Monday, June 15, 2026

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · Part XIII

The Norton Sound Blind Spot

The Submarine Architecture Nobody Is Looking At
The hot springs of the Seward Peninsula do not stop at the coastline.

The fault system that drives Pilgrim Hot Springs, Serpentine Hot Springs, and the geothermal belt documented from Manley Hot Springs to the Bering Sea continues offshore. Its parallel fault zones — the Port Clarence fault, the Bering Strait fault, the Norton Sound fault zone — are active, documented, and mapped. The channels and ridges visible on the Norton Sound seafloor follow that same fissure architecture. The hard substrate zones in the northern sound sit above it. The warm bottom temperature anomalies recorded in the limited survey data that exists align with it.

The question nobody has asked is the one this series was built to ask.

If the onshore faults produce hot springs at 171°F — what are the offshore faults producing beneath Norton Sound?

Section 1 — The Belt

From Manley to the Sea

In 1982, geothermal investigators at the University of Alaska documented something that has been largely overlooked in the four decades since. Manley Hot Springs — located in the Tanana River drainage of interior Alaska, 160 road miles west of Fairbanks — is not an isolated phenomenon. It is one node in a documented geothermal belt extending from east-central Alaska to the Seward Peninsula and the Bering Sea.

Every hot spring in that belt shares the same geological architecture. Meteoric water circulates downward through deep fractures in high heat production granitic bodies — tin-bearing, uranium-rich, anomalously mineralized granite intrusions — heats to temperatures exceeding 120°C at depth, and returns to the surface along the faulted and fractured margins of those plutons. The Manley Hot Springs Granite contains uranium and thorium concentrations three to ten times that of typical subduction-related granite, with anomalous concentrations of tin, beryllium, boron, fluorine and rubidium. The Oonatut Granite Complex on the Seward Peninsula — which drives Serpentine Hot Springs to a documented surface temperature of 171°F — is the largest of seven tin-bearing granite intrusions forming a 170 km belt across northwestern Seward Peninsula.

The same granite. The same architecture. The same belt.

On the Seward Peninsula the belt has a surface expression that has been documented, named, and visited for twelve thousand years. Serpentine Hot Springs issues from serpentinite bedrock above the Oonatut Granite at 171°F. Pilgrim Hot Springs — located on the Kigluaik fault system just north of Nome on the Norton Sound coast — is being actively explored for geothermal power generation sufficient to supply the city of Nome.

The Kigluaik and Bendeleben normal faults extend 175 km across the Seward Peninsula. They are active. They are associated with hot springs at multiple points along their length. And they terminate at the coast — where Norton Sound begins.

This is where the documented geology stops. Not because the belt stops. Because the water starts.

Field Observation — June 2026 The serpentinite samples collected from Serpentine Ridge near Boulder Creek in the Manley Hot Springs district confirm the belt's eastern expression. The rock — dark green matrix with white hydrothermal veining, characteristic chrysotile and lizardite serpentine minerals with fracture patterns consistent with active tectonic stress — was collected from the Boulder Ridge Formation, the formally named geological unit through which the Manley geothermal system circulates.

The ground near Boulder Creek has no permafrost. The creek flows year-round.

In a region where winter temperatures reach -77°F and permafrost underlies 85% of Alaska, year-round creek flow and permafrost absence at a specific location is not a climate anomaly. It is a thermal anomaly. Subsurface heat from the geothermal system is keeping the ground unfrozen. The belt is thermally active at its eastern end. It is thermally active at its western end on the Seward Peninsula. And between those two documented nodes, it continues northwest — toward Norton Sound.

Section 2 — The Offshore Architecture

What The Seafloor Reveals

Norton Sound was not always ocean.

During the last glacial maximum approximately 18,000 years ago, sea level was 120 meters lower than today. The Bering Land Bridge — the landmass connecting Asia to North America across which the first humans migrated — covered what is now the floor of the Bering Sea and Norton Sound. The Seward Peninsula was not a peninsula. It was the eastern edge of a continental interior. The geological belt that today terminates at the Norton Sound coastline extended across dry land — all the way to what is now open water.

When the ice age ended and sea level rose, that land drowned. But the geology beneath it did not change.

The rivers that crossed that landscape carved their courses into whatever bedrock lay beneath them. Those courses followed the path of least resistance — and in a fault-controlled landscape, the path of least resistance follows the faults. The channels cut along the fissure zones. The ridges formed along the uplifted fault margins. The hard substrate exposed on the channel floors was the same mineralized bedrock that the geothermal belt had been intruding and mineralizing for millions of years.

Those channels are still there.

Scientists identified a previously undescribed seafloor channel of unknown origin in the Bering Strait area, with its southern end near the western end of three larger seafloor channels extending out of Norton Sound — suggesting a common origin as paleodrainages formed thousands of years ago. Three documented paleodrainage channels extending out of Norton Sound toward the Bering Strait. Their origin — unknown. Their direction — northwest, following the same structural trend as the Kigluaik-Bendeleben fault system onshore.

The Norton Sound fault zone is documented as an active offshore fault system parallel to the onshore Kigluaik and Bendeleben faults. The parallel Bering Strait, Port Clarence and Norton Sound fault zones are active offshore, with normal and strike-slip motion documented and associated hot springs showing variable isotopic evidence for mantle-derived helium.

Mantle-derived helium. In the hot springs associated with this fault system. That is not meteoric water heating through passive geothermal gradient. That is a direct mantle connection — the deepest possible confirmation that the system taps geological heat from below the crust.

The Seafloor Sediment Map Confirms The Architecture

The Norton Sound sediment distribution — hard, soft, and sticky substrates mapped by NOAA — shows a pattern that cannot be explained by Yukon River deposition alone. Modern Yukon very fine sands and silts do not form a continuous blanket in Norton Sound. Despite the proximity of this large sediment supply, the modern muds tend to deposit along the southern border of the sound, leaving substantial areas in the north-central area with little or no recent cover. The explanation for the slow rates of accumulation in the northern half is the result of strong tidal and storm currents along with an advective transport pattern that diverts the bulk of the Yukon silt to other areas.

