The United States pushed into the cold.
First signs of
a ‘real’ winter emerged at Christmas time 1939, when except
for the
Deep South
and California, the United States had snow and extreme cold (NYT, 26
Dec.39).
Winter came earnestly in early January 1940, with a frigid wave that
gripped
most of the United States (NYT, 06 Jan.40). Icy north-westerly winds
swept over
New York with force, on January 06, causing temperatures to drop to an
average
of 10 degrees (F) below normal (NYT, 07Jan.40). From the Continental
Divide to
the Atlantic Coast there were strange occurrences as compared with
normal
weather conditions. Frigid waves even touched the northern parts of
Florida
(ditto). Was this due to the unusually dry air in November 1939, as
noted by
Dr. James Kimball in ‘The New York Times’ on January 7th
(NYT, ditto), which actually continued well
into December 1939 (see below)? That December had not been as dry as
November
in statistical terms, may be due to snow that fell with the Christmas
cold,
e.g. between St. Louis and Louisville the snow generally was 6 inches
deep
(Lit.: Brooks, Winter 39/40)[1].
The less humid
the atmospheric air is, the more easily it can be replaced by colder
air. If
the amount of water in the atmosphere is less than average, the
‘vacuum’ thus
created, is filled by colder air. If the atmosphere is ‘water
free’ as
on the
moon, the temperature range there is about 300°, it is somewhat
plus 150° or
higher when the sun shines, without the sun shining, temperature on the
moon is
in the range of minus 150° or lower. On the earth the water in the
air makes
the difference in global air temperature. About the equivalent of
three-metre
deep water layer of the ocean surface is usually in the atmosphere. If
a
portion of this water ‘has been taken out of the air’ for a
brief
period of
time during sun-less winter months, arctic air sweeping in from the
North Pole
region may cause a frigid blast causing surprising cold winter
conditions.
This paper will
show that, the United States had an extremely dry weather from October
to
December 1939, presumably caused by the war in Europe.
USA
deprived of rain
Since the initial days of September 1939 a
several hundred kilometres long battle line stretched through Central
Europe
from Straits of Dover and Helgoland Bight to Switzerland with attacks
of
various intensity; missions and encounters taking place every day. As
has been
explained elsewhere, (Rain-Making 1939, 2_31),
it rained
excessively in
Central Europe, presumably due to military activities over land and at
sea. In
early September the Russian and Japanese Armies met in a severe
encounter in
the Outer Mongolia (2_33), whereby California
experienced an eight days
heat wave
since about the September 16th followed by a severe tropical
storm
(NYT, 25 September) and record rain (see below).
Accepting the status-quo as it is, it might
be interesting to see whether it is possible to identify a reflex
action in the
air that reached North America from the French-German front in Europe,
either
from the fires burning in Warsaw during the second half of September,
or from
the fighting in China?. Actually, with regard to contemporary climatic
conditions in the United States, it is a fact that the weather changed
suddenly
from too wet to too dry between summer 1939 and winter 1939/40.
Winter of 1938/39 in the United States was
abnormally wet particularly in the eastern United States and in the
Southwest,
with larger part of the country having above–normal condition .
Spring
of 1939
was exceptionally dry with only a few States from the Mississippi
Valley
eastward having somewhat more than normal rainfall. From the Great
Plains
westward, all States experienced deficient rainfall. The summer was
relatively
wet eastward of the Great Plains, except in the Northeast, where
rainfall was
deficient in almost all sections. The fall season was extremely dry
over large
areas, although amounts of precipitation were a little bit above
normal in Utah, Colorado and Arizona.
For whole of the areas eastward of the Rocky Mountains it was the
driest fall
on record. (Lit.: Martin, The Weather)[2].
With regard to anthropogenic rain making
due to military activities in Europe and Asia, and due to the fact
that,
‘aerosols’ from battle fields, for example in Poland during
September
1939,
could easily make their way to the USA, it should at least be mentioned
here
that in California precipitation in September 1939 was 370 % above
normal
(Alabama, 119%; Arizona, 335%; Nevada 327%; Utah 261%. Without drawing
any
conclusions from this fact. however, in most other States, September
1939 was
exceptionally dry.
