Introduction
 Theses
 Cooling Europe 1939
    Introduction
    Winter 1939-40 Met
    Lost West Drift
    Sea war events 1939
    Sea mines 1939
    Depth charging
    North Sea Cooling
    Baltic Sea Cooling
    Cyclone and shells
    Rain Making 1939
    USA dried out 1939
    War in China 1939
    Russian-Finnish war
    Turkey quake Dec 1927
    Violent weather
 Climate down 1939-42
 Sea War turn climate
 Big Warming 1918
 Climate change twice
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Cooling Europe 1939 (2)

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Introduction

The decade 1930-39 was the warmest period since the 16th century. Only four months after WW II had started Europe was in the arctic, Winter 1939-40 (2_11). That did not happen ‘out of the blue’. The easterly movement of Atlantic cyclones was blocked, Lost West Drift (2_12), due to naval activities over huge seawater areas, Sea war events (2_13), Sea mines (2_14), Depth charge (2_15), that inevitable lead to North Sea Cooling (2_16), and Baltic Sea Cooling (2_17).

How ‘stirring’ the seas may have effected the forming of cyclones is discussed in: Cyclones and shells (2_21). The interesting aspect, that the United States was deprived of rain USA dried out 1939 (2_32), raises the question whether the war in Europe and China acted as Rain-Maker (2_31), and War in China (2_33), the likely cause that the January 1940 was cold in the north everywhere.

At the outer edges of Europe the weather was not left on its own, in the North wedged the Russia–Finnish war (2_41), in the SE occurred the Turkish quake Dec 27 (2_51), and Atlantic cyclones moved south Violent weather (2_52).

 

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