Not exact matches
Brazil, Indonesia, many parts of Africa and Canada typically experience larger wildfires (measured by
area burned) than the United States on a yearly
average.
One
area of primary forest ended up having more than 300 tons of carbon per hectare, while
areas of forest that had been
burned or subjected to timber extraction had, at most, 200 tons per hectare and, on
average, less than 100 tons of carbon per hectare.
Projections indicate that for every 1.8 °F further rise in temperature — and the western U.S. could see
average temperatures rise by up to 9 °F by 2100 — there could be a quadrupling in the
area burned each year in the western U.S..
We found that the
average number of large wildfires
burning each year and the total
area burning in these fires have both increased dramatically since the 1970s.
According to the National Interagency Fire Center, with nearly two months still to go in the fire season, the total
area already
burned this year is 30 percent more than in an
average year, and fires have consumed more than 8.6 million acres, an
area larger than the state of Maryland.
A: The sensitive skin in these
areas is easily irritated, hence the better - than -
average likelihood of razor
burn.
Bug fixes are still update worthy (hopefully none exist) 5 Types of towers: - Arrow: Single target, attacks ground and air units - Cannon: Single target splash damage, attacks ground units only - Splash:
Area of Effect (AoE) attack in radius around tower, attacks ground units only - Air: Single target shot that splits into two new projectiles, attacks air units only - Wall: Cheap tower for creating a path for creeps 3 Tower Elements: - Ice: Slow attack, long range, costly, applies slow to enemies - Fire: Fast attack, short range, expensive, applies
burn to enemies - Normal:
Average stats across the board, cheap 6 Types of Towers: - Normal: Basic creep that progresses slowly ahead with an average health - Armored: High health point creep that can take a beating, but is also very slow - Speed: Fastest creep in the game, but also one of the weakest - Flying: This creep will bypass your ground defenses and walls by flying from start to finish - Dividing: This creep will separate and split into smaller creeps until it is killed a total of 7 times - Parachute: You thought the Flying creep w
Average stats across the board, cheap 6 Types of Towers: - Normal: Basic creep that progresses slowly ahead with an
average health - Armored: High health point creep that can take a beating, but is also very slow - Speed: Fastest creep in the game, but also one of the weakest - Flying: This creep will bypass your ground defenses and walls by flying from start to finish - Dividing: This creep will separate and split into smaller creeps until it is killed a total of 7 times - Parachute: You thought the Flying creep w
average health - Armored: High health point creep that can take a beating, but is also very slow - Speed: Fastest creep in the game, but also one of the weakest - Flying: This creep will bypass your ground defenses and walls by flying from start to finish - Dividing: This creep will separate and split into smaller creeps until it is killed a total of 7 times - Parachute: You thought the Flying creep was bad?
Between 1950 and 2009, the
average annual
burned area in California was at least several times lower than the
burned area before 1800, they say.
This
burn area so far for this one territory is almost twice that for the whole of Canada during an
average year through early August.
The
area burned by these fires has shown an even larger increase: in an
average year, more than six times as many acres across the West were
burned in the 2010s than in the 1970s.
Every ecosystem type, however, is projected to experience an increase in
average annual
burn area.
Since 2005, the Amazon has experienced the two most severe droughts on record; in 2007, NASA satellite data shows that fires in southeast Amazonia
burned 10 times more forest than in an
average climate year — an
area the size of a million soccer fields.
In an
average year, Alaska wildfires devour twice the
area burned by wildfires in all of the lower 48 — and emit more greenhouse gases than all of those other wildfires combined, the USGS said.
The number that I ask you to remember is the increase in thickness,
averaged over one half of the land
area of the planet, of the biomass that would result if all the carbon that we are emitting by
burning fossil fuels were absorbed.