A closer look at a few areas which
received above normal rain in fall of 1939 reveals
that it was the result of high precipitation levels in September.
Figures given
below show the percentage of normal precipitation. It may be noted that
the
States named by Martin above (Lit.M Martin)[3]
are normally very dry during the months October –December.
| Utah |
Sept. 261 |
Oct. 119 |
Nov. 15 |
Dec. 37 |
| Colorado |
Sept. 83 |
Oct. 50 |
Nov. 32 |
Dec. 51 |
| Arizona |
Sept. 335 |
Oct.55 |
Nov. 136 |
Dec. 29 |
Source: (Lit.: Martin, The Weather)[4].
During this period of time California
recorded the highest percentage of 370 above average rain in September
1939. South Dakota and Wyoming
recorded a mere 1 percent and North Dakota and Nebraska recorded just 5
percent. Only Arizona exceeded the ‘average mark’ by 136
percent.
November 1939
was the driest month in the history of whole USA. For the whole
of the USA, the November 1939 rain average was
about 30 percent lower than the ‘ dry spring average’, with
the driest
months
May (72 percent) and April (94 percent).
Total precipitation in the 42 States of USA
during the closing months of the year 1939 as listed by the Monthly
Weather
Review (Lit.: Martin)[5]
was as follows:
Percentage of normal
precipitation
in 42 States ( figures in approximation) |
Oct. 78% |
Nov. 44% |
Dec. 71% |
The ‘unusual dry air’ during November 1939
was quickly noticed (NYT, 07 Jan.40). The recorded dry months of
October to
December 1939 coincides perfectly with the excessive rain in central
Europe
where the battles were being waged.
Natural variation?
The ‘timing’
between excessive rain in Europe and the dry months in the
United
States is a perfect indication of the relationship between both the
events. Any
‘interchange’ between dry and wet air takes
time. A dry or humid air body can
exist up to several days or a few weeks. An ‘air body’
needs a couple
of weeks
to circle the Northern Hemisphere. Interaction of air between the
hemispheres
may take several months, as based on observations made on
movement of
air in the wake of the outbreak of the volcano Krakatoa in 1883 (Lit.:
Furneaux)[6]
and (Lit.: Wexler, Spread)[7]
Scherhag, who analysed disruption in
circulation of air in
the winter of 1940, states with regard
to air movements that there must have been a subsequent
air-body-transfer
(Massentransport) from the Southern Hemisphere towards the Arctic
(Lit.: Scherhag, Zirkulationsstoerung)[8].
This remark makes it
clear, that ‘dry air’ from Europe could have circled the
globe for some
time
before a ‘humidity gap’ could be refilled. It also confirms
that there
was a
‘humidity gap’ in the first place. If this dry-air-gap was
not caused
by
military activities, what else caused it?
The Regions Covered: January 1940 was cold in all
Northern Hemisphere regions, viz. North
America, Northern Europe and Northern Asia, (The war in China, 2_33). This is a strong indication that
there was too little humidity in the air (as
proved in the case of the USA - above), giving arctic air a free path
to
penetrate deep into southern regions. At least the first cold wave in
the
second half of December of 1939 can be clearly related to the prevalent
‘dry
air’ condition. Additional causes (e.g. snow cover) may have
contributed to
subsequent weather events. Nevertheless, presumably the ‘dry
air’ in
late 1939
did not move away quickly, due to scant sunshine available during the
winter season
in the northern hemisphere.
Difference between the winters in USA
and Europe: A further piece of evidence is the fact
that severity of the winter in the United States was over by the end of
January
1940 (Lit.: Martin)[9],
whereas
extreme winter conditions prevailing in Northern Europe even during
February
1940 show that a number of countries e.g. Holland, Northern Germany and
Southern Scandinavia, experienced their coldest winter for more than
100
years,.
