With the highest
average elevation in the United States, as well as a variety of thriving outdoor activities, residents of Colorado have highly individualized needs when it comes to term life insurance.
«
The average elevation in Florida is 6 feet,» London said.
In particular, the high leucine content is being responsible for the above
average elevation in MPS.
Not exact matches
One study reported that traders made significantly higher profits on days when their morning testosterone levels were above their daily
average, and that increased variability
in profits and uncertainty
in the market was reliably associated with
elevations in their cortisol levels27.
He runs four to five times a week,
averaging between 20 and 40 miles per outing with
elevation gains
in the thousands.
Nine of the 10 moved up the mountain, altogether
averaging a 213 - foot gain
in elevation.
Ruiz, who contributed to the report, noted that an analysis of weather records at one páramo research station showed increases
in minimum temperatures were almost twice that of lower
elevations, while increases
in maximum temperatures jumped to nearly three times the
average at lower
elevations.
Not surprisingly, O'Gorman found that under relatively high warming scenarios, low -
elevation regions with winter temperatures initially just below freezing experienced about a 65 percent reduction
in average winter snowfall.
At an
elevation of 2,835 meters (9,300 feet), South Pole has an
average monthly temperature
in the austral summer of -28 °C -LRB--18 °F);
in the austral winter, the
average monthly temperature is -60 °C -LRB--76 °F).
The resistance - training group had a slight
elevation in resting metabolic rate that
averaged 63 calories per day.
A brisk walk into the surrounding hills near Goulongzhu's home would quickly leave me breathless; Zhongchacun is 7,614 feet above sea level, and
in an area where 14,000 feet above sea level is the
average altitude, the village's
elevation is relatively mild.
6» weighing
in at 198,
average kick ass build, Retired, 4 dogs, Debt Free, Long Hair, Long Beard, Wear Glasses, have my teeth & eat clean, Quote; will soon be growing everything that we eat, quote un quote & I live
in the higher
elevations ie Snow Country
Three major landforms, Uplands, Old Fluvial / Deltaic Plains and Young Fluvial Plains are identified from the Lower Gangetic Plains of West Bengal, India, on Australia has some impressive «high country» but it is
in fact the lowest continent
in the world with an
average elevation of just 330 metres.
Australia has some impressive «high country» but it is
in fact the lowest continent
in the world with an
average elevation of just 330 metres.
Are we
in the Anthropocene and no longer
in the Australia has some impressive «high country» but it is
in fact the lowest continent
in the world with an
average elevation of just 330 metres.
There are no EPA estimates available regarding fuel economy, but even with my rather exuberant driving
in a mixture of speeds,
elevations, and traffic patterns, I
averaged about 33 mpg.
The Central Sierra highlands maintain an
average elevation of 9,000 feet (2743 m), resulting
in daytime temperatures that range from 50 °F (10 °C) to 60 °F (15.6 °C).
Willow Springs International Motorsports Park With a blistering lap time of just 1 minute 6 seconds held by legendary racer Michael Andretti, the 9 - turn track is the oldest permanent road course
in the United States with
elevation changes and high
average speeds making it a favourite amongst drivers.
The warming trends
in looking at numerous 100 year temperature plots from northern and high
elevation climate stations... i.e. warming trends
in annual mean and minimum temperature
averages, winter monthly means and minimums and especially winter minimum temperatures and dewpoints... indicate climate warming that is being driven by the accumulation of greenhouse gases
in the atmosphere — no visible effects from other things like changes
in solar radiation or the levels of cosmic rays.
This leads to a higher equilibrium temperature, but balance is reestablished again
in a sense that time
averages of energy
in - and - out are equal for each volume element, given some fixed
elevation of greenhouse gas concentration.
In fact, these
elevations experienced 2.5 times the
average rainfall.
This latter region lies at an
elevation of over 4500m on
average, meaning that there is strong warming over a significant depth
in the troposphere.
In an earlier posting, I pointed out the striking change in altitude of samples at this site, with 13th century samples averaging from an altitude of about 310 m. (NATO 1996, Figure 4, top panel), while modern samples all come from between 200 and 250 m. Briffa says that the elevations of the subfossil cores are known precisely, but not the modern cores (p. 35
In an earlier posting, I pointed out the striking change
in altitude of samples at this site, with 13th century samples averaging from an altitude of about 310 m. (NATO 1996, Figure 4, top panel), while modern samples all come from between 200 and 250 m. Briffa says that the elevations of the subfossil cores are known precisely, but not the modern cores (p. 35
in altitude of samples at this site, with 13th century samples
averaging from an altitude of about 310 m. (NATO 1996, Figure 4, top panel), while modern samples all come from between 200 and 250 m. Briffa says that the
elevations of the subfossil cores are known precisely, but not the modern cores (p. 35).
Not only did Greenland Ice Sheet surface melt
in 2012 occur over a bigger - than -
average area, it also began about two weeks earlier at lower
elevations and, for any given
elevation, lasted longer.
«Calculating the annual
average temperature of the 119 temperature gauges
in Nepal located at
elevations on between 72 m and 4100 m, reveals an upward trend
in values from 1961 — 1996 at a rate of almost 7C per 100 years (or 0.07 C / year)»
Here is a graph of global
average annual relative humidity at various
elevations in the atmosphere expressed
in milli - bars (mb) from 300 mb to 700 mb for the period 1948 to 2008.
