Sentences with phrase «heatwave going»

There is also a mini heatwave going on in Luxembourg at the moment and it's a bit tough since most homes don't have ACs.
It's tough coming up with chic summer outfit ideas when there's a heatwave going on.
The impacts of heatwaves go a lot further than tennis players» burnt bottoms.

Not exact matches

NYC just let go of it's heatwave so this is perfect timing how did i live without your blog before?!
It's a bone fide heatwave here in Vancouver and I'm not going to complain.
It took a while and a massive heatwave to get her going with water, and she now drinks from a Tommee Tippee cup while we're out and a shot glass in the house.
It always gets cooler as the sun goes down, but not as cool as it used to get — the consequences vary from bumper wine years to deadlier heatwaves
Deadly heatwaves could make it a no - go zone»
Actually, I can't go out of home because I hate heatwave!
My plan was to wear this dress with a faux fur coat and give it a little old Hollywood glamour but we got a heatwave over here, so I reserved it for the night when the temperature went down a little.
Today is going to be another hot and steamy day, and this is actually Heatwave # 4.
On a July Thursday at the height of Britain's 1976 heatwave, Robert Riordan goes out as usual for the morning paper but doesn't return.
Maggie O'Farrell is the author of seven novels: After You'd Gone; My Lover's Lover; The Distance Between Us, which won a Somerset Maugham Award; The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox; The Hand That First Held Mine, which won the Costa Novel Award; and Instructions for a Heatwave, which was short - listed for the Costa Novel Award; and This Must Be The Place.
Maggie O'Farrell is another literary writer with the sort of insight into family dynamics that Laurie seems to be looking for — and her latest, Instructions for a Heatwave just went on sale this week.
We happened to visit Tokyo in September during a heatwave and I don't think there was a proper AC system because that bathroom was almost like a sauna, and I sort of dreaded going in it.
This beta will be open to Playstation 4, Xbox One and PC and will offers players the chance to have a go at the Team Deathmatch and Warpath modes on the Infernal Heatwave Maps.
Japan had a chilly spring but at the last possible moment it turned into an unexpected heatwave that caused cherry blossoms to go crazy.
Of course it would be nice to know exactly how and when we're going to really suffer — abrupt CC, runaway GW, mass extinction event, or just a linear ratcheting up of the same (floods, droughts, heatwaves, sea rise / land loss, disease spread, mega-storms, glacier melt, famines).
Some of them are fairly obvious — if you warm up the planet, you're going to have more frequent and intense heatwaves.
Different parts of the country suffer floods at different times, and most serious incidents get news coverage — while heatwaves tend to hit the country in one go, so coverage is more concentrated.
In 1998, when heatwaves extended to 18 days, and average summer temperatures went above 28 °C, deaths totalled 1,655.
But like big heatwave [even if was global] isn't going to effect global yearly temperature.
The theory goes that a weaker jet stream becomes «wavier» and leads to more persistent weather conditions, such as long cold spells in winter and heatwaves in summer.
-- then what explanation (scientific if possible) can be given for the fact that, last year alone, parts of the USA had the highest surface temperatures on record, Australia had to rewrite their own temperature gauge because it was recording temperatures which went, for the first time in recorded history, off the scale they were so high and in the UK and Europe we experienced one of the longest heatwaves in decades?
That's going to have a dangerous impact on the poor, the old, and the very young, who are typically the ones dying in heatwaves
LONDON, 2 March, 2016 — Heatwaves that used to arrive once every 20 years or so could become annual events by 2075 across almost two - thirds of the planet's land surface — if humans go on burning ever more fossil fuels and releasing ever more greenhouse gases.
And it turns out he really was sick and he was sick because — and he explained this — he'd gone swimming in a lake in Oklahoma and it was in the middle of a heatwave and there was an outbreak of blue - green algae, which is linked to climate change.
One group warns that, if humans go on burning fossil fuels at an ever increasing rate, heatwave temperatures could reach an intolerable 55 °C in many parts of the globe, including some parts of continental Europe.
Now, without going to the trouble of a Baysian probability analysis (which would just be putting numbers to educated guesswork), I think there is good reason to consider the Russian Heatwave sufficiently improbable on the assumption of no warming (relative to its probability on the assumption of GW) that it is worth independant recognition as evidence of the warming globe instead of just being burried under a mob of other statistics.
During the heatwave this past summer, I went around my street and checked on the neighbors who were older or had health problems.
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