Lower air circulation: Only
few years after WWII, Richard Scherhag, came to the conclusion that
winter of
1939/40 was the result of a comprehensive general disruption in the
atmospheric
circulation, which could be regarded as a ‘prototype’ for a
weakened
circulation (Lit.: Scherhag, Zirkulationsstoerung)[10].
Summary
This paper provides a number of indications
to show that the war in Europe may have significantly influenced winter
weather
conditions over large distances. In this case, North America had a
severe cold
January in 1940. However, this was presumably initiated by lack of
usual rain
in the United States during the months of October to December 1939 in
the first
place. This could have been caused by excessive ‘rain
making’ on
account of
military activities along the Western Front in Europe. The evidently
low
humidity in the atmosphere in late 1939, made it easy for arctic air to
travel
forcefully over the northern parts of the continents in the Northern
Hemisphere
at low temperatures. The timing of ‘dry
air’ and the invasion of polar air into all continents in the
Northern
Hemisphere with severe impacts also in USA and China seem to suggest
that this
was not a mere natural variation.
Although the ‘dry-USA’ aspect together
with
are highly interesting contributory events, neither is however, the
principal
cause of the severe war winters of 1939-42 in Europe, (e.g. Winter
1939-40 2_11), and the subsequent global
cooling from 1939 until the 1970s, (Sea system
effected, 4_12). But these aspects should
be regarded as a collection of
ideas for further investigations and study.
That something strange had been going on
with the weather many thousand kilometres away from the war in Europe,
is
briefly indicated by an excerpt from Brook’s paper (Lit.: Brook,
p. 160)[11]:
“Paradoxically, most of eastern Canada north of latitude 48°
was
above normal,
with temperatures running up to more than 25° above normal north of
latitude
58° and 18° above normal in the interior of Alaska. Missouri
was actually as
cold as the Hudson Bay region for the month”. The key for this
erratic
behaviour was the war in Europe.
LITERATURE:
Brooks, Charles F.; ‘Some Remarkable
Features of the past winter’, in.: Bulletin American
Meteorological
Soc. , Vol.
21, 1940, pp. 157-162.
Furneaux, Rupert; ‘Krakatoa’; Englewood
Cliffs, N.J. 1964; p. 158.
Martin, R.J.; ‘The Weather of 1939 in the
United States’, in: The Monthly Weather Review, Vol.67, 1939, pp.
444 -
445.
Scherhag, Richard,
(Zirkulationsstoerungen); ‘Die grosse
Zirkulationsstoerung im Jahr 1940’, in: Annalen der Meteorologie,
4.
Jahrgang,
Heft 7-9, 1951, p.321-329.
NYT; The New York Times.
Wexler, H. (Spread); ‘Spread of the
Krakatoa Volcanic Dust Cloud as related to high-level
circulation’, in:
Bulletin
American Meteorological Soc., Vol. 32, No.2, February 1951, pp. 48-52.
[1]
Brooks, Charles F.(Winter 39/40); ‘Some Remarkable Features of
the
past winter’, in.: Bulletin American Meteorological Soc. , Vol.
21,
1940, pp.
157-162.
[2]
Martin, R.J.; ‘The Weather of 1939 in the United States’,
in: The
Monthly Weather Review, Vol.67, 1939, pp. 444 - 445.
[6]
Furneaux, Rupert; ‘Krakatoa’; Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1964;
p. 158.
[7]
Wexler, H. (Spread); ‘Spread of the Krakatoa Volcanic Dust Cloud
as
related to high-level circulation’, in: Bulletin American
Meteorological Soc.,
Vol. 32, No.2, February 1951, pp. 48-52.
[8]
Scherhag, Richard, (Zirkulationsstoerungen); ‘Die grosse
Zirkulationsstoerung im Jahr
1940’, in: Annalen der Meteorologie, 4. Jahrgang, Heft 7-9, 1951,
p.321-329.
[10]Scherhag,
Richard,
(Zirkulationsstoerungen);
[11]Brooks
(Winter 39/40), FN 1
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