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Cool La Nina Heats Up Fire Danger in U.S. Southwest

This satellite image shows La Nina's affects on the Pacific Ocean. Yellows and reds indicate warmer-than-normal sea temperatures and above-normal sea surface heights. Cooler areas are depicted in blues and purples. Green indicates near-normal conditions.
(Image credit: NASA/JPL Ocean Surface Topography Team.)

The equatorial waters of the Pacific Ocean have made the transition from the warming flow, known as El Niño, 10 months ago to its cooler cousin, La Niña, NASA scientists report.

The widespread cooling of the ocean surface, revealed by satellite data, is expected to intensify and could worsen dry spells and forest-fire-friendly conditions in the western United States, the scientists warn.

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