martes, 25 de noviembre de 2014
El Niño storms blamed for stunting growth in Peruvian children
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University in the US found that Peruvian
children who were born during or immediately after a severe El Niño
event 17 years ago were significantly shorter for their age than their
peers born after the extreme storms abated. El Niño is a cyclical
weather pattern that occurs every three to seven years in the equatorial
Pacific region. Warming at the surface of the ocean builds up and heats
the air above it which results in torrential rains and extreme flooding
in the Americas.
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