Sentences with phrase «during cold periods»

It helps our body get rid of toxin build up which is inevitable during colder period of year when our body kind of stagnates, no matter how «clean» you eat.
Together with a colleague from Spain, they offer first evidence for the survival of a warmth - loving, egg - laying reptile during this cold period.
The warm Atlantic water continued to flow into the icy Nordic seas during the coldest periods of the last Ice Age.
«We could see that the concentration of carbon dioxide and solar radiation was higher during the cold period between the two warm periods compared with the cold period before the first warming 15,000 years ago.
The Mammoth steppe, a region of steppe tundra almost completely devoid of trees, was the dominant landscape from Central Europe to East Asia during the cold periods of the Pleistocene era.
Additionally, we found that changes in the water stable isotope signatures in the ice at DF tended to occur before the same changes at EDC, with the time between changes being more pronounced during cold periods.
This phenomenon led to speculation that conditions might support a bloom of Martian vegetation during the warmer months and cause plant life to become dormant during colder periods.
I love making really warming, comforting desserts for my guests during the colder periods.
They are also water resistant when biking during rainy times and can as well keep you warmed during a cold period
Every aspect of the beetle's life is affected by temperature — from the number of eggs it lays, to its ability to disperse, to the rate at which the beetle moves from one life stage to the next (for example, from pupa to adult), to the survival of the beetle during cold periods.
Human civilizations have struggled because of reduced economic productivity, stronger storms, and plague during the colder periods, more recently the Little Ice Ages (1350 to 1850 AD).
Carved by earlier advances of ice during colder periods, the troughs enable warm, salty water to reach the undersides of glaciers, fueling their increasingly rapid retreat.
And a change in the temperature is far more likely to cause a change in CO2 due to outgassing of CO2 from the oceans during warmer times and an ingassing (absorption) of CO2 during colder periods.
The glacier expanded between the 1600s and the 1900s, during a cold period known as «The Little Ice Age.»
That's true: levels have been known to jump around from about 200 to 400 ppm during colder periods (such as our present time), up to thousands of parts per million in warmer times, but this happens on a scale of millions of years.
Diciolla suggests keeping an eye on the outdoor discharge line during cold periods, when frozen pipes can send water back into the pit and potentially overflow.
A comparison with North Atlantic and Western Mediterranean paleoclimate proxies shows that the phases of high storm activity occurred during cold periods, suggesting a climatically - controlled mechanism for the occurrence of these storm periods.
So the air was getting colder, but the deep ocean water was getting warmer, during the coldest periods of the Ice Age.
Now that the weather is getting warmer so big bowls of warm oats aren't as appealing to me as they are during the colder periods, but I still want the benefits of eating a good bowl of oats.
During cold periods, increased sea - ice cover can keep gases trapped in the ocean — and the drier, dustier conditions bring much - needed iron to phytoplankton in the sub-Antarctic portion of the Southern Ocean, feeding blooms that gobble down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
«It is widely thought that during cold periods of the last Ice Age the warm Atlantic water had stopped its flow into the Nordic Seas.
(Note vast areas of the high latitude oceans were covered by ice, during the coldest period and could hence no longer absorb carbon dioxide.)
During colder periods, vasoconstriction does the opposite to conserve heat.
During cold periods the trade winds, loaded with humidity, migrated southwards.
During the coldest periods of the Ice Age, average global temperatures were probably 4 - 5 degrees Celsius colder than they are today.
During the coldest periods of the Ice Age, average global temperatures were probably 4 — 5 degrees Celsius colder than they are today.
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