Sentences with phrase «lot less sea»

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 melt).
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.

Not exact matches

in stead of sea salt i used regular salt which made them a lot less saltier even though sea salt is considered healthier this time wont hurt at all
Back in the day, meaning the 1960s and 70s, most of the super foods then were a lot less glamorous — oat bran, lecithin, sea salt, brewers yeast, dolomite (a powdered rock), margarine, and granola.
Dating can be a stormy sea, but with clear guidance and an inviting community, your search to find love can be a lot less choppy.
The overall feeling is a lot less special than their ground - breaking work that flew with birds and swam with deep - sea creatures.
This very popular villa is located Coral Bay and is an ideal location for a holiday by the sea, less than 200 meters from a small, sand beaches and 650 meters from the main tourist area in Coral Bay, with lots of shops, cafes, restaurants, and taverns.
It's also home to revered sea temple Pura Gede Luhur Batungaus, far less touristic than Tanah Lot — and it's right on your villa doorstep.
A calm lagoon perfect for less experienced snorkellers on the eastern side of the island features lots of coral outcrops, starfish, sea urchins and smaller reef fish.
If you download 1998 - 2009 cloud cover here, and sea surface temperatures here, you can see that, except for a cloud band from ~ 0 to 10 degrees N, cloudiness is generally less where SST is warmer, though there are lots of details and spatial variation that lessen the correlation.
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 formula holds: more CO2 = warming world = less ice + higher seas + lots of changing climate patterns.
Many media articles and weblogs suggested there is good news on the sea level issue, with future sea level rise expected to be a lot less compared to the previous IPCC report (the Third Assessment Report, TAR).
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).
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.
The land surface temperatures vary a lot more because air is less dense than water and lots of the air where the land surface temperatures are measured is less dense than sea level air.
More rainfall in some places Less rainfall in the places where it doesn't rain more Hotter, apart from where its colder Lots more heat in the oceans (somewhere) Catastrophic sea level rise — at the same rate as the last five centuries.
You know, I would have a lot less trouble believing climate scientists could actually measure changes in global average sea level to within a milimeter, if I didn't know how badly they overstate their confidence in «global average temperature» in all its many manifestations, with all its many assumptions, models and WAGs.
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