Sentences with phrase «average warm up»

This was very well explained in Steve McIntyre's latest blog article two minutes to midnight where he showed that over the period 1979 - 2013 models on average warm up 50 % faster than the real -LSB-...]

Not exact matches

The average temperature was 57.1 degrees F, up from the old record, in 1998, which landed an average of 54.3 degrees F. «We had our fourth warmest winter (2011/2012) on record, our warmest spring, a very hot summer with the hottest month on record for the nation (July 2012), and a warmer than average autumn,» Jake Crouch, a scientist at the National Climatic Data Center, told NBC News.
A team of truly big men (the interior of the offensive line averages 261 pounds), the Jets are slow to warm up but have an almost mystical ability to win, often in the nick of time, big games.
The Mens 4 x 400 team really set the standard for Oxford Athletics, in the warm up to the outdoor season they broke the 4 x 200 match record to win in 1:30:18 before breaking the OUAC club record with 3:15:27 (an average split of 48:82) at the BUCS outdoor Championships winning a Bronze medal.
no wonder wenger has gotten away with his dozen years of failure when fans deliver this kind of ludicrous assessment... get of the wenger juice and get yourself cleaned up... anyway this was a tale of two very different halves so average score is basically like saying the guy who took a bath in ice water and then in scolding water had a good time as on average he was in warm water!!!
From his warm, funny and friendly demeanor to efforts in the classroom — he's earned a 3.5 grade point average this semester at the Hayward school — to excelling on the basketball court, the long, lean, high - flying 6 - foot - 6 wing is a young man for young people — and old — to look up to.
As summer heats up in the Arizona desert temperatures easily exceed 100ºF with an average summer temperature of 112ºF and warmer.
The Warming Meadow's radiators raise average soil temperatures by about three degrees Fahrenheit, decrease growing season soil moisture by up to twenty percent and advance the spring snowmelt date by up to a month in order to simulate predicted effects of climate change.
It is well established that cold - blooded species get smaller as the climate heats up, says Andrew Hirst of Queen Mary, University of London — 1 °C of warming reduces their adult body mass by 2.5 per cent on average.
«During last warming period, Antarctica heated up two to three times more than planet average: Amplification of warming at poles consistent with today's climate change models.»
For example, in Cornell's set up, water drawn from Cayuga Lake is between 39 and 41 degrees Fahrenheit, but when it returns it is slightly warmer, averaging about 47 degrees F during the winter and 56 degrees F in the summer.
It shows a record warming spell earlier this year, which continues to drive up the 5 - year average of heat content, shown in blue.
Dr Stephen Grimes of Plymouth University, who initiated the research project, highlighted the climate changes that must have caused this increase in sediment erosion and transport — «We have climate model simulations of the effect of warming on rainfall during the PETM event, and they show some changes in the average amounts of rainfall, but the largest change is how this rainfall is packaged up — it's concentrated in more rapid, extreme events — larger and bigger storms.»
Aerosols are already known to reduce global warming: The vast clouds of sulfates thrown up in the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines, for example, reduced average global temperatures by about half a degree Celsius.
During warm ups, players swung fastest with the light and standard bats, averaging 101.4 and 82.1 kilometers per hour, respectively.
A newly published research study that combines effects of warming temperatures from climate change with stream acidity projects average losses of around 10 percent of stream habitat for coldwater aquatic species for seven national forests in the southern Appalachians — and up to a 20 percent loss of habitat in the Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests in western North Carolina.
In a warm conference room overlooking a frozen cove, Mattingly opens her laptop and calls up my results for about 40 toxins that are present in my body at above - average levels: DDT, PCBs, flame retardants, metals, phthalates, and others.
Over the past 20 years or so, that transition zone has been gradually moving up the ice sheet by about 115 feet every year, on average — another indication that temperatures on the frozen island are warming.
Also not all places are warming in lock - step; it's the average temp that going up, and (I think) it's even possible there could be greater variance or extremes (hotter hots, colder colds), as the average continues to go up (but I'm no scientist, and I don't really know).
An increase (0.35 °C) occurred in the global average temperature from the 1910s to the 1940s, followed by a slight cooling (0.1 °C), and then a rapid warming (0.55 °C) up to the end of 2006 (Figure 1).
Given the one percent rise of temperature over the last century is an «average», and the Arctic and Antarctic regions are now warming faster, purportedly by up to eleven degrees, there must be areas that are now cooler.
He came up with an answer of 5 - 6 °C of warming as a globally - averaged figure.
«We use a massive ensemble of the Bern2.5 D climate model of intermediate complexity, driven by bottom - up estimates of historic radiative forcing F, and constrained by a set of observations of the surface warming T since 1850 and heat uptake Q since the 1950s... Between 1850 and 2010, the climate system accumulated a total net forcing energy of 140 x 1022 J with a 5 - 95 % uncertainty range of 95 - 197 x 1022 J, corresponding to an average net radiative forcing of roughly 0.54 (0.36 - 0.76) Wm - 2.»
Ocean heating accounts for about 40 percent of global sea level rise, because water expands as it warms up; global average sea level from January through November was also a record high, the WMO said.
Planetary warming may only be around 1 degree on average, but around the North Pole it's up to 8 degrees above normal.
The study also found that during the workout portion of the trampoline routine (not including the warm - up and cool - down), participants averaged 79 percent of their maximum heart rate and 59 percent of their VO2 max, a measure of how much oxygen the body can utilize during exercise.
