«From 2010 to 2014, the number of
ice days decreased by 11 in May, and 10 in June.»
Not exact matches
Now, I'll give the readers here credit for catching the part where they flashed up on the screen a nice graphic stating that you COULD put an extra
ice pack or two into the lunch and probably «
decrease the risk,» but I think talking about how not even an
ice pack, or refrigeration at many
day cares, is enough to keep your child from possibly coming down with foodborne illness could be enough to make some less conscious parents throw up their hands in disgust and say «I give up.»
While you are
decreasing to two feeds a
day, use
ice and cabbage in between feeds to reduce the swelling in your breasts.
TIP: Try applying an
ice pack (with a soft covering) to the affected area several times a
day or soak your bottom for 10 to 15 minutes in a warm and relaxing bath to
decrease swelling and discomfort.
If you follow a balanced diet, but you regularly drink soda, juice, milk or sweetened
iced tea throughout the
day, switching to water may be all you need to do to
decrease your caloric intake.
The 14 -
day snapshot shows a 3.4 percentage point increase in Android 4.1 and 4.2 «Jelly Bean» to 28.4 percent with a contraction of Android 4.0.3 and 4.0.4 «
Ice Cream Sandwich» devices to 27.5 percent, a
decrease of 1.8 percentage points.
[2] «If Earth's climate continues to warm, then the volume of present -
day ice sheets will
decrease.
This warming means that the sea
ice, which naturally increases and
decreases during the winter and summer seasons, is sticking around for 100 fewer
days per year than it did in 1978.
Results show that the globally and annually averaged radiative forcing caused by the observed loss of sea
ice in the Arctic between 1979 and 2007 is approximately 0.1 W m − 2; a complete removal of Arctic sea
ice results in a forcing of about 0.7 W m − 2, while a more realistic
ice - free - summer scenario (no
ice for one month,
decreased ice at all other times of the year) results in a forcing of about 0.3 W m − 2, similar to present -
day anthropogenic forcing caused by halocarbons.
This is a
decrease from the average rate of
ice loss for June 2010 of -85,210 square kilometers per
day, and is slower than climatology (average of -84,050 square kilometers per
day for 1979 - 2000).
And faster - melting
ice is causing a
decrease in hunting
days each year, while igloos, which native hunters prefer to tents when they are on the trail, are much harder to build with less snow and
ice.
This came as shock news to me, because only a couple of
days ago I was discussing with «Steve Goddard» how Arctic sea
ice extent (using «Steve's» patent pending personal «DMI 30 % clone» metric) had actually
decreased since the same time last year!
In the middle of November there was even a several -
day period when Arctic sea
ice extent
decreased.
As suggested by the 15 -
day forecast from early August (discussed in the August Outlook report), the weather pattern for August completely changed from the pattern of June and July,
decreasing the chance of a record September sea
ice loss for 2009.
What's more, they continue to ignore the broader, more important problem with Will's discussion of sea
ice: the facts that picking out two
days from a thirty - year time series is not a meaningful way to look at climate trends, and that climate models do not, in fact, lead you to expect a
decrease in global
ice cover.
The observed effects of cryosphere reduction include modification of river regimes due to enhanced glacial melt, snowmelt advance and enhanced winter base flow; formation of thermokarst terrain and disappearance of surface lakes in thawing permafrost;
decrease in potential travel
days of vehicles over frozen roads in the Arctic; enhanced potential for glacier hazards and slope instability due to mechanical weakening driven by
ice and permafrost melting; regional ocean freshening; sea - level rise due to glacier and
ice sheet shrinkage; biotic colonisation and faunal changes in deglaciated terrain; changes in freshwater and marine ecosystems affected by lake -
ice and sea -
ice reduction; changes in livelihoods; reduced tourism activities related to skiing,
ice climbing and scenic activities in cryospheric areas affected by degradation; and increased ease of ship transportation in the Arctic.