Sentences with phrase «cover other planet»

Not exact matches

Global warming, the loss of forest cover, the decrease of bio-diversity, and many other things affect the entire planet.
It covered the harmful effects of plastic and other petroleum based goods on our health, as well as the planet's health.
The finding, published in tomorrow's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, argues that a skein of these shielding molecules covered Earth's primordial soup — a scenario that would boost the odds that life gained a foothold on other planets.
The locations of weather stations, changes in instruments, the siting of weather stations in warmer urban areas, changes in land cover and other issues have all been cited as issues affecting the temperature trends often used to show that our planet is in fact warming.
Moons orbiting other planets are either too small to fully cover the sun's face or are so large that they fully block any view of the corona.
The surfaces of carbon planets may be covered with a layer of long - chain carbon compounds — in other words, something like crude oil or tar.
Some of the research covered in the documentary includes scientists who are identifying and characterizing planets orbiting other stars (the other planets in our solar system would likely be more trouble than they're worth to make comfortable, the film argues); an engineer building a rocket fueled by plasma, the same charged particles found in our sun; and a team building a fleet of robots that could construct habitats before humans even arrive at their destination.
Designed to cover the daily nutritional needs of busy, active people, Athletic Greens is a natural, mega-nutrient whole food formula that offers more than any other greens or multivitamin and mineral compound on the planet.
I felt like I was on a different planet, the rock was covered in pitted holes filled with water from all the recent rain, and other smaller puddles reflecting the sky, it was picture perfect.
Garco the Robot introduces Walt, who introduces this exciting episode of «Tomorrowland» which covers life on other planets.
From Saving Private Ryan's beaches of Normandy to Black Hawk Down's Mogadishu to the CIA black sites of Zero Dark Thirty to a bug - covered planet on the other side of the galaxy in Starship Troopers, war runs the gamut from the very personal to the thoroughly detached.
0:00 — Intro / Jay's Trip 17:25 — Review: Fright Night 51:55 — Review: Conan the Barbarian 1:15:40 — Trailer Trash: Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance 1:20:35 — Other Stuff We Watched: Hot Coffee, Score: A Hockey Musical, A Beginner's Guide to Endings, Liberia 77, Trigger, Pontypool, Daydream Nation, Small Town Murder Songs, Major League, Crazy Stupid Love, Final Destination 5, Field of Dreams, Master Chef, Fright Night, Child's Play, Whatever Works, Billy Madison, Baseketball, Fright Night: Part II, Louie: Season 1 2:09:50 — Junk Mail: TF3, Pirates 4, Favourite Batman and West Memphis 3, Original Planet of the Apes Origin Story, Reversible DVD and Blu - ray Covers, Good Books on the Filmmaking Process, Amazon.com, Film Junk Action Figures 2:34:25 — This Week's DVD Releases 2:36:55 — Outro
, published on the website < http://planetasustentavel.abril.com.br/noticia/ambiente/quando-recursos-minerais-se-esgotarao-648952.shtml >, based on information from the US Geological Survey, the US government agency responsible for geological research that crossed information on the annual consumption, mineral reserves available on the planet and its predictable extinction: 1) Platinum (use in surgical materials)-- Extinction by 2049; 2) Silver (use in the manufacture of mirrors and cutlery)-- Extinction in 2016; 3) Copper (use in wire and cable and air conditioning ducts)-- Extinction in 2027; 4) Antimony (use in remote controls and other materials to increase strength)-- Extinction 2020; 5) Lithium (use in cell phone batteries, laptops and video games)-- Extinction in 2053; 6) Phosphorus (use in agricultural fertilizers)-- Extinction in 2149; 7) Uranium (use for electric power generation)-- Extinction in 2026; 8) Indian (use in smartphones and tablets touch screen screens)-- Extinction in 2020; 9) Tantalum (use in cameras lenses)-- Extinction in 2027; 10) Nickel (use in metal alloy coating, electronics such as cell phones)-- Extinction in 2064; 11) Tin (use in coating metal alloys, such as those used in the soft drink cans)-- Extinction 2024; 12) Lead (use in car batteries and trucks and welds and bearings)-- Extinction in 2015; 13) Gold (use as jewelry and computer microchips)-- Extinction in 2043; 14) Zinc (use to cover alloys, preventing rust that destroy objects like coins)-- Extinction in 2041.
Congratulations to the 2018 Hugo finalists, especially URB authors Sarah Pinsker (Best Novella and Best Novelette finalist and contributor to the anthology How to Live on Other Planets: A Handbook for Aspiring Aliens), Caroline M. Yoachim (Best Short Story finalist and contributor to the anthology Sharp & Sugar Tooth: Women Up To No Good), and Bogi Takács (Best Fan Writer finalist and contributor to the anthologies How to Live on Other Planets and Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation), and URB artist Likhain (Best Fan Artist finalist and cover artist of Sunvault)!
