In 1899, the Indian monsoon
failed, leading
to drought and famine in India. This
led Gilbert
Walker, the head of the Indian Meteorological Service, to search for a way to predict the Indian monsoon. By the early 20th century, he had
identified a
peculiar see-saw relationship between pressure over the maritime continent and India and the
Pacific near
South America. When pressure is high over the eastern Pacific,
it is low
over the maritime continent, and vice versa. He
called this relationship the Southern Oscillation.