ShrNfr says: July 23, 2010 at 5:41 am «-LSB-...] Odd that in figure 3 that sunspot count is a trailing indicator of
lake level rather than a leading indicator.»
Not exact matches
A glaciologist
rather than a biologist, he wanted to investigate a question critical to climate change: Do subglacial rivers and
lakes lubricate the movement of ice over land — and might they somehow accelerate a glacier's flow into the ocean, triggering rapid sea
level rise?
Since desiccation mudcracks form only where wet sediment is exposed to air, their position closer to the center of the ancient
lake bed
rather than the edge also suggests that
lake levels rose and fell dramatically over time.
The
lake and connecting river have
rather unique hydrology in significant variations in water
level and reverses flows of the Tonle Sap River linking the
lake with the Mekong River.
That is because extensive
rather than intensive farming demands more soil, with higher
levels of taint and pollution in the rivers and
lakes, per unit of food produced.