Sentences with phrase «in storminess»

Yes, we may even be in for a «natural» increase in storminess over the next several hundred years.
In contrast, a projected reduction in storminess over the western US and Great Lakes regions will increase the possibility of heat waves there, exacerbating the mean temperature increase due to climate change, thus producing earlier ToE.
These experiments also show a decline in storminess and wind intensity eastwards into the Mediterranean (Busuioc, 2001; Tomozeiu et al., 2007), but with localised increased storminess in parts of the Adriatic, Aegean and Black Seas (Guedes Soares et al., 2002).
«We see an increase in the storminess of the Antarctic, and that's obviously redistributing the sea ice around» the continent differently, Dr Lieser said.
While 1741 is noted as the year the current intensification began, the paper also references an increase in storminess in the year 1825.
The third study, focused on the uptick in storminess, used models that had correctly predicted that increase in advance.
However, the existence of natural variability in storminess confounds reliable detection of anthropogenic effects.
Because climate synopses compiled from instrumental records can not distinguish underlying natural increases in storminess from anthropogenic effects, detected increases in contemporary storminess may not be a reliable indicator of human - induced climate change.
Very significant variations in storminess have been recorded over the last 200 years for Armagh observatory despite the sheltered inland nature of the site.
«It's unclear to what extent changes in storminess are... part of the large - scale Arctic amplification or [are] due to more local factors.»
The uncertainty surrounding trends in storminess was underlined, and a point was being made about this subject being controversial.
As MIT Emeritus Professor Richard Lindzen has explained, the decline in storminess is a consequence of reduced temperature differentials between the tropics and exo - tropics that arise when global average temperatures are warmer.
While there's currently no evidence to suggest that the UK is increasing in storminess, this is an active area of research under the national climate capability.
We suggest that the long - term trends in storminess were caused by insolation changes, while oceanic forcing may have influenced millennial variability.
Climate simulations using the IS92a and A2 and B2 SRES scenarios (Meier et al., 2004; Räisänen et al., 2004) reinforce existing trends in storminess.
A key conclusion is that the «role of human influence» can be detected in temperature extremes, but changes in storminess and rainfall rates need more research.
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