podcast on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is the first double-interview! Two new papers came out over the last couple of weeks, discussing the response of ocean productivity to astronomical forcing: Clara Bolton and her colleagues focus on the Pleistocene in Nature, whereas Boris Karatsolis and his team deal with the Mio-Pliocene biogenic bloom (Nature Communications). Their results seem contradicting at first, but this episode of CycloPod reveals that these two geologic time windows have more in common than expected. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 6: Margriet Lantink

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 19:48


The sixth podcast on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is by Margriet Lantink. In her 2019 Nature Geoscience paper, Margriet demonstrated a climate control on Banded Iron Formations from South Africa. In this podcast, she elucidates how cyclostratigraphy and radio-isotopic dating were both essential in coming to her interpretation. She also shares her vision on what's next in researching the early days of Planet Earth. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 5: Dr. Anna Joy Drury

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 23:16


The fifth podcast on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is by Anna Joy Drury. She talks about a 30 million year long carbonate content and stable isotope record that she compiled for an ocean drilling site on Walvis Ridge, in the South-East Atlantic Ocean. In this podcast, Anna Joy discusses how climate and carbon cycle have been responding to astronomical frocing throughout the late Cenozoic. This discussion is based on scientific results, recently published in Climate of the Past. They also discuss how CODD, or Code for Ocean Drilling Data (Wilkens et al., 2017), was used to construct composite core images of the sedimentary sequence. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com.

CycloPod
Episode 4: Dr. Zhixiang Wang

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2021 13:37


The fourth podcast on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is by Zhixiang Wang. He talks about the Late Miocene sedimentary response to astronomical forcing in North-East Tibet. In this podcast, the reasons why an eolian sequence displays a completely different astronomical signature compared to a contemporaneous lacustrine section are explored. This discussion is based on scientific results, recently published in GSA Bulletin. The Intro music of this podcast is an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work at arvidtomayko.com

cd wang aphrodite dew north atlantic oscillation
CycloPod
Episode 3: Dr. Rocío Caballero-Gill

CycloPod

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 22:32


The third podcast on www.cyclostratigraphy.org is by Rocío Paola Caballero-Gill. She is a cyclostratigrapher who co-founded the GeoLatinas. During this podcast, she talks about her earlier work on Pliocene climate and stratigraphy, about her new paper on being anti-racist in geoscience (Ali et al., 2021), and about CycloAstro and CycloCohort. The Intro music of this podcast is again an excerpt of a piece based on the North Atlantic Oscillation from the "Aphrodite's Dew" book and CD project by Arvid Tomayko and Sandro Montanari. Check out more of their work here.

cd roc caballero aphrodite dew pliocene north atlantic oscillation
JC Weather
Tracking a storm next week and monitoring the NAO

JC Weather

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2020 6:29


In this episode we discuss the forecast for the rest of the holiday weekend. We then talk about a potent rain and wind event expected for this coming Monday. Lastly, in our weather education segment, we discuss the North Atlantic Oscillation and how it affects our prospects of getting snow and cold in the northeast. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

tracking monitoring north atlantic oscillation
The Askancity Podcast
Episode 416

The Askancity Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2020 69:07


Dan and Eric talk about Trump, Supreme Court, India, China, Kelly Loeffler, PG&E, fires, statues, Aunt Jemima, KFC, Burger King, Impossible pork, police, CrossFit, foldable Phones, Apple, WWDC, 8k receivers, meth-gators, Soul Fly, North Atlantic Oscillation, organs, boss nova, Lady Gaga, Danzig, Central Intelligence, Black Sunday, Gemini Man, Jaws, Watchmen, The Dark Red, Space Cowboys, Exists

Capturando la temperie - CLT
CLT11 - Índices meteorológicos (NAO) y vórtices polares

Capturando la temperie - CLT

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 17:07


Bienvenidos a CLT, el podcast. En el episodio de hoy repasamos lo más parecido a una bola de cristal en meteorología: los índices meteorológicos, centrándonos en el NAO, North Atlantic Oscillation). También repasaremos qué es el vórtice polar, o polar vortex, que en algún momento escucharás en los medios. Todo ello muy picadito y con sorbitos de agua par que pase mejor... y con banda sonora homenaje a El Fari y a Juan Gabriel. ¡No te lo pierdas! Aquí el enlace a la NAO: https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/pna/nao.shtml Sintonías: Reckless by Dysfunction_AL (c) copyright 2016 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. https://dig.ccmixter.org/files/destinazione_altrove/54482 Ft: Blue_Wave_Theory.

