February 11, 2009 2:57 PM

Did El Nino Help Magellan Sail?

(AP)  The El Nino phenomenon that has puzzled climate scientists in recent decades may have assisted the first trip around the world nearly 500 years ago.

Explorer Ferdinand Magellan encountered fair weather on Nov. 28, 1520, after days of battle through the rough waters south of South America. From there his passage across the Pacific Ocean may have been eased by the calming effects of El Nino, researchers speculate in a new study.

When an El Nino occurs, the waters of the Equatorial Pacific become warmer than normal, creating rising air that changes wind and weather patterns. The effects can be worldwide, including drought in the western Pacific and more rain in Peru and the west coast of South America.

Tree ring data indicate that an El Nino was occurring in 1519 and 1520 and may even have begun in 1518.

After passing through the strait later named for him, Magellan sailed north along the South American coast and then turned northwest, crossing the equator and eventually arriving at the Philippines, where he was killed in a battle with natives.

Magellan was seeking the so-called spice islands, now part of Indonesia, and his course took him north of that goal.

But the route may have been dictated by mild conditions and favorable winds during an El Nino, anthropologists Scott M. Fitzpatrick of North Carolina State University and Richard Callaghan of the University of Calgary, Canada, propose in a new study of his trip.

Their research is summarized in Friday's edition of the journal Science and is scheduled to be published in full in the August edition of the Journal of Pacific History.

They were studying early exploration trips and were struck by the fact that Magellan sailed unusually far north, Fitzpatrick explained in a telephone interview.

"We had not considered El Nino until afterward, when we were trying to account for why the winds were so calm when he came into the Pacific," he said. "We knew it was unusual."

The researchers used a computer to model wind and weather conditions across the Pacific during an El Nino and then compared that to Magellan's route.

Magellan's journals show that many of the crew had died or were sick with scurvy, so he may simply have chosen to sail with the existing winds and currents, reducing the number of crew needed to operate his ships, Fitzgerald said.

"It could have been an adept maneuver," the researchers wrote, allowing him to move west along the past of least resistance.

In his writings, Magellan said he chose the northerly route because of reports of a famine in the spice islands. This also could be accurate, Callaghan and Fitzpatrick say, as El Nino conditions often result in drought in that region.

Magellan had received correspondence from a friend in the spice islands before setting out and so may have known about a famine there, Fitzgerald said. But that cannot be determined for certain, because the correspondence was destroyed in the great Lisbon earthquake of 1755.

While the actual reasons for Magellan's choice of route remain uncertain, El Nino conditions "may have been largely responsible for structuring the route and extent of what many consider the world's greatest voyage," the researchers wrote.

The trip, in fact, may be the earliest record of an El Nino, Fitzpatrick said.

Sir Francis Drake encountered mild conditions in the Strait of Magellan when he sailed through in 1578, but he then faced months of Pacific storms that scattered his ships, sinking one. Captain James Cook seems also to have benefited from El Nino conditions centered on 1769 during his Pacific exploration.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by glock4me May 18, 2008 12:19 AM EDT
Impossible, Al Gore invented El Nino 450 years after Magellen''s voyage.
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by blackbug99 May 17, 2008 1:21 PM EDT
"I''m convinced that reporters who''ve been bad get stuck doing weather stories." - downtowner97

LOL, I call it the Hurricane Pecking Order Theory. You can tell where you are in the weather news hierarchy by whether you''re covering a hurricane, on TV, at a warm comfortable desk, or holding on to a street sign being blown horizontal by 130mph winds.
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by brianbwb-2009 May 17, 2008 11:21 AM EDT
In case anyone wonders why he was killed;

"Searching for a way to control the native population after he leaves the island, Magellan persuades one of the local chiefs to convert to Christianity (referred to by Antonio as the "Christian King"). Magellan hopes to make this chieftain supreme over the remaining local tribes and loyal to the King of Spain. To bolster this chief''s local supremacy, Magellan decides that a show of force, particularly the power of his muskets and cannon, against a neighboring tribe will impress the natives into submission...

...the captain-general sent some men to burn their houses in order to terrify them. When they saw their houses burning, they were roused to greater fury. Two of our men were killed near the houses, while we burned twenty or thirty houses. So many of them charged down upon us that they shot the captain through the right leg with a poisoned arrow."

To this day, "White" people still try this, only now it is called "shock and awe", and they still wonder why the locals get angry...
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by ajmarine111 May 17, 2008 1:31 AM EDT
Try it again.
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by erasmus81 May 17, 2008 12:14 AM EDT
I was in the middle of writing an e-mail to you and then I got your other one. I then tried sending it but it wouldn''t go through. Now what? Should I use the other or just talk here?
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by ajmarine111 May 16, 2008 11:48 PM EDT
I sent you an e-mail.
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by erasmus81 May 16, 2008 11:43 PM EDT
Amazing what they can tell from tree rings. Posted by AJMarine111 at 08:32 PM : May 16, 2008


Yes, it is amazing. I watch a show one time with David Suzuki. He was showing what all the different rings meant and what was happening at that time.
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by ajmarine111 May 16, 2008 11:32 PM EDT
Tree ring data indicate that an El Nino was occurring in 1519 and 1520 and may even have begun in 1518.



Amazing what they can tell from tree rings.
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by downtowner97 May 16, 2008 6:18 PM EDT
I''m convinced that reporters who''ve been bad get stuck doing weather stories.
Reply to this comment
by catlover912 May 16, 2008 2:37 PM EDT
wHAT NO GLOBAL WARMING???!!!
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