Sentences with phrase «lot less ice»

Some stuff I have read over the years seemed to point to a lot less ice when CO2 levels were anything from 450 to 700.
Today, though, there's a lot less ice to start with.
There is a lot less ice so albedo feedbacks are much more limited in extent.
I'd like to see the earth green from pole to pole and the way to get there appears to require a phuckava lot more CO2 and a lot less ice.
Today we are pushing the carbon dioxide level to a height it last reached 24 million years ago, when there was a lot less ice on Earth and the climate was very different.

Not exact matches

3 Tbs unsalted butter 2/3 cup packed brown sugar 2 cups half and half (I just couldn't bring myself to use heavy cream when I knew I would eat a ton of this ice cream) 4 large egg yolks pinch of kosher salt 2 tsp vanilla extract 1 1/2 cups whole milk 1/2 cup mini-chocolate chips — I used regular chips and a lot less (as you can tell from the pics) but next time I will definitely use more
If you do opt for liquid food colouring then you will likely have to add less milk for the frosting and more icing sugar as the colouring tends to have a taste as well as needing a lot more to colour than with the paste.
Lots of rinks locally, with many Adult and Tot skates, which typically means a lot less people, and no one really speeding around the ice that could knock over the ones just learning.
It had much higher sea levels, forests extended all the way to the Arctic Ocean, and there was almost certainly a lot less sea ice.
Their composition is concluded to be of water ice as it a lot less dense than the nitrogen ice carrying it away — hence they float!
Now, if you have all this very cold, nearly freezing water surrounding these ice caps, sucking up carbon dioxide out of the polar atmosphere, at nearly the highest possible rate, 30 times faster than oxygen, and 70 times faster than nitrogen, doesn't it stand to reason that the air that remains might just have a lot less carbon dioxide in it than the atmosphere across the rest of the planet?
By Stanka Vukelić Photo: Stanka Vukelić Easy desserts to make: Raw Chocolate Ice Cream I think there are lots of people out there dreaming of an ice - cream better and healthier than from an ice - cream stand, and consumable in — more or less — unlimited quantitiIce Cream I think there are lots of people out there dreaming of an ice - cream better and healthier than from an ice - cream stand, and consumable in — more or less — unlimited quantitiice - cream better and healthier than from an ice - cream stand, and consumable in — more or less — unlimited quantitiice - cream stand, and consumable in — more or less — unlimited quantities.
But much like gorging on cotton candy, funnel cakes and ice cream, it leaves you wondering how much more you would have loved it if only you'd been able to take in a lot less.
Sausalito, with its colorful candy shops, ice cream vendors, and lively atmosphere is a kid's dream, and a lot less hilly than the city.
Half a million less ice extent is a lot more extra open ocean with far lower albedo.
If you understand the links above, volume is wholesale a lot less compared to 1996, along with open water, with very little multi year ice in the archipelago.
I've been criticized by some environmentalists in recent years for writing that the long - term picture (more CO2 = warmer world = less ice = higher seas and lots of climatic and ecological changes) is the only aspect of human - caused global warming that is solidly established, and that efforts to link dramatic weather - related events to the human influence on climate could backfire should nature wiggle the other way for awhile.
So here we are, still facing a clear long - term picture (more CO2 = warming world = less ice + higher seas + lots of changing climate patterns), but sufficient murk in the short run to fuel the «green noise» and «destructive interference» in climate discourse.
This is far from a settled story, but most of the scientists I know now have the feeling that in a high CO2 world with less sea ice, the chill from a THC shutdown would be a lot less.
The opposite East Greenland Current brings cold, less salty water and lots of ice from the Arctic back into the Atlantic Ocean.
The formula holds: more CO2 = warming world = less ice + higher seas + lots of changing climate patterns.
But there are a lot of factors involved, according to many glaciologists and climate specialists, including soot from cooking fires, which settles on ice, making it less reflective and amplifying melting.
On the admittedly tenuous observation that conditions this April seemed different than last April (colder and less windy), I'll bet on a little greater ice extent inn Fall 08, but I wouldn't wager a lot of money on it.
My understanding is that Greenland's ice cover during the last interglacial period was a lot less than at present.
One of the unavoidable realities attending global warming — a reality that makes it the perfect problem — is that there is plenty of remaining uncertainty, even as the basics have grown ever firmer (my litany: more CO2 = warmer world = less ice = rising seas and lots of climate shifts).
What is distinct about global warming is that the basics of 100 - year - old theory have stood the test of time (more CO2 = warming world = less ice + higher seas and lots of climate change).
That aside, less summer ice will mean a lot more heat gain throughout the Arctic, with dorect local implications for the permafrost, the Greenland ice sheet and (worst case) the East Siberian Shelf shallow clathrates.
Warm oceans take a lot of heat loss to freeze and the closer to freezing they start the less heat loss before ice forms.
Examples; CO2 levels in the atmosphere correlate directly with human population (lots of breathing) and thus population control can avoid climate change (hard to disprove) Melting of the Artic ice sheet is good as shipping route will become shorter and transportation costs much less.
For example, areas that accumulated lots of ice in the late Holocene will take longer to melt out than areas that accumulated less ice.
It's still cutting - edge research and there's no smoking gun, but there's evidence that with less sea ice, you put a lot of heat from the ocean into the atmosphere, and the circulation of the atmosphere responds to that... We've seen a tendency for autumns with low sea ice cover to be followed by a negative Arctic Oscillation.
A 1C warming now would allow for a lot less plant growth then a 1C warming when the world is half covered with ice.
And, going back to the Little Ice Age, with the oceans appropriately a lot cooler than today they could hold more carbon dioxide and less was released into the air.
What is clear is that there is a lot less multi-year ice and therefore a lot more fracturing and other kinds of deterioration.
The usual Sea Ice Extent (JAXA daily data plotted here as an anomaly — usually 2 clicks to «download your attachment») shows the crazy excursions during 2016 (a lot less Sea Ice Extent due to a very early melt season and a very late freeze season but with the height of the melt not as big as some expected and leaving a lot of ice in - place at the height of te melIce Extent (JAXA daily data plotted here as an anomaly — usually 2 clicks to «download your attachment») shows the crazy excursions during 2016 (a lot less Sea Ice Extent due to a very early melt season and a very late freeze season but with the height of the melt not as big as some expected and leaving a lot of ice in - place at the height of te melIce Extent due to a very early melt season and a very late freeze season but with the height of the melt not as big as some expected and leaving a lot of ice in - place at the height of te melice in - place at the height of te melt).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z