Not exact matches
In Japan, Undaria grows fastest in the
cold arctic water that flows past Japan in winter, but reproduces only in the warm
summer currents.
Of course I would absolutely appreciate it if we can get so
summer straight away — and quick — but after a long and fairly
cold winter, I can only applaud that I've officially moved my
arctic parka to my winter wardrobe storage, and those loafers no longer need socks.
Even with a
cold winter and cool
summer,
arctic ice STILL declined to a new record low.
http://c3headlines.typepad.com/.a/6a010536b58035970c0134862e7521970c-pi says this
summer was the
coldest summer in the
arctic since santa claus........
The warming effect of carbon dioxide is strongest where air is
cold and dry, mainly in the
arctic rather than in the tropics, mainly in mountainous regions rather than in lowlands, mainly in winter rather than in
summer, and mainly at night rather than in daytime.
And remember, the satellite data are one small part of a vast amount of data that overwhelmingly show our planet is warming up: retreating glaciers, huge amounts of ice melting at both poles, the «death spiral» of
arctic ice every year at the
summer minimum over time, earlier annual starts of warm weather and later starts of
cold weather, warming oceans, rising sea levels, ocean acidification, more extreme weather, changing weather patterns overall, earlier snow melts, and lower snow cover in the spring...
And, once the
summer season is passed, the ever -
colder Arctic air masses remove even more heat from the under - ice water up through the sea ice by conduction into the -25 deg
arctic air.
7 Tropical wet; tropical wet / dry a) Sub climates Humid Tropical Moist mid-latitude Sub climates Tropical wet; tropical wet / dry a) Sub climates Severe winters; humid continental, sub -
arctic / mild winters; humid subtropical, marine west coast, Mediterranean b) Location Close to equator and in ITCZ Severe winters: interiors and eastern coasts of continents, close to poles; mild winters: along water at edges of continents c) Features Hot / rainy year round; hot with wet and dry seasons; tropical rain forests and grasslands c) Features: severe winters:
cold winters, hot / humid
summers except in sub-
arctic; mild winters: hot, muggy or cool
summers depending on coastal position, and mild winters with mostly rain.