## Abstract Norman Gabel measured 355 Western Apache men in 1940. This provided an excellent set of data with which to initiate a study of secular change. One hundred fortyβthree sons of the men measured in 1940 were included in a 1967 survey. Correlation analysis of those under age 27 confirmed th
Secular changes of the standing circulation
β Scribed by E. B. Kraus
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1956
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 672 KB
- Volume
- 82
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0035-9009
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The evidence produced seems to show a secular intensification of the North Indian summerβmonsoon low. The effects upon rainfall in North India and the Peninsula are discussed qualitatively. The secular decrease of the mean summer pressures in North India was associated with an increase of winter pressure. Similar pressure changes, with an even larger seasonal amplitude, occurred throughout eastern Europe, Siberia and eastern Asia.
The secular increase in the seasonal pressure oscillation over the interior of Eurasia may have been associated with variations in the wind field which should tend to cause colder winters in the Far East and warmer, shorter winters in Europe. In summer the opposite tendency should prevail. An analysis of records confirms this inference.
An intensification of the standing circulation of the northern hemisphere may have caused an increased transport of warm air into the Arctic and hence contributed to the retreat of the arctic ice. The absence of largeβscale standing oscillations in the southern hemisphere, accounts, probably, for the apparent absence of marked climatic change in the Antarctic.
The strength of the standing monsoonβtype circulations appears to be in a roughly inverse relation to the strength of the zonal circulation. The resulting interaction could cause a large amplification of small disturbances in the climatic equilibrium.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Secular changes are demonstrated by residual mass curves. It is shown that tropical rainfall decreased abruptly at the end of the 19th century. This was due largely to a contraction of the rainy belt and a shortening of the wet seasons. In the SE. Asian monsoon region the annual rainfal
## Abstract The mean rainfall along the east coasts of North America and Australia is shown to have decreased abruptly at the end of the 19th century, in conformity with results for the tropics obtained in an earlier paper. A simultaneous decrease of the rainfall in the semiβarid western parts of N
## Abstract Analysis of longβseries rainfall records from Victoria and New South Wales shows a decrease of summer rainfall to a minimum about the turn of the century, and fifty years' gradual increase since then. Winter rainfall trends were opposite. Fluctuations of a much larger amplitude affected