PARIS, France—A drought that has gripped the southwestern corner
of Australia since the 1970s is linked with higher snowfall in East
Antarctica, a phenomenon that may be rooted in global warming,
scientists reported on Sunday.
Researchers Tas van Ommen and Vin Morgan of the Australian
Antarctic Division said that the drought—which has seen winter
rainfall decline by 15-20 percent—is extremely unusual when compared
with the last 750 years.
Hand in hand with the drought is a similarly exceptional rise in
snowfall at Law Dome, an icecap on the coast of East Antarctica.
The apparent reason is a "precipitation see-saw," the pair report
in a paper published online by the journal Nature Geoscience.
Relatively cool, dry air flows northwards to southwest Australia,
providing little rain, while warm, moist air flows to East
Antarctica, where it provides abundant snow.
The pattern is consistent with previous studies that suggest a
man-made role in the drought, say the pair.
Previous research has pointed to greenhouse gases for changing
the so-called Southern Annular Model, a key feature of atmospheric
circulation in the southern
hemisphere.