Sentences with phrase «cause less sea»

Not exact matches

Proponents claim the dispersants did help dissipate oil slicks on the sea surface, causing less oil to taint shoreline beaches and marshes.
Whiting, now a doctoral student at the University of Minnesota, describes the alligator as a survivor, withstanding sea - level fluctuations and extreme changes in climate that would have caused some less - adaptive animals to rapidly change or go extinct.
The wind can also affect the marine environment, she continued, mixing up the water column and dispersing the krill, a penguin's main source of food, which may cause parent penguins to remain at sea for longer periods of time and cause chicks to be fed less frequently.
The findings suggest that while the response of Antarctic summer sea ice to human - caused climate change may be less dramatic than in the Arctic, sea ice cover may have declined by as much as 14 % over the last 100 years.
Or that the current deep freeze in europe is caused by less sea ice etc..
My take is that the tug of war over what's causing today's telegenic heat waves, floods, tempests — and even Arctic sea - ice retreats — distracts from the high confidence scientists have in the long - term (but less sexy) picture: that more CO2 will lead to centuries of climate and coastal changes with big consequences for a growing human population (for better and worse in the short run, and likely mostly for the worse in the long run).
I've been criticized by some environmentalists in recent years for writing that the long - term picture (more CO2 = warmer world = less ice = higher seas and lots of climatic and ecological changes) is the only aspect of human - caused global warming that is solidly established, and that efforts to link dramatic weather - related events to the human influence on climate could backfire should nature wiggle the other way for awhile.
Results showed the storm caused the sea ice to pass the previous record 10 days earlier in August than it would have otherwise, but only reduced the final September ice extent by 150,000 square kilometers (almost 60,000 square miles), less than a 5 percent difference.
Simple physics dictates that with less sea ice there is magnified warming of the Arctic due to powerful albedo feedback; this in turn reduces the equator to pole temperature gradient which slows the jet stream winds causing them to become more meridional; this combined with 4 % more water vapor in the atmosphere (compared to 3 decades ago) is leading to much more extremes in weather.
The study said sea level rise, caused by factors including a thaw of glaciers, averaged about 1.2 millimeters (0.05 inch) a year from 1901 - 90 — less than past estimates — and leapt to 3 mm a year in the past two decades, apparently linked to a quickening thaw of ice.
None of this excuses Carrington's distortion, but we shouldn't let that cause us to miss the point and ignore the information that the graphs do show us: The Arctic sea - ice is melting at an increased rate and there is less of it now than 10 or 15 years ago.
Had New York and New Jersey focused resources on building sea walls and adding storm doors to the subway system and making simple fixes like porous pavements, Hurricane Sandy would have caused much less damage.
Reworded, the reduction in trade wind strength due to the El Niño causes less evaporation, and since there is less evaporation, tropical North Atlantic sea surface temperatures rise.
Then, less than seven months later, what he called «an unusual sea - surface temperature spike» caused another moderate to severe bleaching event.
«Within less than the term of a 30 - year mortgage, sea level rise could cause floods this high to occur once every five years, or even every year, depending on the location,» a Climate Central report found.
Thus, the increase in the surface temperature at sea level caused by doubling of the present - day CO2 concentration in the atmosphere will be less than 0.01 °C, which is negligible in comparison with natural temporal fluctuations of global temperature.
Cooler seas, less outgassing, more co2 absorbed, soon it'll be global cooling causes ocean acidification; — RRB - Can't wait for that one.....
The increase in relative humidity is due to warmer surface sea temperatures allowing greater evaporation and warmer polar conditions causing less condensation.
What I find difficult with the «other» paper that it is again an a-posteriors explanation (like cold European winters caused by less Arctic sea ice in the preceding fall) and just one.
Overall, the risk of sea - level rise from global warming is less at almost any given location than that from other causes, such as tectonic motions of the earth's surface.»
Exactly I will add low solar — sunspot numbers less then 40 solar flux sub 90 will cause overall sea surface temperatures to decline, due to less UV light which is the light which penetrates the ocean surfaces to the greatest degree thus warms / cools the oceans depending on it's intensity..
Second, the ocean near the melting ice sheet drops because the smaller ice - sheet mass has less gravitational attraction for ocean water than before, and thus the water released from the former gravitational attraction of the ice sheet causes additional sea - level rise far from the ice sheet.
This causes more wave action which mixes colder water in from deep sea, this will cause less evaporation) 4) Negatively: more % water vapor in the atmosphere 5) Positively: evaporation itself causes more evaporation (difference in pressure causes wind and wind and heat together causes more evaporation)
Nearly every alarmist publication that asserts less sea ice causes polar bears to suffer from nutritional stress references as «proof» a 1999 paper by Ian Stirling showing body condition of bears in the western Hudson Bay declined from the 1980s to 1997.
And against the backdrop of all of this is the fact that man - caused global climate change is making it all possible — now that there's less ice in the Arctic, ships (and oil rigs) can more safely navigate the seas.
We have probably all heard about ways that climate change will threaten Indigenous peoples — by causing rising sea levels, less sea ice, and so on.
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