Kscope
Podcast 117 - A Golden Hour of 2019 Chats

Kscope

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2019 66:34


What a great year it’s been for Kscope and its artists, thank you BIG TIME for your support! The acts have played in every corner of the globe, records have made the charts, awards have been placed upon mantlepieces. Here’s a few highlights of the chats and the music from the year of Billy Reeves. LOTS coming next year too, hear it here! Tracklisting: Richard Barberi – (from VARIANTS.5) ‘New Soul 2018’kscopemusic.com/artists/richard-barbieri/ O.R.k. – (from Ramagehead) ‘Black Blooms’kscopemusic.com/artists/ork/ Mansun – (from 6) 'Fall Out'kscopemusic.com/artists/mansun/ Giancarlo Erra – (from Ends) 'End IV'kscopemusic.com/artists/giancarloerra/ Gong – (from The Universe Also Collapses) 'My Sawtooth Wake'kscopemusic.com/artists/gong/ Daniel Tompkins – (from Castles) 'Limitless'kscopemusic.com/artists/danieltompkins/ Iamthemorning – (from The Bell) 'Song Of Psyche'kscopemusic.com/artists/iamthemorning/ Klone – (from Le Grande Voyage) 'Yonder'kscopemusic.com/artists/klone/ Bruce Soord – (from All This Will Be Yours) 'All This Will Be Yours'kscopemusic.com/artists/bruce-soord/ North Atlantic Oscillation – (from Grindshow) 'Spinning Top'kscopemusic.com/artists/north-atl…ntic-oscillation/

big time variants gong golden hour klone new soul mansun kscope bruce soord daniel tompkins north atlantic oscillation iamthemorning
Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 298

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2019 179:59


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 298. In this edition we spoke to Simon Godfrey and heard music by Thundercat, Genesis, Kate Bush, Dario Marianelli, North Atlantic Oscillation, TesseracT, Stevie Wonder, Field Music, Pinegrove, Rush, Valdez, Shineback, Freefall, Tinyfish, Tidehouse & Simon Godfrey .

Kscope
Podcast 110 - Kavus Torabi Gong Interview

Kscope

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2019 37:22


In which your host Billy Reeves is joined by Kavus Torabi from Gong – an in-depth chat about how he was invited by Daevid Allen to take over the orbit of Planet Gong, what it’s like to join one of your favourite bands and, having already had a bit of previous joining a favourite band (Cardiacs) who he’d join next, in the past, given a time machine. PLUS an attempt on coming up with a name to describe the great new crop of southern England based whimsical noisy prog-psyche groups and how they are sympatico with the Canterbury scene. AND.. Some Iamthemorning news, a spin of the new single from Daniel Tompkins of TesseracT, and tracks from new releases on vinyl from North Atlantic Oscillation and an alumni of both Porcupine Tree and Japan, the one and only Richard Barbieri. On this podcast: Gong – "Forever Reocurring" [Excerpts] (from The Universe Also Collapses) http://kscopemusic.com/gong   Iamthemorning – "Blue Sea" (from Ocean Sounds) http://kscopemusic.com/iatm   Daniel Tompkins – "Black the Sun" (from Castles) http://kscopemusic.com/dt   North Atlantic Oscillation – "Spinning Top" (from Spinning Top) http://kscopemusic.com/nao   Richard Barbieri – "New Soul" (from Variants.5) http://kscopemusic.com/rb

england japan sun canterbury variants gong cardiac castles tesseract porcupine tree ocean sounds daevid allen richard barbieri daniel tompkins north atlantic oscillation kavus torabi
Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 278

