Sentences with phrase «gone to sea yet»

Not exact matches

As the author Christopher Derrick put it in his book This Strange Divine Sea: «Here, we are still alienated and in exile but are on our way home; we can not yet see the satisfaction of our deepest longings, but we do know where to look; we are still sinners, but we can get our innocence back; we are still going to suffer, but not pointlessly or absurdly; we are still going to «die», but not in the old sense, not permanently.
Based on the anatomical features of the fossil, Isthminia was either a close relative or ancestor of today's Amazon river dolphin (which probably invaded South America's river systems when sea - level rise expanded those habitats about 6 million years ago), or it was a descendant of an older and as - yet - undiscovered river dolphin that went back to sea.
And the present regime has yet to stabilize: «With increasingly higher sea surface temperatures it is hard to imagine anything lower than 15 storms per year» going forward, the two conclude.
Yet some sea urchins can live for 200 years, and one bowhead whale is known to be 211 years old and still going strong.
Some spend all their lives in fresh water, while others shoot out to sea immediately, only to come back later; yet others seem never to go back at all, Limburg reported on 9 August at the Ecological Society of America's annual meeting.
Yet the sense of relief does not last, for these islands of clarity are invariably surrounded by a broad sea of circumspection and equivocation that leave one adrift, wondering just how reliable they and similar assertions are, and just how policymakers might go about using this book to improve educational outcomes for minority children.
In comparison to» A Long Way Gone», the story of a young boy's daunting walk out of Darfur, «In the Sea There are Crocodiles» is not as graphic and disturbing, yet just as hideous and harrowing.
As far as contests go, the super-biggies aren't open yet to self - publishers, but this year saw a sea change in the RWA Chapter contests, some of which carry a fair bit of cachet.
We «Google Earthed» it (16 ° 49» 60, 151 ° 25» 0 W) and it looks like a very nice place to spend a few days - green island surrounded by blue seas and a barrier reef (if you haven't yet discovered Google Earth you should give it a go - it's a lot of fun!)
As if within her, beneath the span of her own days, there are other hunts going on continuously, giant elk in flight from the pursuit of hunters other than herself, and the birth of other mountains being plotted and planned — other mountains rising, then, and still more mountains vanishing into distant seas — and that even more improbable than her encountering that one giant elk, on her first hunt, was the path, the wandering line, that brought her to her father in the first place, that delivered her to him and had made him hers and she his — the improbability and yet the certainty that would place the two of them in each other's lives, tiny against the backdrop of the world and tinier still against the mountains of time.
For example, the Adventurer campaign only teaches you the most basic of techniques for earning money, and yet to actually complete the damn thing you're going to have to be able to utilise the more advanced methods of constructing a sea - based economy that are only tought within the Trader campaign, otherwise you'll never be able to afford to purchase the ships and equipment required to wage war.
Those feeling a bit lost at sea upon finally fully exploring the massive world that Breath of the Wild immersed them in need have no fear; thanks to Bethesda and The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, you don't have to go back to the real world quite yet.
All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full: unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again... also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and fears shall be in the way, and the almond tree shall flourish, and the grasshopper shall be a burden, and desire shall fail: because man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go about the streets..
Threats of ever rising sea levels are stock in trade for the climate mafia, yet when we look at actual tidal gauge records, we see nothing other than a gradual rise, going back to the 19thC.
Hot water will always seek to rise yet reams are written on hot water going deeper into the sea on a long term basis which is anti science..
RE: 4th Error -RCB- Poses an objection to the non-scientific term catastrophic [NOTE: Scientific «consensus» is often being used & / or implied in standard climate - change discourse - Yet Consensus is a Political Term - NOT a Scientific Term]- HOWEVER - When Jim Hansen, the IPCC & Al Gore, et - al - go from predicting 450 — 500 ppm CO2 to 800 — 1000ppm by the end of the 21st century -LCB- said to the be highest atmospheric CO2 content in 20 — 30 Million YRS -RCB-; — & estimates for aver global temps by 21st century's end go from 2 * C to 6 * C to 10 * C; — & increased sea level estimates go from 10 - 20 cm to 50 - 60 cm to 1M — 2M -LCB- which would totally submerge the Maldives & partially so Bangladesh -RCB-; — predictions of the total melting of the Himalayan Ice caps by 2050, near total melting of Greenland's ice sheet & partial melting of Antarctica's ice sheet before the 21st century's end; — massive crop failures; — more intense & frequent hurricane -LCB- ala Katrina -RCB- for much longer seasonal durations, etc, etc, etc... — IMO That's Sounds pretty damned CATASTROPHIC to ME!
The overall net emission over this period = + 0.5 units yet we can see how anthropogenic and sea (e.g. warming) contribute equally to this figure while net natural emission (i.e. sea + land) is — 0.5 Do we really know enough about the carbon cycle, in particular the natural fluxes of CO2, to rule out that some thing like this is going on?
The turtles aren't quite out of the woods yet (that's a strange image...), because even if they are in areas protected from development, they can still be vulnerable to other threats such as stray logs from nearby forestry operations that drift and clutter beaches, blocking the way for turtles and keeping them from landing, or from going back to sea.
So, in another example of those cycles of the elements that make the world go round, ice that scrapes over rock also delivers vital nutrients to the sea, for marine plants to take up yet more carbon dioxide and flourish more vigorously in the oceans and keep the planet a little cooler.
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