From a
discussion board at NOAA comes this graph showing the developing
La Niña of 2010 might be a record breaker. La Niña causes multiple global
climate disruptions including a drop in global temperatures and
extreme weather events around the globe, which no doubt will still be conveniently blamed on mankind's evil ways. The last 2 times of record-contending La Ninas in 1954 and 1973 were during the
global cooling scare:
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_ucNKcdaqEsBYcR8HWdjeBoZAXeHzCXq4hNanlMrKsdKvmbpJP8pih5OqZqwmSjMx7oOhrPKWftobCfEdQAEdyeyPC4luezvZA4hIRpZDV7PrXmzg1agUb29smvlts-lFU=s0-d) |
You are here (at "10+" data point) |
Global temperatures drop about 6 months after a drop in the
Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), which is similar to but not the same as the
El Niño-La Niña Index, as shown in the graph below. Look out for an extra cold winter and some cold water splashed on the claim "2010 is the hottest year ever."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhV8cEf5N7iVGdqzaCvLDlcImOynV0vgJQ0CfisaIb0XzwBddyFLXU8vmWBMOl7HgSr8oW0c1cqUuJrywx450lYgaeqkywIHiCTT2xrQFSDRjH93rrcVyOlcDKoivt5eMz1zTILM6TXE1FH/s400/pdo.jpg) |
Satellite temps in Red lag PDO in Green by ~6 months |
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