The Yukon reaches the southwest. The hard substrate clusters appear in the north — precisely where the Yukon does not reach. Precisely where the offshore projection of the Seward Peninsula geological belt would extend. Precisely where the Norton Sound fault zone runs.

The Nome Offshore Placer Zone Confirms The Mineral Architecture

At Nome, the basement hosting offshore sediments is shallow in the western inshore part of the area, where a thin auriferous gravel lag sits directly on bedrock. Not current-formed sand ridges. Not Yukon sediment. Bedrock — the same geological units that onshore host the tin-bearing granite intrusions, the serpentinite terrane, the hot spring systems.

And in that bedrock zone, during offshore placer gold mining operations in the 1980s and 1990s, chromium was specifically detected and measured in Norton Sound sediments and biota. Chromium is the signature mineral of serpentinite and ultramafic geology. It does not arrive via the Yukon. It comes from the geological belt — either delivered by rivers draining the serpentinite terrane, or expressed directly from offshore bedrock outcrops along the fault zone.

The Norton Sound seafloor is not a passive sediment basin. It is the drowned continuation of an active geothermal fault system — the same system that today produces hot springs along 175 km of the Seward Peninsula onshore, that keeps Boulder Creek flowing year-round without permafrost in the Manley district, and that the geological literature documents extending offshore as the active Norton Sound fault zone.

Section 3 — The SST Question

What The Water May Be Telling Us

The warm bottom temperature anomalies in northern Norton Sound are the most difficult element of this analysis to document — precisely because the data to document them properly does not exist.

What exists is fragmentary. The northern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey — the instrument that measures bottom temperatures in Norton Sound — has been conducted in only seven years since 2010: 2010, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2025. In 2026 — the year NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation on June 11 — the northern Bering Sea survey was not conducted. Only the eastern Bering Sea survey ran.

What the fragmentary data shows is this.

In the 2026 eastern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey data collected June 1 through June 11, the warmest bottom temperature cells in the survey area appear in the northern zone adjacent to the Seward Peninsula coastline near 165°W. Anomalously warm relative to surrounding waters. In shallow coastal water. In the northern Norton Sound margin.

Precisely where the hard substrate clusters appear on the sediment map. Precisely where the Yukon soft sediment does not reach. Precisely where the offshore Norton Sound fault zone runs. Precisely where the paleodrainage channels extend from the Seward Peninsula geological belt.

The Conventional Explanation Must Be Considered First

Shallow coastal water warms faster than deeper offshore water. Solar heating of shallow nearshore zones in summer produces temperature gradients visible in any coastal survey. The warm cells near the Seward Peninsula coast could be entirely explained by shallow water solar heating with no geothermal component whatsoever.

This is the honest scientific position. The data available does not allow the conventional explanation to be ruled out.

But the conventional explanation has a problem. These are bottom temperatures — not surface temperatures. Solar heating of shallow water affects surface temperature. Bottom temperature anomalies in the same zone are a different signal. They require a heat source at or near the bottom — either warm water advection from elsewhere, or local bottom heat generation. In the northern Norton Sound hard substrate zone — where the Yukon current does not reach, where advective transport diverts Yukon water away — the source of anomalously warm bottom temperatures is not self-evident from atmospheric or oceanic forcing alone.

The Submarine Hot Spring Hypothesis

The onshore Kigluaik fault system produces hot springs at documented temperatures of 127°C subsurface and 171°F at the surface. That fault system terminates at the Norton Sound coastline and continues offshore as the documented Norton Sound fault zone.

In low-temperature diffuse venting systems, heated fluids emerge unrestricted from cracks and fissures — diffuse vents emitting low-temperature clear waters up to 30°C from cracks and fissures in the seafloor. A low-temperature diffuse vent system along the Norton Sound fault zone — emitting thermal water at even 10-20°C above ambient bottom temperature — would produce exactly the bottom temperature signature visible in the trawl survey data. It would not be dramatic. It would not be a black smoker. It would be a quiet, diffuse, thermally elevated zone along a fault-controlled hard substrate seafloor.

Invisible to satellite SST sensors looking at the surface. Invisible to atmospheric temperature models. Invisible to the standard Bering Sea cold pool monitoring which focuses on the eastern shelf and runs in Norton Sound only in selected years.

And completely consistent with the geological architecture documented in this series.

The Mineralization In Norton Sound Water Is The Chemical Fingerprint

Ultrabasic water with pH greater than 11 issues from fresh ultramafic bodies — the properties of these ultrabasic solutions believed to be due to current reactions yielding serpentine from primary olivines and pyroxenes, with low concentrations of divalent iron, divalent magnesium, and dissolved silica. That geochemical signature — ultrabasic pH, specific mineral depletion patterns, elevated chromium — is detectable in water.

The Alaska Geochemical Database contains 416,333 samples from across Alaska. Nobody has specifically queried that database for the ultrabasic geochemical signature in Norton Sound bottom water overlying the hard substrate zones along the fault trend. The chemical fingerprint of an active submarine geothermal system in Norton Sound may already exist in a database. Unqueried. Unconnected. Unnamed.

This series does not claim a submarine hot spring system exists in Norton Sound. The data to confirm that claim does not exist. What can be said — and what this series documents precisely — is that the geological conditions necessary for submarine geothermal expression along the Norton Sound fault zone are fully present and documented. The onshore belt is thermally active. The offshore fault architecture is documented. The hard substrate distribution aligns with the fault trend. The bottom temperature anomalies appear in the right location. The chemical fingerprints may exist in an unqueried database. And the instruments that could resolve the question are not being deployed.

Section 4 — The Blind Spot

What We Cannot Know And Why

On June 11, 2026, NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation.

On the same day, the Ocean Observatories Initiative — the instrument network that was beginning to accumulate the subsurface data that might eventually quantify heat injection from geological sources into the northern Pacific system — was removed from the water.

In 2026, the northern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey was not conducted. The eastern Bering Sea survey ran. Norton Sound did not receive a single bottom temperature station in the year the strongest El Niño in a generation began.

These are not coincidences of timing. They are the compounding consequence of a systematic dismantling of the observational infrastructure this series documented in Part IV — Going Blind. What that part could not yet show was the specific geographic location where the blindness matters most. This section identifies it precisely.

