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Atmospheric rivers over Japan intensify 8% in 42 years, raising flood risk

Atmospheric rivers (ARs) are long, narrow bands of intense water vapor transport that move large amounts of moisture from low to midlatitudes, resembling giant rivers in the sky. They are gaining widespread attention because of their potential to trigger flooding across the Japanese archipelago. Researchers at the University of Tsukuba have discovered that, influenced by global warming and the strengthening of the North Pacific Subtropical High, the intensity of water vapor transport in ARs...

Phys.org 7d ago

Distant climate patterns determine how cold Japan's winters become

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Attribution constraints reveal stronger future intensification of the upper‑level Hadley circulation

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NASA satellites reveal major ocean nutrient stress

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Godzilla El Nino set to be worst in history could leave UK 'with bare supermarket shelves and rising prices'

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