Well, so that you know: drinking 2 liters of water daily amounts to roughly 95 kcal burned to warm it up from 22O (the average temperature of our environment) to 37o (the average temperature of our bodies.
However, all that must not be tried before warming up with hiking (going up steep slopes and burning 390 calories an hour, on an average), biking and a bit of running.
Go way beyond your «Average» Warm Up — This 3 - DVD set takes you step by step through the Performance U Dynamic Warm Up System, used to help clients and athletes ensure optimal performance before they train or compete.
I walked everyday 1 hour in the morning, warm up in first 10 mins then reach 7km / hour and maintain it for 50 mins (Average I walk 6.7 km / hour).
Soooo I've been doing RRARF (eating lots whenever I'm hungry or cold, emphasizing the 4 S's, minimizing liquids (no water unless really crave it... otherwise, only salted juices or kombucha — and only after I eat / get warm), no low intensity cardio except for gardening / mowing the lawn) for about a month now, and while my hands and feet seem to generally be warmer, and my heart rate is up into the normal range (60 - 90, not 50 and below), my BBTs have not gone up... and on average, they are actually worse, and more variable!
After a light warm - up of very leisurely walking, walk at a good pace where you don't feel too much stress — say 4 km / hr (2.5 m / h)-- and record your average heart rate every quarter mile or half kilometer a few times.
On those warmer than average days, I've been able to ditch my puffy winter jacket (for those of you looking for a warm yet affordable winter coat option, I love my Eddie Bauer jacket) I find myself reaching for this new lilac long coat I picked up last week.
Shy at first but once I warm up to you, I can honestly say I'm awesome:P Average body, brown hair, blue eyes.
well im Jamaican and i am 6 foot 5 body is average and i am a really fun guy to hang out with and enjoy yourself with me im not too much of the quiet type but you get me warmed up i will start to talk to you like no other man has spoke to you before and the name is mikko lol sorry
DAY SIX: Still happy with mileage, been warming the vehicle up and was caught on Glenmore trail for slow drive home, still managing an average of 10.1 L / 100 km, that's great!
The water is some of the warmest to be found in any surf region averaging 27ºC (80ºF) and sometimes creeping up to 30ºC (86ºF)!
At this time of year, the average temperature for the city starts off at 0 °C, made up of highs of 4 °C using the daytime and lows of -4 °C after sunset, and rises up to 2.5 °C, made up of highs of 6 °C during the daytime and lows of -1 °C at night, by the end, making the final week of February the best time to visit if you want to experience New York at its warmest.
Water clarity is average up to 15 meters distance, temperature is warm likes bathing water.
It's looking like they will have some average surf to warm up on, then they are going to have to get serious because the long range forecasts are calling for some solid, southwest swell next week!
Temperatures warm up rapidly, and average daily highs will reach 29oc by the end of November.
On an average night, you can find me curled up with a warm tea browsing the (surprisingly active) Lovecraft subreddit, discussing how accurate the narrator's descriptions of the Great Old Ones are.
For instance, the canvas buckets give a temperature up to 1ºC cooler in some circumstances (that depend on season and location — the biggest differences come over warm water in winter, global average is about 0.4 ºC cooler) than the modern insulated buckets.
[1] CO2 absorbs IR, is the main GHG, human emissions are increasing its concentration in the atmosphere, raising temperatures globally; the second GHG, water vapor, exists in equilibrium with water / ice, would precipitate out if not for the CO2, so acts as a feedback; since the oceans cover so much of the planet, water is a large positive feedback; melting snow and ice as the atmosphere warms decreases albedo, another positive feedback, biased toward the poles, which gives larger polar warming than the global average; decreasing the temperature gradient from the equator to the poles is reducing the driving forces for the jetstream; the jetstream's meanders are increasing in amplitude and slowing, just like the lower Missippi River where its driving gradient decreases; the larger slower meanders increase the amplitude and duration of blocking highs, increasing drought and extreme temperatures — and 30,000 + Europeans and 5,000 plus Russians die, and the US corn crop, Russian wheat crop, and Aussie wildland fire protection fails — or extreme rainfall floods the US, France, Pakistan, Thailand (driving up prices for disk drives — hows that for unexpected adverse impacts from AGW?)
Given the one percent rise of temperature over the last century is an «average», and the Arctic and Antarctic regions are now warming faster, purportedly by up to eleven degrees, there must be areas that are now cooler.
Interestingly, although the [Summary for Policy Makers] clearly talked about the projected global warming being up to 6.4 degrees above 1980 - 1999 average (which is 6.9 degrees above pre-industrial), you often see AR4 cited as suggesting that warming could be «up to 4 degrees,» which I think is partly a consequence of the way a key figure was presented.
Global average surface temperatures are not expected to change significantly although temperatures at higher latitudes may be expected to decrease to a modest extent because of a reduction in the efficiency of meridional heat transport (offsetting the additional warming anticipated for this environment caused by the build - up of greenhouse gases).
Now I've seen mentions that (strong) El Nino years will make the global annual average higher — e.g. 1998 was so warm partly because of El Nino, and that this is due to the fact that sub-surface warmer water is brought up and allowed to affect the air temperature.
This is the «bottom up» or «soft» approach described by Andrew Revkin at the start of the summit, although the combined commitments almost certainly won't be enough to keep the planet below the politically agreed target of 2 degrees Celsius average warming.
In the North Atlantic, the measured values differ markedly from the average global warming: the subpolar Atlantic (an area about half the size of the USA, south of Greenland) has hardly warmed up and in some cases even cooled down, contrary to the global warming trend.
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