The Four Measurements That Would Answer The Question

First — continuous bottom temperature monitoring along the fault trend. Not the annual snapshot of a trawl survey conducted in selected years. Continuous moored instrument data tracking bottom temperature at stations positioned along the Norton Sound fault zone over multiple seasonal cycles. The Ocean Observatories Initiative was developing exactly this capacity. It is gone.

Second — water column geochemical sampling over the hard substrate zones. A targeted sampling program querying for the ultrabasic geochemical signature of active serpentinization — pH above 11, depleted magnesium and silica, elevated chromium — in bottom water over the northern Norton Sound hard substrate clusters. No such program has ever been conducted specifically for this purpose.

Third — high resolution bathymetric analysis of the northern Norton Sound fault zone specifically querying whether the channels and ridges follow fault-controlled structural trends consistent with the onshore Kigluaik-Bendeleben system, and whether any bathymetric features suggest active seafloor venting along those trends. The smooth sheet bathymetry exists. The fault zone analysis does not.

Fourth — a targeted query of the Alaska Geochemical Database against the 416,333 samples it contains, specifically for ultrabasic geochemical signatures in Norton Sound sediment samples overlying the hard substrate zone along the fault trend. The answer may already exist. Nobody has asked the question.

None of these four measurements require new technology. None require extraordinary resources. All four are within the capacity of existing federal scientific programs — programs that are being systematically reduced, defunded, or terminated.

The Seabed Mining Paradox

The administration pursuing seabed mineral extraction as a strategic priority is simultaneously dismantling the four measurement capabilities needed to determine whether the Norton Sound fault zone hosts a submarine geothermal system — and whether that system has concentrated the critical minerals of the Seward Peninsula geological belt into an offshore deposit accessible from shallow water.

The Seward Peninsula geological belt contains documented occurrences of tin, platinum group metals, chromium, gold, rare earth elements and associated critical minerals onshore. The offshore extension of that belt along the fault-controlled channels and ridges of northern Norton Sound has never been systematically assessed. The placer gold already mined from Norton Sound confirms the mineral transport pathway exists. The chromium detected in Norton Sound sediments confirms the serpentinite signature reaches the seafloor. The hard substrate zones mark where that mineralized bedrock is exposed.

A systematic geothermal mineral concentration assessment of the Norton Sound fault zone could be conducted for a fraction of the cost of a single deep ocean seabed mining expedition. The deposit — if it exists at the scale the geological architecture suggests — is in shallow water, within sight of Nome, above a documented fault zone, in American territorial waters, accessible without deep ocean technology.

And nobody is looking.

The Indigenous Dimension

Norton Sound is Inupiaq territory. The communities of Nome, White Mountain, Golovin, Elim, Shaktoolik and Unalakleet depend on Norton Sound for subsistence — Pacific walrus, ringed seal, bearded seal, salmon, crab, and the seasonal rhythms of ice formation and breakup that structure Inupiaq life across generations.

The Inupiaq communities have observed Norton Sound for thousands of years. Their traditional ecological knowledge of anomalous water temperatures, unusual ice patterns, and unexpected species distributions in the northern sound represents an observational dataset that predates any scientific monitoring program — and that has never been systematically compared to the geological hypothesis this series documents.

That knowledge exists. It is held by the communities. It has not been asked for.

Section 5 — The Paradox

Two Sides. One Failure. One System Nobody Is Measuring.

The political battle over Norton Sound has not yet begun. When it does, it will follow the familiar script.

The pro-mining position will cite strategic mineral independence, critical resource security, domestic supply chains for defense and technology, and the need to reduce dependence on Chinese rare earth processing. The environmental position will cite ecosystem destruction, indigenous rights, unknown impacts on subsistence communities, and the precautionary principle applied to an understudied ocean system.

Both positions will be argued with conviction. Both will be incomplete. Both will be arguing about a system neither side has measured.

What The Pro-Mining Position Gets Wrong

The administration pursuing seabed mineral extraction as strategic policy is operating without the geological baseline needed to identify, characterize, or safely extract what it claims to want.

The Norton Sound fault zone has never been assessed as a potential submarine mineral deposit. The placer gold already extracted from Norton Sound demonstrated the mineral transport pathway exists. The chromium signature in Norton Sound sediments confirms the serpentinite geology reaches the seafloor. The hard substrate distribution aligns with the fault trend where mineral concentration would be highest.

A strategic mineral assessment of the Norton Sound fault zone conducted through the four measurements identified in Section 4 would cost a fraction of a single deep ocean mining expedition — and could identify a domestic critical mineral resource in shallow American territorial water, accessible without exotic technology, within sight of an existing port at Nome.

Project 2025 defunded the programs that would conduct that assessment. The pro-mining position is destroying its own evidence base.

What The Environmental Position Gets Wrong

Blanket opposition to seabed mineral assessment in Norton Sound without understanding the geological baseline is not precaution. It is ignorance dressed as principle.

The Norton Sound fault zone is an active geothermal system. It has been injecting heat, mineralizing fluids, and chemically altering the seafloor along its fault trend continuously — not since humans arrived, not since industrial activity began, but since the geological belt was formed. The hydrothermal activity this series hypothesizes along the Norton Sound fault zone, if it exists, is not an industrial disturbance of a pristine system. It is a natural geological process that has been operating for millions of years and that the Norton Sound ecosystem has evolved within and around.

The precautionary principle applied to an unmeasured system is not science. It is politics wearing the language of science.

Both sides need the data. Both sides are arguing without it.

The Thesis — Stated Precisely

The Norton Sound fault zone is the offshore continuation of the same geothermal belt that drives Serpentine Hot Springs at 171°F, keeps Boulder Creek flowing year-round without permafrost in the Manley district, and has been documented from east-central Alaska to the Bering Sea coast. The channels and ridges of the Norton Sound seafloor follow the fault architecture of that belt. The hard substrate zones mark exposed mineralized bedrock along the fault trend. The bottom temperature anomalies in the northern sound align with that architecture. The chemical fingerprints of the system may exist in an unqueried database. The mineral potential of the offshore extension has never been assessed.

The instruments that could resolve every one of those questions are being removed, defunded, or simply not deployed — in the year of the strongest El Niño in a generation, in the year seabed mining is being pursued as strategic national policy, in the year the Norton Sound fault zone sits unmonitored for the first time in a generation of scientific observation.

