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・ 1997–98 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey)
・ 1997–98 División de Honor de Futsal
・ 1997–98 Divizia A
・ 1997–98 Divizia B
・ 1997–98 Doncaster Rovers F.C. season
・ 1997–98 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team
・ 1997–98 Dundee United F.C. season
・ 1997–98 ECHL season
・ 1997–98 Edmonton Oilers season
・ 1997–98 EEHL season
・ 1997–98 Eerste Divisie
・ 1997–98 EHF Champions League
・ 1997–98 EHF Women's Champions League
・ 1997–98 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup
・ 1997–98 Ekstraklasa
1997–98 El Niño Event
・ 1997–98 Eliteserien (Denmark) season
・ 1997–98 Eliteserien season
・ 1997–98 Elitserien season
・ 1997–98 English Premiership (rugby union)
・ 1997–98 Eredivisie
・ 1997–98 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season
・ 1997–98 Esiliiga
・ 1997–98 Euro Hockey Tour
・ 1997–98 EuroLeague Women
・ 1997–98 European Challenge Cup
・ 1997–98 European Challenge Cup pool stage
・ 1997–98 Everton F.C. season
・ 1997–98 FA Cup
・ 1997–98 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds


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1997–98 El Niño Event : ウィキペディア英語版
1997–98 El Niño Event

The 1997–1998 El Niño was regarded as one of the most powerful El Niño-Southern Oscillation events in recorded history, resulting in widespread drought, flooding and other natural disasters across the globe. It caused an estimated 16% of the world's reef systems to die, and temporarily warmed air temperature by 1.5 °C, compared to the usual increase of 0.25 °C associated with El Niño events.
It led to a severe outbreak of Rift Valley fever after extreme rainfall in north-eastern Kenya and southern Somalia. It also led to record rainfalls in California during the water season of 1997-1998 and one of Indonesia's worst droughts on record. 1998 ultimately became the hottest year in recorded history (up until then).
==Meteorological progression==

In January 1997, satellites gathering information on water temperatures and sea level heights discovered an area of unusually warm water situated across the western half of the Pacific Ocean. About below the surface, water temperatures were about 3 °C (5.4 °F) above normal, signifying that an El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event was beginning. By this time, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography had forecast that an ENSO was likely to take place during the latter half of 1997. Throughout February, water temperatures began increasing over much of the Pacific as well as in shallower waters off the coast of Peru. The above-average water temperatures covered an area roughly across, almost stretching from New Guinea to South America. By April, the ENSO became fully established; a column of warm water extended to the surface in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and water anomalies exceeded 5 °C (9 °F) about below the ocean surface. At the surface off the coast of Peru, water temperatures averaged 3 °C (5.4 °F) above normal.
Exceedingly warm waters became apparent by May, especially off the coast of South America where anomalies were reaching 7 °C (12.6 °F) above normal. Further north, sea surface temperatures along the Pacific coast of North America were increasing, with a large pool of water being 3 °C (5.4 °F) above normal. By September 1997, the ENSO became very powerful, with surface temperatures between South America and the International Dateline averaging 2-4 °C (3.6-7.2 °F) above normal, roughly a quarter of the planet's diameter. Additionally, waters along the Pacific coast of North America continued to expand, now stretching from Alaska to southern Mexico. A contrasting area of abnormally cool waters took shape near the coast of Australia by September as well, with waters below the surface averaging 4 °C (7.2 °F) below normal. Along the Pacific coast of the Americas, the volume of water was roughly 30 times greater than that of the all the water in the Great Lakes combined. The extra heat energy created by this anomaly was also about 93 times more than the energy produced by fossil fuels in the United States during 1995.
By January 1998, waters off the coast of Peru continued to increase, reaching temperatures 11 °C (19.8 °F) above average. However, the region of cooler than average water in the western Pacific expanded, signifying that a La Niña would take shape in the latter part of 1998. Just two months later, the extent of above-average water temperatures sharply decreased as the El Niño weakened. The 1997–98 ENSO event finally ended during May 1998 as below-average water temperatures extended across much of the Pacific.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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