Sentences with phrase «melt back because»

But then we come along and start burning fossil fuels and adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, and glaciers that would still be growing start to melt back because summer temperatures are warmer.
But then we come along and start burning fossil fuels and adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, and glaciers that would still be growing start to melt back because summer temperatures are warmer.»

Not exact matches

Really cinnamony, soft, and airy: — RRB --RRB--RRB--RRB- They're actually small so 18 of them came out which is great because next week, when I get back to my gym, I'm going to throw some in a bowl of milk and eat them all at once postworkout >:-D When they were ready, I covered them with melted 87 % dark chocolate, using 5 squares to cover them all.
Just make sure to serve the bark right out of the freezer because if it sits out too long the yogurt will start to melt back to room temperature.
The last Nutiva coconut oil product I used, which I am now out of, melted at over 76 degrees which was great for medicinal use, because it also re-solidified, or became gel like anyway, back again at less than 76 degrees.
It's hot, it's muggy and I am finding myself wanting to be outside in the fresh air, but quickly going back in once I'm out there because I feel like I'm melting.
Back before we had a proper refrigerator, I got a hankering for some no - bakes but had no way to chill them because our tiny refrigerator was comprised of 40 % ice, 5 % melting ice water, and 55 % necessities (like almondmilk, La Croix, coffee creamer, tempeh, hummus, pickles, cashew cheese, etc.)-- and I couldn't have made room for cookies even if I tried.
But there is a situation where I refuse to back down; I am not leaving a fully stocked cart in Target because my child is having a melt down.
The Arctic is warming more than twice as fast as the rest of the planet, because as ice melts at the top of the world, there is less of it to reflect sunlight back into space, so more of it is absorbed by ocean waters; more absorbed sunlight means even warmer temperatures, which means more ice melt a circular process known as Arctic amplification.
As I am writing this for you all I am tearing up looking out the window at the snow falling because I was SO not ready, but thankfully it all should melt and I will have the perfect weather for my fall outfits back again.
I finally caved and found a few that I love because of the fit and am so excited for this snow to melt away and for the temperatures to creep back up so that I can give them the love that they deserve!
First, go back and read the stuff that was assigned but that you skimmed (or skipped) because you had so much work and your brain was starting to melt.
That winter, the water in the radiator froze and because ice expands, when it melted and turned back into water, it leaked out of the now broken radiator.
If you can get close enough without them seeing you — which you can because it's terribly easy — you can thrust your weapon through their back and watch them melt into a satisfying puddle of tar.
But had the Fukushima plants all been AP1000s, they would have melted too, because they can only go without power for three days, and it took 11 days to get power turned back on in all four reactors.
Getting back to point # 1, September ice extent is highly variable because (as Ron pointed out): (i) the thinner ice of summer is more susceptible to the vagaries of weather, and (ii) the thinner ice is also more sensitive to the amount of melt.
This thicker multiyear ice takes longer to melt back (both because of greater thickness and higher albedo than first - year ice) and so in conjunction with the weather it is responsible for more extensive ice in the late summer in this region.
«Once people understand climate protection puts MONEY back into your pocket because you do not have to buy all that fuel, the political resistance will melt faster than the glaciers.»
Because ice reflects some heat radiation back out into space, when it melts it exposes darker ocean which then absorbs that radiation, leading to more warming.
Russia and US, talked about ways to melt the Arctic, because it caused the cold weather, back then.
Lovins also states, «Climate change is a problem we do not need to have, and it is cheaper not to (have it)... Once people understand climate protection puts money back into your pocket because you do not have to buy all that fuel, the political resistance will melt faster than the glaciers.»
«This information is of great importance, although the consequences of melting ice will be much less dramatic now than during the Ice Age, because there is less ice and temperature changes was much larger back then», Rasmussen explains.
The idea was revived in the 1990s because of a mechanism (volcanic CO2 becoming 10 % of air) that would melt it back within a few million years, after which there is a Hothouse Earth for a few million years until the thirty - fold - greater CO2 is removed from the atmosphere.
It is easy to melt ice (in a warming world) but takes much longer to grow it back because of the slow growth rates.
For even if the models are proven to be wrong with respect to their predictions of atmospheric warming, extreme weather, glacial melt, sea level rise, or any other attendant catastrophe, those who seek to regulate and reduce CO2 emissions have a fall - back position, claiming that no matter what happens to the climate, the nations of the Earth must reduce their greenhouse gas emissions because of projected direct negative impacts on marine organisms via ocean acidification.
What is so amazing about these displays is that Samsung was able to squeeze this much display in a fairly small footprint, yet because of the way the edges of the display seem to melt into the back of the device, in your hand, the display looks huge.
A core aerator removes small cores of soil (when finished, leave those cores on the ground because rain will «melt» them back into the soil).
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