Sentences with phrase «like ice volcanoes»

Not exact matches

The centres may erupt like little volcanoes but that's ok, you can lop off these peaks if you want to ice them flat or pipe icing in a spiral to emphasis their shape!
I iced the bottom of a large cake plate with green and brown frosting and stuck some of his toy dinosaurs around the volcano to make it look like a scene from prehistoric times for my dinosaur obsessed son.
Gather the mixture into a mound, make a volcano - like well in the center, and pour in the yolk and ice water.
And India is teaming up with the United States on a $ 1 billion satellite mission slated for launch in 2021 that will monitor natural disasters like earthquakes and erupting volcanoes and more gradual but potentially calamitous processes like melting ice caps.
Once on Ceres» surface, the Slurpee - like material couldn't flow far, and it slowly built up a 3 - mile - high ice volcano.
Using all available geologic, tectonic and geothermal heat flux data for Greenland — along with geothermal heat flux data from around the globe — the team deployed a machine learning approach that predicts geothermal heat flux values under the ice sheet throughout Greenland based on 22 geologic variables such as bedrock topography, crustal thickness, magnetic anomalies, rock types and proximity to features like trenches, ridges, young rifts, volcanoes and hot spots.
Astronomers have discovered direct evidence of water on the dwarf planet Ceres in the form of vapor plumes erupting into space, possibly from volcano - like ice geysers on its surface.
I can sum up most of my frustration with Volchaos with one line: it's a game entirely set in a volcano that plays like an extended ice level.
Mike's work, like that of previous award winners, is diverse, and includes pioneering and highly cited work in time series analysis (an elegant use of Thomson's multitaper spectral analysis approach to detect spatiotemporal oscillations in the climate record and methods for smoothing temporal data), decadal climate variability (the term «Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation» or «AMO» was coined by Mike in an interview with Science's Richard Kerr about a paper he had published with Tom Delworth of GFDL showing evidence in both climate model simulations and observational data for a 50 - 70 year oscillation in the climate system; significantly Mike also published work with Kerry Emanuel in 2006 showing that the AMO concept has been overstated as regards its role in 20th century tropical Atlantic SST changes, a finding recently reaffirmed by a study published in Nature), in showing how changes in radiative forcing from volcanoes can affect ENSO, in examining the role of solar variations in explaining the pattern of the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age, the relationship between the climate changes of past centuries and phenomena such as Atlantic tropical cyclones and global sea level, and even a bit of work in atmospheric chemistry (an analysis of beryllium - 7 measurements).
This idea of volcanoes instead of atmpospheric changes causing the arctic ice to melt was a rumor started by people like Rush Limbaugh, and was immediately debunked by several Dot Earth posters.
«In places like Iceland, for example, where you have the Eyjafjallajökull ice sheet, which wouldn't survive [global warming], and you've got lots of volcanoes under that, the unloading effect can trigger eruptions,» McGuire said.
LOD is likely related to unknown or underestimated climate drivers, like combined tidal forcing variations which can impact plate tectonics, volcanoes, ocean currents, ice mass stability etc. etc..
Like the gaseous aerosols from volcanoes, these tracers settle on distant ice and are there to be read by anyone bold enough to retrieve the record.
Ice ages are triggered by natural forces like volcanoes and changes in the Earth's orbit and tilt.
40:30 Ice core records, low - latitudes, like hockey stick 42:00 Glacier lengths, hockey stick 42:50 Boreholes, corals 45:50 Forcings, CO2, CH4 47:00 Sunspots 49:00 Volcanoes 50:00 Other reconstructions, new studies 51:40 Spaghetti curve, look at envelope 54:15 Put spaghetti with hockey stick error bars 56:50 30 - year averages warmest, 400 years likely, 1000 years plausible 58:15 end of talk 58:50 MWP likely varied globally 01:01:50 LIA seems more global 01:03:00 Does it have anything to do with AGW?
They are now quite complex and factor in things like; variable output by the sun, variations in the earth's orbit around the sun, greenhouse gases AND dust from volcanoes, greenhouse gases from decay in wetlands and from agriculture (rice paddies are artificial wetlands), differences in the reflectivity («albedo») of different surfaces (grass reflects more sunlight than forest, and ice much more than open water etc.)... and there are many more.
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