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2019 164:21


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 278. In this edition we heard music by Haunt The Woods, Crippled Black Phoenix, Glass Hammer, Hanford Flyover, I Am The Manic Whale, Illumine, Kevin Gilbert, Lalle Larsson Trio, The Buggles, North Atlantic Oscillation, Phil Keaggy, Tony Levin, Jerry Marotta, Point Clear, Starfish64, Talk Talk, Magenta, Thumpermonkey, Thomas Giles & Neal Morse.

towers magenta talk talk buggles tony levin phil keaggy illumine jerry marotta kevin gilbert glass hammer crippled black phoenix north atlantic oscillation progzilla i am the manic whale
Prog-Watch
Prog-Watch 551 - Prog-Watch & TPA Present Some of the Best of 2018

Prog-Watch

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 87:08


Well, it's that time of year again...when Prog-Watch teams with The Progressive Aspect to bring you our end of year round-up of some of the best albums released in the Progressive genre this year! Seven of the fine reviewers from TPA provided short lists of their favorites, and brief reviews. Your humble host has also selected one of his own. With contributions from Mel Allen, Shawn Dudley, Rob Fisher, Magnus Moar, Jez Rowden, Roger Trenwith, and Leo Trimming, and music from 3.2, Dukes of the Orient, Gazpacho, North Atlantic Oscillation, Phideaux, Pymlico, Regal Worm, and Voivod!

The Askancity Podcast
Episode 355

The Askancity Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2018 56:31


Dan and Eric talk about coffee, Cancer, the war on truth, neti pot, Russia, Venezuela, bombers, Apple, Bedditt sleep monitor, Geezer Butler, Deadland Ritual, Mission Impossible: Fallout, Letterboxd, Shudder, Red Christmas, You Might Be The Killer, The Office, Opeth, North Atlantic Oscillation, Bela Fleck, Victor Wooten, Stuart Hamm, The House That Jack Built

EconomicsJunkie Podcast
#ClimateChange Doomsday Cult Issues Another "Dire" Warning

EconomicsJunkie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2018 40:06


Nima discusses the latest of many dire climate change reports. Sources: "U.S. impacts of climate change are intensifying, federal report says"(https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/11/23/climate-change-intensifying-economy-impacted-federal-report-finds/2093291002/) The Technological Society by Jacques Ellul (https://archive.org/stream/JacquesEllulTheTechnologicalSociety/Jacques%20Ellul%20-%20The%20Technological%20Society_djvu.txt) Club of Rome invents global warming hoax (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Club_of_Rome#The_Limits_to_Growth) Peer reviewed science papers cited: "These estimates both have much lower upper bounds than those from a predecessor study using AR5 data ending in 2011." (https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0667.1) "solar variability has been the dominant influence on Northern Hemisphere temperature trends since at least 1881." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012825215300349) "If the climate continues its cooling and the sun behaves in a manner not witnessed since 1800, we can be sure that climate changes are dominated by the sun and that atmospheric CO2 has a very small role in climate changes. If the same climatic patterns, cyclic warming and cooling, that occurred over the past 500 years continue, we can expect several decades of moderate to severe global cooling." (http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/reprint/multidecadal_tendencies.pdf) "the ice winter severity index in the Baltic Sea is modulated by solar activity and solar motion in several frequency bands during the last 500 years." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364682612002167) "These quantities were analyzed in two GCMs and compensating errors in the SW and LW clear-sky, cross-atmosphere radiative flux divergence were found to conspire to produce somewhat reasonable predictions of the net clear-sky divergence. Both GCMs underestimated the surface LW and SW CRF and predicted near-zero SW CRE when the measured values were substantially larger (~70 W m−2 maximum)." (http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/JCLI-D-11-00072.1?af=R) "These findings, together with the missing orbital signature in published dendrochronological records, suggest that large-scale near-surface air-temperature reconstructions relying on tree-ring data may underestimate pre-instrumental temperatures including warmth during Medieval and Roman times." (http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v2/n12/full/nclimate1589.html) "(…) resulting in the conclusion that the early MCA was warmer than the late 20th century by ~ 1 °C." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0031018212003926) "the global temperature increase during the last century is between 0.4°C and 0.7°C, where these two values are the estimates derived from raw and adjusted data, respectively." (http://www.itia.ntua.gr/en/docinfo/1212/) "Highest pre-industrial summer temperatures of the 12th century were 0.3 °C warmer than the 20th century." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379112001680) "the periods in which solar activity agents affecting the Earth are predominantly related to solar toroidal or poloidal fields are the periods in which the North Atlantic Oscillation is negatively or positively correlated with solar activity, respectively." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364682612001393) "25–56% of the temperature increase the last 150 years may be attributed to the Sun. For 3 North Atlantic stations we get 63–72% solar contribution." (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364682612000417) Oregon Petition (http://www.petitionproject.org) 1,350+ peer reviewed research papers supporting the skeptic's view: http://www.populartechnology.net/2009/10/peer-reviewed-papers-supporting.html#General Another 100+: http://notrickszone.com/100-papers-sun-drives-climate/#sthash.7JBjco1q.uUrhUs2q.dpbs