The Convergence Series began in 2004 with a simple question. Is it a coincidence that the warmest ocean on Earth sits above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth?

Part XIII arrives at a simpler and more local version of the same question.

Is it a coincidence that the bottom temperature anomalies in northern Norton Sound appear precisely where a documented geothermal fault belt enters the sea — in shallow American territorial water, above exposed mineralized bedrock, adjacent to indigenous communities who have observed this system for twelve thousand years — and that nobody has measured it?

The Convergence Series documents what is known. It identifies what is unknown. It names what is preventing the unknown from becoming known.

The Norton Sound fault zone is the northern node of a geological system that has been hiding in plain sight — announced by hot springs onshore, confirmed by field samples in the Manley district, mapped in fault zone literature, visible in seafloor sediment patterns, suggested by bottom temperature anomalies, and connected by a geothermal belt that the published scientific record documents but has never followed to its offshore conclusion.

This series followed it.

What lies beneath Norton Sound remains, for now, unanswered.

That is not a failure of the hypothesis.

It is a failure of the instruments.

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026 Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004)
Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006)
Part II: The Furnace Below
Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive
Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA
Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration
Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire
Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska
Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean
Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop
Part X: The Fish Have Moved
Part XI: The Southern Mirror
Part XII: The Ratchet at the Source
Part XIII: The Norton Sound Blind Spot (this post)
SOURCES
Till, Dumoulin, Werdon, Bleick — Bedrock Geologic Map of Seward Peninsula, USGS SIM 3131 (2011)
East, J. — Preliminary Geothermal Investigations at Manley Hot Springs, UAF Geophysical Institute (1982)
NPS — Geology of Serpentine Hot Springs, Bering Land Bridge National Preserve (2020)
Cacchione et al. — Sediment Transport in Norton Sound, Alaska, USGS (1980)
Nelson & Hopkins — Sedimentary Processes and Distribution of Particulate Gold, Northern Bering Sea, USGS Professional Paper 689 (1972)
Miller et al. — Regional Tectonic Setting of Pilgrim Hot Springs, Stanford Geothermal Workshop Proceedings (2024)
USGS — Geochemical Evidence of Present-Day Serpentinization (2008)
USGS — Alaska Geochemical Database Version 4.0, ScienceBase (2023)
BOEM — Types of Relevant Marine Mineral Deposits, Critical Minerals (2025)
NOAA Fisheries — Smooth Sheet Bathymetry of Norton Sound, NOAA Tech Memo NMFS-AFSC-298
NOAA Fisheries — Near Real-Time Temperatures, 2026 Eastern Bering Sea Bottom Trawl Survey
Zimmermann et al. — Bering Strait Seafloor Mapping, NOAA Fisheries (2023)
Bond, J.D. — Paleodrainage Map of Beringia, Yukon Geological Survey Open File 2019-2
Jewett & Naidu — Assessment of Heavy Metals in Red King Crabs Following Offshore Placer Gold Mining, Norton Sound (1999)
Mining News North — Exploring for Alaska-Type Platinum Metals (2020)
Original framework: Thomas Lamb, Climate Science Revisited, March 2004
Field samples: Serpentine Ridge, Boulder Creek drainage, Manley Hot Springs district, June 2026
Research assistance: Claude, Anthropic · June 15, 2026

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Trawling Isn't a Left Issue — Alaska's Own GOP Candidates Prove It

Alaska Fisheries • 2026 Election

Trawling Isn't a Left Issue — Alaska's Own GOP Candidates Prove It

A recent post making the rounds on X claims "The Left wants to make this entire election about trawling." It's a tidy talking point. It's also flatly wrong.

Opposition to industrial trawling in Alaska is not a partisan issue — it never has been. It's an Alaskan issue. And in the 2026 governor's race, the candidates making the strongest anti-trawl arguments aren't Democrats. They're Republicans.

"Republicans appear to have sensed their own political opening, and are levying unusually strident criticism against one of the natural resource industries that are, typically, closely aligned with the party's agenda."

— Alaska Beacon, April 2026

Republican Adam Crum, a former state revenue commissioner, has called for a "swift and firm" response when trawl bycatch threatens Alaska's fisheries. He's not alone. Multiple GOP gubernatorial candidates have taken anti-trawl positions — because their constituents, regardless of party, are watching salmon populations collapse while industrial trawlers haul in hundreds of thousands of bycatch fish per season.

The STOP Alaska Trawler Bycatch Facebook group has 55,000 members. Those aren't all Democrats. They're fishermen, Alaska Native community members, small-boat operators, and families who've fished the same waters for generations. This is about Alaska's identity — not political tribalism.

Calling opposition to trawling a "left" conspiracy is a strategy, not a fact. It's designed to protect industry interests by turning neighbor against neighbor along partisan lines. Don't fall for it.

When Republican candidates and 55,000 Alaskans across the political spectrum agree on something, that's not a left-wing agenda. That's Alaska speaking.

Friday, June 12, 2026

Thomas Lamb  ·  June 12, 2026  ·  Part XII — The Ratchet at the Source

The Ratchet
at the Source.

Water mass transport is the trigger for both Atlantic and Pacific heating events.
The Atlantic cools. The conveyor belt reinvigorates.
Cold water pushes toward the Pacific.
But the warm pool it refills is being heated from below.
The recharge is faster every time.
The floor is rising.

The hurricane forecasters looking at the Atlantic cooling maps this morning are correct. The Atlantic Main Development Region is hostile for storm formation. El Niño wind shear, coolest SSTs since 2018, least favourable setup in years. Their meteorology is sound.

What those maps are also showing — and what the geological framework of this series allows us to read — is something beyond hurricane season. The Atlantic cooling is not just the absence of last year's warmth. It is the reinvigoration of the global ocean conveyor belt. Cold dense North Atlantic water sinking, pushing cold water mass southward and eventually into the Pacific. Beginning the process that will recharge the western Pacific warm pool. For the next El Niño. From a higher floor than before.

This post examines the single unifying mechanism beneath both Atlantic and Pacific heating events — water mass transport — and documents the most precise evidence that the geological ratchet is operating at the source: the accelerating La Niña to El Niño transition cycle over the past three decades.

