We're seeing weirder, wilder, more extreme weather (and yes, the East Coast blizzard has its roots in warming as well; warmer water
means more moister evaporates into the air, and when that meets cold arctic air you get even more snow).
Not exact matches
Sticky Toffee Pudding is a British dessert and it is
meant to be
more like a very
moist warm cake with melted toffee poured over rather than a regular pudding.
These chocolate - cranberry - studded biscuits are softer and
more moist than their traditional counterparts, which
means they won't keep quite as long.
Oil free oat flour baked goods will dry out somewhat with freezing, that's inevitable, so if you wanted to try the almond flour version of this cake it's
more moist and may freeze better: https://www.feastingonfruit.com/vegan-paleo-carrot-cake/ And THANK YOU, that
means a lot ☺️
It does
mean air is apt to be warmer and
moister and with prospects for
more snow on nearby land in the Fall.
Also, just because the average pole - to - equator temperature gradient is decreasing doesn't
mean that the seasonal variation won't still be in place, and then there's the whole issue of the hydrologic cycle intensification — a
moister atmosphere carries
more latent heat and thus may generate
more intense mid-latitude storms as well.
It has not been shown that a
moist adiabat
means rain, or that it
means more rain rather than the same rain from a different altitude.
I'm told that a
moist adiabat typically
means rain, which I don't think is correct, and that the shallower lapse rate resulting from
more humidity is * caused * by there being
more rain.
To do so, you'd need a study such as mine which shows water vapour cools and
more moist regions have lower
mean daily maximum and minimum temperatures than drier regions at similar latitudes and altitudes.
Warmer air
means more melting, but
moister air
means more precipitation and therefore, where the temperature is right,
more snowfall.