Hoff Solo Podcast
3. Uh, y'know. Bill Maher, Holiday Shopping, Reverse Mordrake, North Atlantic Oscillation

Hoff Solo Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 80:44


Hoff Solo 3: I talk about Bill Maher's stupid blog, shopping during the holidays, the Reverse Mordrake, a little this and that and nothing else.

Strange Brew with gugai
Strange Brew #148 Djin Chin

Strange Brew with gugai

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2018 57:21


Here's Strange Brew #148 - Djin Chin - on 8Radio.com - Dan Snaith from Caribou tells me why Les Fleur by Minnie Ripperton is his favourite song, and there's new music from The Redneck Manifesto, Bitch Falcon, Pursued By Dogs, North Atlantic Oscillation, Sufjan Stevens, Beirut, Beach House, Pillow Queens, free tickets to see Kiran Leonard and a classic from Modest Mouse. It's all go here on Strange Brew. Every Friday at 9pm & Saturday at 7pm on 8radio.com. Strange Brew : Songs Of The Day playlist - https://open.spotify.com/user/gugai www.strangebrew.ie www.facebook.com/strangebrewgalway www.twitter.com/@strangebrewirl gugai@strangebrew.ie

Strange Brew with gugai
Strange Brew #145 Prime Number

Strange Brew with gugai

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2018 58:08


Here's Strange Brew #145 - Prime Number - on 8radio.com. This week, The olllam tell me about a song they love, and there's music of all shapes and sizes from Bitch Falcon, Girlfriend., Montauk Hotel, Japanese Wallpaper, Paddy Hanna, Skelocrats, North Atlantic Oscillation, Pillow Queens, Bouts and a classic from Passion Pit. Every Friday at 9pm & Saturday at 7pm on 8radio.com. Strange Brew : Songs Of The Day playlist - https://open.spotify.com/user/gugai www.strangebrew.ie www.facebook.com/strangebrewgalway www.twitter.com/@strangebrewirl gugai@strangebrew.ie

girlfriends strange brew bouts prime numbers passion pit japanese wallpaper north atlantic oscillation paddy hanna
Stile Libero
Stile Libero: Culture in Movimento

Stile Libero

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2018 59:38


Speciale "JonZ" con intervista..Musiche di Beth Rowley, JonZ, Le Trio Joubran, North Atlantic Oscillation, Zorn's Nosferatu

culture movimento nosferatu zorn stile libero musiche jon z north atlantic oscillation le trio joubran
Stile Libero
Stile Libero: Culture in Movimento

Stile Libero

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2018 59:38


Speciale "JonZ" con intervista..Musiche di Beth Rowley, JonZ, Le Trio Joubran, North Atlantic Oscillation, Zorn's Nosferatu

culture movimento stile libero musiche jon z north atlantic oscillation le trio joubran
Stile Libero
Stile Libero: Culture in Movimento

