Sentences with phrase «cold weather variation»

It was a HUGE hit and a nice cold weather variation.

Not exact matches

This cold - weather variation of a classic Greek stew is enlivened with cubes of marinated tofu feta.
The extreme cold weather observed across Europe and the east coast of the US in recent winters could be partly down to natural, long - term variations in sea surface temperatures, according to a new study published today.
Seeing an influx of coats online and in stores is dangerous and tempting, especially for a girl who yearns to wear coats in legitimately cold weather but can not because it really just never gets that cold enough to justify getting two or three variations.
If it is extreme cold, it is just natural variation in weather masking the 100 % proven rising trend of warming becasue of AGW that is far worse than we ever imagined
«The authors write that «the El Niño - Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a naturally occurring fluctuation,» whereby «on a timescale of two to seven years, the eastern equatorial Pacific climate varies between anomalously cold (La Niña) and warm (El Niño) conditions,» and that «these swings in temperature are accompanied by changes in the structure of the subsurface ocean, variability in the strength of the equatorial easterly trade winds, shifts in the position of atmospheric convection, and global teleconnection patterns associated with these changes that lead to variations in rainfall and weather patterns in many parts of the world,» which end up affecting «ecosystems, agriculture, freshwater supplies, hurricanes and other severe weather events worldwide.»»
Gallup's research discovered that about half the public associates warmer weather with global warming (the other half sees it as normal variation); fewer associate snow and cold weather with global warming because «the connection [is] less intuitive.»
This is the same natural variation which was used by the Hadley Centre to explain its failure to accurately predict the temperatures of 2007, and the cold weather which has followed the La Nina event.
In «Too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry: Drivers and impacts of seasonal weather in the UK», the Met Office considered whether recent seasonal variations could be attributed to climate change, and to what extent this could be used to estimate likely future climate.
They sum up succinctly, «The current cold weather in the UK is part of the normal regional variations that take place in the winter season.
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