Fewer
miles in circulation means less risk of award chart inflation!»
Award Wallet estimates that some 10 trillion frequent - flier
miles in circulation today, worth well over $ 165 billion, have gone... Read More...
Not exact matches
In 2005, frequent - flyer miles were more valuable than all the U.S. dollars in circulatio
In 2005, frequent - flyer
miles were more valuable than all the U.S. dollars
in circulatio
in circulation.
Further,
in areas of the ocean with persistent or frequent eddies, Qiu and co-authors from the Japan Meteorological Agency, Caltech and NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory determined that sea level can reliably be used to calculate
circulation at a fairly high resolution, that is, at fairly small length scales (resolution of 10
miles).
«We're currently seeing tropical storm conditions
in North Carolina even though the center of
circulation is 250
miles to the southeast.»
In fact, there are now more unredeemed frequent flyer miles than currency in circulation — around the worl
In fact, there are now more unredeemed frequent flyer
miles than currency
in circulation — around the worl
in circulation — around the world!
Did you know that there are more unredeemed frequent flyer
miles than U.S. dollar bills
in circulation?
Fewer
miles will be issued through actually flying, so theoretically there will be less competition for those award seats, as fewer
miles will be
in circulation
What has happened is that the base of knowledge that should be there to compute the longer cycles of repeating influence, driving the global
circulations dynamics has been left behind, and it is only now that we realize that even a nice new Corvette, is not going to work well 600
miles from the nearest gravel road up
in the Himalayas.
Although they may be thousands of
miles apart, air conditions
in the West Pacific directly influence those of North America due to atmospheric
circulation patterns.
When a full - depth ocean model is used, something intriguing happens: the loss of Arctic sea ice triggers a far - flung response that mimics climate change itself, including a slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation (AMOC), a build - up of heat
in the tropical oceans over several decades, and a warming of the atmosphere a few
miles above the tropics.
A University of Utah study suggests something amazing: Periodic changes
in winds 15 to 30
miles high
in the stratosphere influence the seas by striking a vulnerable «Achilles heel»
in the North Atlantic and changing
mile - deep ocean
circulation patterns, which
in turn affect Earth's climate.