Stile Libero

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2018 59:38


Speciale "JonZ" con intervista..Musiche di Beth Rowley, JonZ, Le Trio Joubran, North Atlantic Oscillation, Zorn's Nosferatu

culture movimento nosferatu zorn stile libero musiche jon z north atlantic oscillation le trio joubran
Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 175

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2016 139:38


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 175. In this edition we heard music by Rani Chatoorgoon, Blind Ego, The Invisible, Umphrey's Mcgee, Jethro Tull, North Atlantic Oscillation, Hemina, Thomas Giles, Public Service Broadcasting, Kate Bush, The Alan Parsons Project, Shamblemaths, Rick Wakeman, Evership, Kyros, Arena, Pymlico & Discipline.

Maine Coast Dock Talk
Episode 7: A Conversation with John Bullard, Greater Atlantic Regional Administrator, NOAA Fisheries

Maine Coast Dock Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2016 56:55


Join us today for a thought-provoking interview with John Bullard, the Regional Administrator in charge of NOAA Fisheries from Maine to Cape Hatteras, NC. A native of New Bedford, Massachusetts (and the city's former mayor), John believes strongly that protecting the soul of New England means protecting our working waterfronts. Ben and John discuss what makes fisheries management so hard and the new difficulties posed by climate change. Ben also shares the findings of a new study that demonstrate the impact of the North Atlantic Oscillation (or NAO, a short-term climate cycle similar to El Niño) on cod stocks in the northern Atlantic. Check out our website for more info on the NAO! PLUS: Monique tells Ben the very sad story of Larry the lost lobster. Photo of Mr. Bullard courtesy of GARFO.

Live From Progzilla Towers
Live From Progzilla Towers - Edition 133 - All Requests

Live From Progzilla Towers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2016 142:36


Welcome to Live From Progzilla Towers Edition 133. In this all request edition, we heard music by Haken, I Am The Manic Whale, Jadis, Dream Theater, 10CC, Thotch, Tom Slatter, Darwin's Radio, Matthew Parmenter, Fuzzy Duck, Peter Hammill, IQ, North Atlantic Oscillation, Kate Bush, Tears For Fears & The Flower Kings.

iq requests towers kate bush haken dream theater 10cc jadis peter hammill north atlantic oscillation progzilla i am the manic whale
Strange Brew with gugai
Strange Brew #7 With Gugai On 8radio.com 03.12.15

Strange Brew with gugai

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2015 62:29


Strange Brew #7 with music from Girls Names, Bagels, Sleep Thieves, Sugar, Sufjan Stevens, Talos, North Atlantic Oscillation, Talos, And So I Watch You From Afar, Villagers, Here We Go Magic, and Gaz Coombes tells us what his favourite song is. Strange Brew - Indie beats, alternative rock and good vibrations from the past, the present and the not too distant future with gugai every Thursday at the Róisín Dubh. Facebook.com/strangebrewgalway

Mathematical and Statistical Approaches to Climate Modelling and Prediction
Towards a theory of the North Atlantic oscillation

Mathematical and Statistical Approaches to Climate Modelling and Prediction

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2010 68:25


Ghil, M (Ecole Normale Superieure) Thursday 02 September 2010, 10:00-11:00

theory north atlantic oscillation
I Hear a New World Podcast
I Hear a New World March 2010

I Hear a New World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2010 29:36


Featuring Paul Vickers & The Leg, The Japanese War Effort, North Atlantic Oscillation, King Post Kitsch See www.gaseousbrain.com for more details.

Earth Bulletin
Doc - NAO: Driving Climate Across the Atlantic

Earth Bulletin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2004 7:40


For centuries, a massive atmospheric system has regularly altered weather patterns, fishery production and animal migrations across the North Atlantic Ocean. At last, Earth scientists and climate modelers are beginning to understand how--and when - the North Atlantic Oscillation happens.