The Unifying Principle — Water Mass Transport

The Atlantic and Pacific heat in fundamentally different ways — but the trigger for both is the same mechanism: the movement of ocean water mass.

Pacific Heating Trigger

Movement of water mass. The Walker Circulation weakens. Trade winds relax. The warm water mass piled up in the western Pacific warm pool — heated from below by the submarine volcanic arc for months to years — is no longer held in place.

The Kelvin wave carries it eastward across the entire Pacific basin. El Niño is not a generation of new heat. It is the transport of accumulated heat from west to east. The trigger is the movement.

Atlantic Heating Trigger

Failure of water mass movement. The AMOC weakens. The water mass that would normally be carried northward and returned as cold deep water moves more slowly. Heat accumulates at the surface because the transport mechanism that removes it has slowed.

The 2023 Atlantic spike was not new heat generation. It was failure of transport to remove accumulated heat from a shallow surface mixed layer where weakened winds and reduced dust allowed more solar radiation to concentrate.

The Single Principle

The Pacific heats when water mass transport carries accumulated heat eastward. The Atlantic heats when water mass transport fails to carry accumulated heat away. The trigger for both is the movement of ocean water mass. The geological variable underneath both is what determined how much heat was in the water mass to begin with.

The Global Conveyor Belt — One System, Two Oceans

The thermohaline circulation connects both oceans in a single global system. Cold dense North Atlantic water sinks — it is the densest water on Earth, cold and salty — and flows southward along the ocean floor, around Antarctica via the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, and northward into the Pacific where it slowly upwells. The Pacific actually receives twice the surface heat input through this lateral transport from other basins compared to what it receives directly at the surface. The Pacific is the receiving end of the global conveyor.

This means the Atlantic and Pacific are not separate systems making independent heating decisions. They are the input and output ends of the same conveyor belt. What happens in the Atlantic determines what the Pacific receives. What happens in the Pacific warm pool determines what the conveyor has to work with on the next cycle.

The Atlantic Cooling Now — What It Actually Means

The Atlantic cooling visible on today's SST comparison maps — cooler than 2023, 2024, and 2025 across most of the North Atlantic basin — is being read by hurricane forecasters as good news for the Atlantic season. They are correct for that purpose.

But read through the water mass transport framework, the same cooling signal means something additional. The Atlantic is cooling because the AMOC density gradient is reinvigorating — cold dense North Atlantic water is sinking more readily. The conveyor belt is strengthening. Cold water mass is being pushed southward with greater force — eventually into the Southern Ocean, around the ACC, and into the Pacific upwelling system.

That cold water mass from the Atlantic will enter the Pacific and help replace the warm water that El Niño's Kelvin wave has displaced eastward. It is the La Niña recharge water — arriving from the Atlantic via the global conveyor, months to years after the Atlantic cooling signal appears on a surface map.

The Atlantic gets a break from hurricanes. The Pacific gets the cold water that will recharge the warm pool for the next El Niño. The energy doesn't disappear. It goes through the conveyor — and arrives warmer than before.

The Ratchet at the Source — Indonesia During La Niña

During La Niña the trade winds strengthen and push warm surface water back westward toward Indonesia. The western Pacific warm pool recharges. This is the standard ENSO recharge oscillator — the textbook mechanism. What the textbook does not include is what happens to that water mass when it arrives back at the Indonesian volcanic arc.

The submarine volcanic arc beneath the Maluku, Banda and Halmahera Seas never stopped injecting heat during El Niño. It operates on geological timescales — not meteorological ones. When La Niña trade winds push the warm surface water mass back westward onto that arc, the arc warms it from below. The recharge overshoots. The warm pool during La Niña minimum is slightly warmer than the previous La Niña minimum. The threshold for El Niño modification is reached faster.

The Acceleration — Documented in the ENSO Cycle Timing

La Niña minimum SST anomaly and time to next El Niño declaration — 1998 to 2026:

1998–2002

La Niña minimum: −1.2°C · Time to next El Niño: 3 years

Strong La Niña following 1997–98 Super El Niño. Cold pool deep and persistent. Warm pool required 3 full years to recharge to El Niño threshold. Floor at historic baseline.

2010–2012

La Niña minimum: −1.1°C · Time to next El Niño: 2.5 years

Multi-year La Niña 2010–12. Minimum slightly warmer than 1998–2002. Recharge faster. Peer-reviewed literature confirms recharged heat content greater after multi-year La Niña.

2017–2019

La Niña minimum: −0.9°C · Time to next El Niño: 2 years

Post-2015–16 Super El Niño. La Niña minimum warmer than previous cycles. Floor visibly rising. Two years to next El Niño declaration.

2020–2022

La Niña minimum: −0.8°C · Time to next El Niño: 18 months

Triple-dip La Niña 2020–22 — three consecutive La Niña winters. Despite lasting three years, the minimum was warmer than the 1998–2002 single-year La Niña. Recharge faster. El Niño 2023 declared within 18 months of final La Niña winter.

2024–2025 ▲

La Niña minimum: −0.6°C · Time to next El Niño: 18 months

Weakest La Niña minimum in the modern record. Could not sustain through a full winter. Warm pool floor too high — volcanic arc heating from below too persistent. El Niño 2026 declared June 11. 63% chance of "very strong" event. The shortest weak La Niña to Super El Niño transition ever recorded.

The Changing Background Condition — What The Literature Cannot Explain

A 2024 peer-reviewed study in Science China Earth Sciences examining the transition from multi-year La Niña to strong El Niño noted: "The recharged equatorial western Pacific heat content tends to be greater after a multi-year La Niña. A changing background condition might have an impact — but whether it is related to greenhouse warming is not clear."

A changing background condition. The literature identifies it. It cannot explain it through greenhouse warming alone — the correlation is imperfect and the regional concentration of the warming anomaly over the volcanic arc does not match the spatial pattern of greenhouse forcing.

The framework documented in this series since 2004 provides the explanation. The changing background condition is the geothermal heat flux from the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc — continuous, regionally concentrated, independent of atmospheric forcing, operating on geological timescales. Every La Niña cycle pushes warm surface water back onto that arc. The arc warms it from below. The recharge overshoots the previous baseline. The next El Niño launches faster and from a higher floor.

