
Crazy world weather
blows hot and cold
- 11 January 2007
- From New Scientist Print
Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues
As North Americans basked in a January heat wave last weekend, people in Bangladesh
were freezing to death.
Across the world, the media reported sunbathing New Yorkers enjoying
temperatures that topped 18 °C, up from the usual January daily maximum of
3 °C. But there were fewer stories about how residents in the Bangladeshi
capital of Dhaka were enduring temperatures
that fell from the daily average of 18 °C to between 5 and 8 °C. The
government called on affluent people to donate warm clothes and blankets to the
poor, as doctors reported that more than 100 people had died from the sudden
cold.
Meteorologists suspect the extreme US weather was caused by the North
Atlantic Oscillation, a distant cousin of El Niño. In Bangladesh, cold air sweeping in from Tibet was
compounded by dense smog that prevented the sun warming the ground - smog made
all the denser as people burned fuel to keep warm.
From issue 2586 of New Scientist magazine, 11 January 2007,
page 4