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Atmospheric rivers: When it rains on the West Coast, it pours

Floating streams of water vapor known as 'atmospheric rivers' aka 'Pineapple Express' may be responsible for a majority of the worst coastal storms, according to a new study. 

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Nic Coury/ Monterey County Weekly via AP
A man who lives in his RV, which was parked in the 300 block of Griffith Street in Salinas, Calif., walks through the flooded street on Mon., Feb. 20, 2016.

The Pineapple Express turns out to be less delicious than it sounds.

One of many streams of vapor flowing through the atmosphere, the Pineapple Express is an example of the weather phenomenon known as an 鈥渁tmospheric river.鈥 These relatively narrow bands play a major role in the transportation of water around the planet, bringing vast quantities of vapor from one place to another.

But in doing so, they can also wreak havoc when they make landfall and dump their cargo, causing , according to a paper published Monday in Nature Geoscience.

Despite floating through the sky, these rivers easily outstrip their earthbound counterparts. Thousands of miles long and hundreds of miles wide, large atmospheric rivers can carry more than a dozen times the water of the Mississippi River at its mouth,聽, and account for up to half of the West Coast鈥檚 annual precipitation.

Their outsized impact on the West Coast can be both a blessing and a curse. This year, they鈥檝e brought drought-stricken California some much needed good news, but also caused a lot of damage.

"This has been a ," reported Jeff Zimmerman of the National Weather Service, according to NPR. "We've probably had 10 or more ... this winter."

The state聽isn't out of the woods quite yet, but the replenished snowpack may ease water restrictions. On the other hand, big storms have thrashed the state all winter, with the most recent on Monday.

California is no stranger to聽extreme precipitation聽events 鈥 it even聽lost an iconic sequoia聽to an atmospheric river storm in January 鈥撀燼nd the new research sheds light on why. Scientists have long known that atmospheric rivers can wallop聽communities with large floods when they make landfall, but study authors Duane Waliser and Bin Guan wanted to study exactly how the streams affected surface winds and rains.

To do so, they applied a new atmospheric river-recognizing algorithm to almost 20 years of weather data, from 1997 to 2014, to reach some surprising conclusions.

The duo found that the vapor ribbons are in fact quite windy, although they write that this result was 鈥渘ot completely unexpected,鈥 given that wind is a necessary ingredient in the transport of water vapor up from the tropics.

What was more surprising was just how damaging atmospheric rivers could be. Atmospheric rivers appeared to be responsible for up to half of the top 2 percent of high-wind, high-precipitation weather events, inducing tempests likely to feature winds twice as strong as a standard storm.

California isn鈥檛 the only victim. Dr. Waliser was also able to connect many of Europe鈥檚 worst storms during the time period studied with atmospheric rivers.

Such storms' combination of wind and rain makes them incredibly costly.聽Over the last twenty years, 19 European storms caused a billion dollars or more in damage. "And so out of these 19 storms," Waliser told NPR, "we associated atmospheric rivers with 14 out of the 19."

Some hope a more detailed understanding of these remarkable weather patterns might help states be better prepared in the future.

The duo suggests that future studies analyze the behavior of atmospheric rivers more deeply and find out how they relate with 鈥渟pecific wind-related hazards, such as storm surge and coastal flooding, wind damage, marine weather and significant wave height.鈥

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