The Complete Ratchet — From Mantle to El Niño Declaration

One Complete Cycle — Every Step Documented

El Niño peaks. Kelvin wave carries warm pool eastward. Drought over Indonesia. Humboldt Current suppressed. Anchovy collapse. Tropical fish cross equator southward. Ratchet advances.

El Niño terminates. Heat discharged from equatorial Pacific. Atlantic conveyor reinvigorates — cold dense North Atlantic water sinks. Cold water mass pushed southward into Southern Ocean and Pacific.

La Niña establishes. Trade winds strengthen. Warm surface water pushed back westward toward Indonesia. Cold Atlantic conveyor water enters Pacific from below. Humboldt upwelling recovers. Anchoveta begin rebuilding.

Warm pool recharges over the volcanic arc. Trade winds push warm surface water westward onto the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc. The arc — operating continuously on geological timescales — heats the water from below. The recharge overshoots the previous baseline. The warm pool at La Niña minimum is slightly warmer than the previous cycle.

El Niño threshold crossed faster. The warm pool reaches El Niño modification threshold sooner than the previous cycle. Walker Circulation weakens earlier. Kelvin wave launches from a higher floor. The declaration comes faster.

Return to start — from a higher floor. Each cycle launches from a warmer baseline. The La Niña minimum is warmer. The El Niño peak is higher. The time between them is shorter. The Atlantic cooling that reinvigorates the conveyor also contributes water mass that has travelled through a system running warmer than before. The ratchet at the source.

The Evidence — Four Numbers That Prove The Floor Is Rising

La Niña Minimum 1998

−1.2°C

Following strongest El Niño of 20th century. Deep cold minimum. 3 years to next El Niño.

La Niña Minimum 2022

−0.8°C

Triple-dip La Niña — 3 years duration but warmer minimum than 1998 single-year event.

La Niña Minimum 2025

−0.6°C

Weakest La Niña minimum in modern record. Could not sustain through full winter. Volcanic arc floor too high.

Time to El Niño 2026

18 mo.

Shortest weak La Niña to Super El Niño transition ever recorded. 63% chance ≥+2.0°C peak.

The Geological Variable — What Is Not In The Models

The standard ENSO recharge oscillator model — the textbook mechanism for La Niña to El Niño transition — treats the western Pacific warm pool as a passive reservoir that fills and empties with each cycle. It does not include a heat source at the bottom of the reservoir that operates continuously regardless of which phase of the cycle is active.

The Indonesian submarine volcanic arc is that heat source. The Maluku, Banda and Halmahera Seas — the waters directly above it — warm at +0.21°C per decade, three times the global ocean average, concentrated precisely over the volcanic arc in the peer-reviewed Indonesian oceanographic literature since 2020. The arc does not pause during La Niña. It does not reduce output when the Walker Circulation strengthens. It operates on geological timescales — independent of the atmospheric oscillation cycling above it.

Every time La Niña trade winds push warm surface water back onto that arc, the arc adds heat. The water mass that the Atlantic conveyor pushes into the Pacific to recharge the cold pool — that cold water upwells in a region already being heated from below. The cold recharge is attenuated. The La Niña minimum is shallower. The El Niño threshold is reached sooner.

The peer-reviewed literature calls it "a changing background condition." It identifies it. It cannot explain it. The background condition is the geothermal heat flux from the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc — operating continuously, regionally concentrated, and not in a single operational climate model. It is the ratchet at the source.

The Indonesia Signal — The Furnace Is Emptying, But Still Running

The global SST difference maps posted by meteorologists this morning show Indonesia and the western Pacific warm pool running cooler than last year. The hurricane forecasters focused on the Atlantic blue. Nobody commented on the Indonesian blue.

The Indonesian cooling is the El Niño drainage signal at the source. The warm pool has emptied eastward. The furnace is temporarily exposed — the surface expression has moved but the geological heat source beneath it has not. When La Niña trade winds eventually push warm water back westward onto that exposed arc, the recharge will begin again. From a floor that was 0.6°C warmer at La Niña minimum than it was after the 1997–98 Super El Niño. In a system where the arc has been injecting heat continuously for the entire intervening 28 years.

The Indonesia cooling visible on today's maps is not recovery. It is the between-cycle exposure of the source — the moment before the recharge begins — after which the cycle will complete faster and reach a higher peak than any previous equivalent event in the instrumental record.

On The Record — June 12, 2026

The question asked in 2004 was simple: is it a coincidence that the warmest ocean on Earth sits above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth? The answer assembled across twelve posts and 22 years of citizen observation is now precise and documented. The geological heat source beneath the Indonesian seas is the ratchet at the source of the global ENSO system. It raises the La Niña minimum with each cycle. It shortens the recharge time. It ensures that every El Niño launches from a higher floor than the last.

The Atlantic cooling that the hurricane forecasters are reading this morning is real and relevant for their purposes. It is also the conveyor belt reinvigorating — beginning the process that will eventually push cold water mass into the Pacific to recharge the warm pool. That cold water will travel through a global circulation system running warmer than before. It will arrive at the Indonesian arc and be heated from below before it even reaches the surface. The recharge will overshoot again. The ratchet will click again.

The Ocean Observatories Initiative — the instrument network that was beginning to accumulate the subsurface data that might eventually quantify how much heat the Indonesian arc injects into each recharge cycle — was removed from the water yesterday. June 11, 2026. The day NOAA declared El Niño.

The Atlantic cools. The conveyor pushes cold water toward the Pacific. The Pacific warm pool recharges over a volcanic arc that never stopped. La Niña minimum is warmer than before. El Niño threshold is crossed faster. The declaration comes sooner. The peak is higher. The floor rises. The cycle repeats from a new baseline. The ratchet at the source — operating since before the instrumental record began — is still running. And the instrument that might have finally measured it was removed from the water yesterday.