Summer 2017 — Issue 6, cover art by W. Jack Savage • Sixth issue of a «new deindustrial science fiction quarterly focused on publishing speculative fiction that explores a future defined by natural limits, energy and resource depletion, industrial decline, climate change, and other consequences stemming from the reckless and shortsighted exploitation of our planet, and to imagine the ways that humans will adapt, survive, live, die, and thrive within this future.»
Ritchy Feet (A blog by a budget backpacker) Road Affair (Ben and Jazzy share tips and stories on their budget travel blog) Road Forks (Akila and Patrick — as we travel, cook & eat our way rtw with our two dogs) Roamantics (Travel adventures & misadventures) Roaming Cooking (Cooking on the road made easy for travelers) Romancing The Planet (India's Number 1 Luxury Travel Blog) Round The World We Go (Travel stories, photos and blogs from around the world) RTW Travel Guide (A travel blog covering destinations around the world) Routes North (Independent travel guide to Sweden) Runaway Brit (Tales of a girl on the run) Runaway Guide (Leif is sharing his travels, adventures, & budget travel tips to inspire others) Rydaway (Travel, adventure and the expat lifestyle)
In NPR's piece When Patents Attack, the Planet Money team explores the world of Patent Trolls — companies that buy up large collections of patents just so that they can sue other companies who produce technology that might be covered under these patents.
Also common are evocations of swiftly tilting planets and the universe's terrific, alienating vastness, beginning, of course, with Paul Thek's much - disseminated brochure - cover work Untitled (Earth Drawing I), but also including pieces by Friedrich Kunath, Vija Celmins, Mark Bradford, Rivane Neuenschwander, and quite a few others.
They have also dramatically altered the natural land cover, and have pushed into the shadow of extinction an alarming proportion of the other 10 million or so species that share the planet and its resources.
The only problem with all the predictions about the level of the World Ocean rising is that, the World Ocean is refusing to rise up in support of the predictions, the other problem is that ice is frozen fresh water and frozen fresh water only covers about 5 % of this planet above sea level and frozen water under the level of the World Ocean does not count as the World Ocean will fall a small amount if that ice melts, so if the ice there is enough to get the World Ocean to rise and significant amount then it must be piled up very high, I cubic kilometer of water as ice, should it melt, would make 1000 square kilometers rise by one meter, so when you use this simple math then somewhere on the planet, above the level of the sea, then there must be over 500,000 cubic kilometers of ice, piled up and just waiting to melt, strange that no one can find that amount of ice, all these morons who talk about the rise of the World Ocean in tens of meters, this includes you Peter Garrett or Mr. 7 Meters, the ice does not exist to allow this amount of rise in the World Ocean, it is just not there.
The release of gas hydrates may still be stoppable through a suite of techniques including withdrawing atmospheric CO2 by rapidly building soil fertility on a global scale, reforestation to increase reflective cloud cover, and rapidly reducing CO2 emissions — in other words, a massive emergency campaign to cool the planet: Climate Code Red!
I have been wondering about another simple model «water world» which is a hypothetical planet covered 100 % in water with an atmosphere exactly like earth but no other greenhouse gas except water.
He said, however, that the climate change chapter is only 50 pages long, and recommends several other books for readers who want to get a broader picture of this aspect: Jim Hoggan's Climate Cover - Up, George Monbiot's Heat: How to Stop the Planet Burning and Ross Gelbspan's The Heat is On and Boiling Point.
It covers a history of ideas about how winds on Earth arise, leading to a modern perspective of what controls winds and their structure on Earth and other planets.
Now that we have covered climate forcing other that AGW, which may have been responsible for pre-industrial climate cahnges (most of our planet's history), let's move on to AGW.
The GISTEMP dataset provides gridded global temperature estimates covering almost the entire planet over recent decades: This data allows us to estimate the effect of poor coverage in the other datasets.
Other potential causes of climate change include the depletion of stratospheric ozone in recent decades, again through human activities, and global changes in the surface reflectivity — or albedo — of the planet, as we modify the patterns of vegetation that cover the land.
Almost 19 % of BC's «Rosenfelds» were saved in the 70 % of CO2E covered by the BC Carbon Tax, so a bit over 13 % savings in Rosenfelds (this would be more effective than any other single measure anywhere by a wide margin), and the economy of the province remained as strong as before the legislative changes so far as analysts can determine, which is pretty freaking amazing, given that the changes happened just before the largest global economic downturn in over half a century, and pretty much 95 % of the planet's economies tanked in that time.
The design and build process, final product, and subsequent events will be covered, among others, by our media partners: Discovery's Treehugger and Planet Green, Core77 and Architizer, premier sites in the design and green living communities.
But just because this Central American country has been a pioneer in the so called eco-tourism industry for over 25 years, they seem to be ahead of the curve, and the talks from the Planet, People, Peace conference TreeHugger has been invited to cover have actually been quite good.A conclusion from the first day of the event, yesterday, was that the tourism industry seems to be maturing along with other segments of the «green» movement.
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