Not exact matches
Gold award winners included: Brazil's Froneri for a cardboard
ice cream cup featuring a PP in - mold label, closure with spoon inside and aluminum / PE
sealing; and Insignia Technologies for its Freshtag shelf - life indicator tag designed to change color over a pre-set number of days at a prescribed temperature, while the color change is faster when the temperature increases; and PPi Technologies for MosquitoPaQ, which
uses a frangible
sealed pouch that allows consumers to mix and activate the dry and wet chemicals at the time of
use, without having to pour out or touch the contents; after activation, consumers hang the pouch nearby and leave it alone as the repellent is released over the course of 15 days.
I have a few there now but I'd love to really grow that page and show all the cool little tricks that even I've learned from moms like
using press n»
seal plastic wrap to cover the
ice trays.
Other scientists have documented true
seals using their pawlike forelimbs in stereotypically terrestrial ways, too, such as
using the claws to dig out lairs in
ice or uncovering buried fish from the seafloor.
When the cave is not in
use, the
ice is
sealed off with steel shutters to prevent it from oozing out.
The
seals rarely come ashore, but live instead beneath the
ice,
using their claws to open and maintain breathing holes.
I have seen some similar recipes
using self -
sealing plastic bags, but I can vouch for this one — you'll make the best
ice cream you'll ever have!»
Elsewhere, researchers are
using sensor - wearing elephant
seals to dive under the Antarctic
ice in search of climate change evidence.
Polar bears like this one are excellent swimmers but
use floating sea
ice as pathways to coastal areas and as platforms from which to hunt
seals.
Nonetheless, Overland
used a select group of 6 IPCC models to convince the courts rising CO2 concentrations threatened to destroy and modify the
seals» sea
ice habitat.
«Loss of habitat directly impacts polar bears,
seals and walruses, which
use the
ice for foraging, reproduction and resting, and for also for people who
use ice for hunting, travel and other activities.»
For example despite his research showing cycles of heavy spring
ice had been most detrimental to
seals and bears, Stirling and Derocher's review of polar bear «science»
used the very same research to falsely imply that less summer
ice was the problem.
«As the area of sea
ice that polar bears can
use for hunting declines, progressively fewer
seals are accessible to the bears, and therefore the bears» hunting success likely declines as well.»
They
use the sea
ice as a platform to capture
seals and other prey.