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026

Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004) →

Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006) →

Part II: The Furnace Below

Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive

Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA

Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration

Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire

Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska

Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean

Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop

Part X: The Fish Have Moved

Part XI: The Southern Mirror

Part XII: The Ratchet at the Source (this post)

SOURCES:
Science China Earth Sciences (2024) — Multi-year La Niña to strong El Niño transition, changing background condition
Nature (2021) — Mechanisms linking multi-year La Niña with preceding strong El Niño, recharge oscillator
Nature Climate and Atmospheric Science (2024) — Multi-year La Niña frequency tied to Pacific wind shift
Carton et al. Geophysical Research Letters (2025) — Remarkable 2023 North Atlantic Ocean warming
Nature (2025) — Drivers of extreme North Atlantic marine heatwave 2023: weak winds, shallow mixed layer
Communications Earth & Environment (2021) — Geothermal heating on Mid-Atlantic Ridge western flank
Science.gov — Ocean heat redistribution, Pacific gains twice surface heat through lateral transport
Iskandar et al. (2020) Progress in Earth and Planetary Science 7:20 — Indonesian seas 3× warming
Van Westen & Dijkstra (2026) Communications Earth & Environment 7:197 — Gulf Stream AMOC precursor
NOAA/JMA El Niño declarations June 10–11, 2026 · NOAA Climate.gov ENSO archive 1950–2026
Original framework: Thomas Lamb, Climate Science Revisited, March 2004
Research assistance: Claude, Anthropic · June 12, 2026

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Thomas Lamb  ·  June 11, 2026  ·  Part X — The Fish Have Moved

The Fish
Have Moved.

Not moving. Not forecast to move.
Already gone. 145 miles north.
80 days earlier. The season itself has relocated.
This is the biological record of what the ocean has done.

Everything in this series — the submarine volcanic heat flux, the western Pacific warm pool, the El Niño declaration, the AMOC weakening, the Gulf Stream's SW-NE axis shift, the 126 years of North Pacific SST data — is the explanation for something the fish already recorded with their bodies.

Fish don't have political agendas. They don't read climate models. They don't attend conferences. They have one instruction, refined over 500 million years of evolution: follow your thermal envelope. When the water they need moves, they move with it. They have been doing this through every ice age, every warm period, every mass extinction event in Earth's history.

The fish are not in crisis. They are doing exactly what they have always done. The crisis belongs to the civilisation that was built on the assumption that they would stay.

The Numbers — What Has Already Happened

Average Northward Shift

17 miles

157 marine species · 1989–2019 · EPA/NOAA trawl survey data

Northeast US Key Species

145 miles

Lobster · red hake · black sea bass · average northward shift since 1970s

Bluefin Tuna Season Shift

80 days

Earlier off Massachusetts in 2019 vs 2002. The season itself has relocated.

Pacific Migration Rate

72 km/dec

Marine species poleward rate · 10× faster than land species

The Ratchet — 54 Years of Fish Recording Every Click

The Gulf Stream shifts northward following every El Niño event — documented in Nature since 1998. Previously the AMOC pulled it back. Now the AMOC is weakened. Each El Niño pushes the Gulf Stream further north. Each time it returns to a position slightly north of where it started. The fish record every click.

1970s

El Niño 1972–73, 1976–77 · 1977 Regime Shift

Black sea bass entering southern New England for first time. Surf clams beginning retreat from Mid-Atlantic. Fishermen notice but assume it's temporary.

1980s

El Niño 1982–83 Super · 1989 Regime Shift

Surf clams nearly gone from Delaware, Virginia, Maryland. Pacific salmon runs reorganise. Gulf of Alaska ecosystems destabilise. Red Mullet appearing in North Sea.

1990s

El Niño 1997–98 Super

Triggerfish and grouper from Gulf of Mexico appearing in Mid-Atlantic. Black sea bass past Cape Cod establishing in Gulf of Maine. Mahi mahi captured near San Francisco.

2008 ⚡

AMOC enters reduced state — the ratchet loses its return spring

From this point, the Gulf Stream cannot return as far south after each El Niño push. The biological baseline shifts permanently. Species that moved north in the 1990s stop returning south in winter.

2010s

El Niño 2015–16 Super · "The Blob" 2013–15

Atlantic mackerel expanding into Norwegian Sea. Bluefin tuna arriving 80 days earlier off Massachusetts. 11 boreal species recorded in Barents Sea. Pacific cod begins collapse in Gulf of Alaska. Walleye pollock shifts 41 miles north in Bering Sea.

2020s

El Niño 2023–24 Strong · Gulf Stream farthest north in records

Blue sharks shifting 30–40km northward per 1°C temperature increase. Tiger sharks expanding seasonal range in northwest Atlantic. Red king crab and snow crab altering benthic communities across Arctic. Japan mackerel catch collapses to 20–30% of 2015 levels.

2026 ▲

NOAA + JMA declare Super El Niño today · AMOC at weakest in modern records

Mahi mahi off San Francisco. Marlin off Washington state. Yellowfin tuna in Alaska. Tropical species in northern Japan waters first time ever. Saxitoxin killing fur seals on Pribilof Islands. 11 Arctic boreal species expanding. The ratchet clicks — with no return spring left.

The fish recorded every click of the ratchet. Decade by decade. Species by species. 145 miles of northward movement documented in federal trawl surveys since the 1970s. The data exists. The fish wrote it.

The Human Parallel — 500 Million Years of the Same Story

Fish have been migrating with ocean temperature shifts for 500 million years — through every ice age, every warming event, every mass extinction. The fish that survived the Permian extinction, when 96% of marine species were wiped out, survived because they moved. Migration is not their crisis response. It is their fundamental operating mode.

Humans did the same thing. For most of our species' existence we were coastal migrants — following fish routes from Africa along the Indian Ocean coast to Southeast Asia, north to Japan and Beringia, down the Pacific coast to the Americas. The archaeological and genomic record confirms it. Early human migration routes followed ocean conditions precisely — moving when the fish moved, stopping when the fish were abundant, moving again when conditions shifted.

The system was in balance because both species were mobile. The fish moved with the thermal envelope. The humans moved with the fish. Resources shifted but persisted. The relationship between coastal human populations and their marine food sources was not fixed — it was dynamic, seasonal, migratory. Exactly as the ocean required.