We posit that these characteristics are the result of demonstrable differences between corresponding topographical datasets used
in the gridded observations and CRCM, the resulting errors propagated to physical variables tied to
elevation and the beneficial effect of subsequent spatial
averaging.
As proof of warmer
average temperatures
in northern Europe, they cite the existence of wheat cultivation and vineyards at latitudes and
elevations that were far higher than today.
A measurement comparing these systems demonstrates an unprecedented atomic clock instability of 1.6 × 10 ^ -18 after only 7 hours of
averaging... Clock measurement at the 10 ^ -18 level can be used to resolve spatial and temporal fluctuations equivalent to 1 cm of
elevation in Earth's gravitational field (25 — 28), potentially impacting geodesy, hydrology, geology, and climate change studies.
Minimum temperatures play an especially important role
in March, when the
average overnight low temperatures
in high
elevations hover around the freezing point.
In 2005 the Greenland ice sheet lost around 53 cubic miles (220 cubic kilometers) of mass — more than two times the amount it lost in 1996 (22 cubic miles, or 90 cubic kilometers).5 The melt area set a new record in 2007: it was about 60 percent larger than the previous record in 1998, and extended farther inland.7, 8 By 2007 the melt season at elevations above 6,500 feet (2,000 meters) was a month longer than the average from 1988 to 2006
In 2005 the Greenland ice sheet lost around 53 cubic miles (220 cubic kilometers) of mass — more than two times the amount it lost
in 1996 (22 cubic miles, or 90 cubic kilometers).5 The melt area set a new record in 2007: it was about 60 percent larger than the previous record in 1998, and extended farther inland.7, 8 By 2007 the melt season at elevations above 6,500 feet (2,000 meters) was a month longer than the average from 1988 to 2006
in 1996 (22 cubic miles, or 90 cubic kilometers).5 The melt area set a new record
in 2007: it was about 60 percent larger than the previous record in 1998, and extended farther inland.7, 8 By 2007 the melt season at elevations above 6,500 feet (2,000 meters) was a month longer than the average from 1988 to 2006
in 2007: it was about 60 percent larger than the previous record
in 1998, and extended farther inland.7, 8 By 2007 the melt season at elevations above 6,500 feet (2,000 meters) was a month longer than the average from 1988 to 2006
in 1998, and extended farther inland.7, 8 By 2007 the melt season at
elevations above 6,500 feet (2,000 meters) was a month longer than the
average from 1988 to 2006.9
I have seen very slow growth rates
in larch from northern Siberia, but as you can see
in the Salzer et al figure 4a the growth rates of the high
elevation trees are ~ 0.4 mm on
average compared to ~ 0.2 mm for the lower, precip limited site.
Two summers back, here within view of Colorado Springs» Waldo Canyon conflagration, I vividly recall some details: a) a hoisted ember astonishingly re-igniting things across a mile wide mountain lake, breaching the NE perimeter; b) our relative humidity, the day of the blaze, was so low the am weatherman uttering «you night as well say we have none;» c) the flown -
in Commander, on camera and perhaps the best mind
in all the world on matters such, describing never before witnessed probabilities for live ember re-ignitions, as «perhaps two out of three;» & d) that sad day's all - time record setting mark of 101 F., here @ 6,500 feet +
elevations,
in that astonishing summer where lower - 48
averages jumped by more than a single degree Fahrenheit
in one realm - altering excursion.
The most likely candidate for that climatic variable force that comes to mind is solar variability (because I can think of no other force that can change or reverse
in a different trend often enough, and quick enough to account for the historical climatic record) and the primary and secondary effects associated with this solar variability which I feel are a significant player
in glacial / inter-glacial cycles, counter climatic trends when taken into consideration with these factors which are, land / ocean arrangements, mean land
elevation, mean magnetic field strength of the earth (magnetic excursions), the mean state of the climate (
average global temperature), the initial state of the earth's climate (how close to interglacial - glacial threshold condition it is) the state of random terrestrial (violent volcanic eruption, or a random atmospheric circulation / oceanic pattern that feeds upon itself possibly) / extra terrestrial events (super-nova
in vicinity of earth or a random impact) along with Milankovitch Cycles.
The
elevation that year of CO2 at MLO above the global
average was the highest recorded
in the 27 years between 1982 and 2008 - presumably as a consequence of the 1998 El Nino.
The high -
elevation samples occur
in the medieval period and were not
averaged with Little Ice Age -LSB-...]
It's actually somewhat difficult to define the
average temperature of a region, because of things like the changes
in temperature with
elevation over even short distances.
A comparison of glacier surface
elevation in 1983 and 2002 identifies the
average thinning
in the twenty year period from the USGS aerial photography
in 1983 to 2002, for the northern branch is 15 m.
In total, 180 coastal municipalities in the conterminous U.S.A. with populations over 50,000 have an average of 36 % of their land area at or below 6 meters of elevation and connected to the se
In total, 180 coastal municipalities
in the conterminous U.S.A. with populations over 50,000 have an average of 36 % of their land area at or below 6 meters of elevation and connected to the se
in the conterminous U.S.A. with populations over 50,000 have an
average of 36 % of their land area at or below 6 meters of
elevation and connected to the sea.
Is it not true that the equilibrium radiation
in / out is consistent with a temperature of about 255K, which is the
average temperature at about 5 km
elevation?
Inhomogeneities
in the data arise mainly due to changes
in instruments, exposure, station location (
elevation, position), ship height, observation time, urbanization effects, and the method used to calculate
averages.