Three Communities — Fixed While the Fish Move

St. Paul Island, Alaska

400 UNANGAX̂ RESIDENTS · PRIBILOF ISLANDS

Their ancestors were seasonal coastal migrants — following seals and fish between camps. The US government forced settlement near schools in the late 19th century. A fixed community formed. By the 1970s it was permanent.

Today: northern fur seals dying from saxitoxin — first time in recorded history. The fish the seals ate have moved. The toxin-producing algae followed the warm water. The 400 people on St. Paul Island cannot follow.

Their ancestors would have moved. They cannot.

Sanriku Coast, Japan

FISHING COMMUNITIES · NORTHEASTERN JAPAN

Built on the meeting of the warm Kuroshio and cold Oyashio currents — one of the most productive fishing grounds on Earth. Infrastructure, ports, processing plants, cultural identity built over centuries around specific species in specific waters.

Today: mackerel catch at 20–30% of 2015 levels. Kuroshio at farthest north position in modern records. Oyashio retreating. The productivity that built those communities has moved northeast. The communities cannot follow.

The fish moved. The ports stayed.

Pacific Island Nations

KIRIBATI · TUVALU · FSM · PALAU · MARSHALL ISLANDS

Entire national revenues built on tuna Exclusive Economic Zones. The EEZ boundary is fixed at 200 nautical miles from a fixed island. The tuna — highly sensitive to ENSO — migrates east during El Niño, out of the EEZ, beyond the boundary that defines national income.

Today: NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation. Tuna stocks moving east now. The fish cross the EEZ boundary. The revenue disappears. The nation's border stays where it was drawn.

The fish don't respect EEZ boundaries.

The Deeper Point — A Mobile Ocean and a Sedentary Civilisation

The fish are not the crisis. They are doing exactly what they have always done — following the thermal envelope that their physiology requires, tracing the boundary between warm and cold water as it migrates with the ocean climate. They have no choice. They have no politics. They have only the imperative encoded in 500 million years of evolution: move or die.

The crisis belongs to the civilisation that built permanent infrastructure — ports, processing plants, fishing quotas, national EEZ boundaries, subsistence communities, cultural identities — on the assumption that the fish would stay where they had always been. That assumption was always provisional. The ocean has always been mobile. The thermal envelope has always shifted with climate. Human coastal civilisations simply built during a period of relative stability and called it permanence.

The period of relative stability is ending. The ratchet has been clicking since 1977. The fish have been recording each click. 145 miles of northward movement in federal survey data. 80 days of seasonal shift in tuna arrival. 72 kilometres per decade across the Pacific. The biological record is unambiguous and it has been available in peer-reviewed literature for decades.

The fish moved because the ocean told them to. The ocean moved because the Pacific told it to. The Pacific moved because the submarine volcanic system beneath it has been expressing itself for millions of years — and nobody built it into a climate model.

The Framework Closed — From Mantle to Migration

The Complete Chain — Every Step Documented

Earth's mantle generates heat — expressed through submarine volcanic and hydrothermal systems beneath the western Pacific volcanic arc

Western Pacific Warm Pool builds — the warmest ocean on Earth above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth

El Niño declared today — Kelvin wave drains warm pool eastward. NOAA + JMA simultaneous declaration. Strongest event in a generation.

Pacific reorganises global climate — Walker Circulation shifts. Arctic warming accelerates. Greenland melt adds freshwater to North Atlantic.

AMOC weakens — Gulf Stream shifts SW-NE. 219km northward displacement possible. Cold eddy upwelling distributed across Atlantic. Carbon pump weakening.

Thermal envelopes migrate — Japan-to-Alaska corridor warming. North Atlantic restructuring. Pacific Island EEZs losing tuna. Arctic losing its buffer.

The fish move. 145 miles north. 80 days earlier. 72km per decade. The biological record of everything above — written in species distributions since 1972. The fish have already moved. The civilisation built on their staying has not caught up.

On The Record — June 11, 2026

This series began with a question asked in 2004 — whether the warmest ocean on Earth sitting above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth was a coincidence worth investigating. Over ten posts built across a single day, June 10–11, 2026, the answer has been assembled from NOAA satellite data, JMA monitoring reports, peer-reviewed literature, federal trawl surveys, coral bleaching records, AMOC measurements, and the fish themselves.

The fish are the final and most honest piece of evidence. They have no ideology. They cannot be funded by anyone. They cannot be pressured to reach a particular conclusion. They simply follow the water that their bodies require. And for 54 years of federal survey data — 157 species, 145 miles, 80 days — they have been telling us the same thing.

The ocean has moved. The fish have followed. The question for the civilisation that built itself on the assumption of stability is how quickly it can learn to read what the fish already know — and whether the instruments that allow us to understand what is driving this change will survive long enough to provide the answer.

The Ocean Observatories Initiative — the instrument network monitoring the subsurface ocean from Alaska to the Gulf Stream — is being removed from the water in four days.

The fish don't lie. They don't have political agendas. They don't attend conferences or publish papers. They simply move when the ocean tells them to. And the ocean has been telling them — clearly, consistently, for more than fifty years — to go north. They went. We are still arguing about why.

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026

Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004) →

Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006) →

Part II: The Furnace Below

Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive — 41 Years of Data

Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA

Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration June 10 2026

Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire

Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska

Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean

Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop

Part X: The Fish Have Moved (this post)

DATA SOURCES:
EPA Climate Change Indicators: Marine Species Distribution · NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center bottom trawl survey 1972–2022
NOAA Fisheries HMS Study: Crear et al. (2023) — Atlantic Highly Migratory Species catch shifts
Mid-Atlantic Ocean Data Portal: Fish Species Through Time 1972–2017 (The Nature Conservancy / NEFSC)
Chaikin & Belmaker, Tel Aviv University — Nature Ecology & Evolution (2024): poleward shift = population decline
Van Westen & Dijkstra (2026) Communications Earth & Environment 7:197 — Gulf Stream precursor to AMOC collapse
Taylor, Jordan & Stephens (1998) Nature 393 — Gulf Stream displaced northward following ENSO events
Smeed et al. (2018) — AMOC in reduced state since 2008, Geophysical Research Letters
NOAA/JMA El Niño declarations June 10–11, 2026
Original framework: Thomas Lamb, Climate Science Revisited, March 2004
Research assistance: Claude, Anthropic · June 11, 2026