Sentences with phrase «ocean air coming»

With my eyes closed, I can still vividly remember taking in deep breaths of fresh ocean air coming in through the open car window and the sun warming my face whilst gleaming through pine tree tops.
I never felt so connected with nature while being in a hotel; the way the villas are so open to the outdoors, you can't help but relax with the ocean air coming in and the sounds of the surrounding vegetation; everything in the villa was absolutely spotless while still providing a sense of warmth and welcome.

Not exact matches

«This isolated Vostok and prevented the waves of warm air that normally come up from the ocean,» says Turner.
The Amazon produces roughly a third of its own precipitation — trees release moist air that then falls back as rain to nourish other trees (the rest comes from the Atlantic Ocean).
Over the oceans, some contain organic or biological ingredients (bacteria, degradation products of microscopic algae) which come from sea spray, others are transported in the air (mineral dust, smoke).
Note that we've got a paper soon to come out in «The Cryosphere» (and we'll have a poster at AGU) looking at recent «Arctic Amplification» that you discuss (the stronger rise in surface air temperatures over the Arctic Ocean compared to lower latitudes).
Low pressure systems coming from the Indian Ocean are forced down into the Southern Oceans, taking with them any moist air.
Icarus - In this context it doesn't really matter where the CO2 is coming from (since it becomes well - mixed in the air over less than a few years), though the most plausible hypotheses usually require the Southern Ocean to be involved, and the associated feedbacks of ocean biogeochemistry and its interaction with the ocean's physical circulaOcean to be involved, and the associated feedbacks of ocean biogeochemistry and its interaction with the ocean's physical circulaocean biogeochemistry and its interaction with the ocean's physical circulaocean's physical circulation.
If there is a difference in how you feel when it comes to looking at nature from your window, imagine how positive the effects are when you are actually immersing your senses in nature in real time — when you're actually feeling the breeze caress your skin, the sun warming your body, the smell of the ocean air, or the taste of sea salt on your lips.
The view from above (a vampire's view) is all carnival lights reflecting off the ocean and the screams piercing the air come from the roller coaster on the horizon.
Flannery breaks down the types of greenhouse gases, where they come from, and what they do to the air and ocean.
Each style of holiday accommodation at Beaches Port Douglas comes complete with air conditioning and ceiling fans (although most guests simply enjoying the refreshing ocean breezes), a fully equipped kitchen including dishwasher, refrigerator, microwave and crockery and cutlery, a fully equipped laundry, facsimile and modem point, internet access, telephone, iron and ironing board and tea and coffee making facilities.
Imagine waking up one morning to come to a beautiful sunrise on the horizon, its rays reflecting the crystal clear waters of the ocean, salt water penetrates the air and your nostrils.
At 3,300 sq.ft., this ocean view vacation rental comes complete with central air conditioning, oceanfront swimming pool, gourmet kitchen with granite counter tops, spacious covered lanai and outdoor BBQ gas grill - perfect for the indoor - outdoor Kauai lifestyle.
All rooms have a magnificent ocean view and come with air conditioning.
Local Attractions: Flyers Skate Zone 1 mi SandCastle Baseball Stadium 1 mi Beach and Boardwalk 2.5 mi AC Casinos 3 mi AC Convention Center 3 mi AC Medical Center and Community College 3 mi Amtrax 3 mi Greyhound 3mi NJ Transit bus system 3mi Absecon Lighthouse 4 mi Ripleys Believe It or Not 4 mi Steele Pier 4 mi Ocean Life Center 5 mi Social Security office 5 mi The Shore Mall 5 mi Noyes Museum 6 mi Atlantic City Intl Airport 7 mi NJ Tax office 7 mi Air Force Base 8 mi Shore Memorial Hospital 8 mi Stockton State College 8 mi Storybook land 8 mi Hamilton Mall 12 mi Renault Winery 16mi Come and Stay at Ramada West Atlantic City!
Fully equipped rooms come with air conditioning, a bathroom complete with tub and shower, a balcony or terrace with an amazing ocean view, and WiFi.
They boast air conditioning, bathroom with hot water and an ocean view terrace: three rooms have a King bed, four rooms come with a Queen bed and two single beds on a mezzanine, while the one Jr..
Six room / villa types are available at the resort: Deluxe balcony, Jacuzzi Deluxe, Ocean View Jacuzzi Deluxe, Ocean View Pool Villa, Panoramic Ocean View Pool Villa, and Ocean Front Pool Villa Suite.There a stylish combination of traditional and modern elements in their architecture and interior design, all rooms are air conditioned and come with top - of - the - range amenities including television and DVD player, mini-bar, electronic safe, en - suite bathroom with bathtub, and terrace / balcony.
The rooms downstairs come with a fan, while the rooms upstairs come air - conditioned and all contain huge windows facing the magnificent ocean.
Each rooms comes with the necessary mod - cons such as air conditioning and uninterrupted views of the surrounding ocean.
Modern and spacious, the suites have 2 private balconies and are located on the second story above the deluxe rooms 1 Honey Moon Suite: One of the best ocean views of the hotel, that comes with a king size bed, hot water, TV, air conditioning, a large bathroom, small refrigerator and wrap around balcony with a hammock.
Enjoy a formal dinner at the indoor spacious Living / Dinning room and Breakfast at the open air area while overlooking the pacific ocean and the bay with the balmy breeze coming from open sea.
The spacious 26.59 - sq - metre room comes with a 1 queen sized bed, with an individual controlled air condition, a fully stocked Mini bar that offers you snacks and drinks for refreshment while watching satellite cable TV, hot & cold shower and with sliding doors that open onto a private balcony to enjoy the magnificent ocean view.
The Adina Apartment Hotel Coogee offers apartment types ranging from studio to two bedroom premier apartments all of which come with air - conditioning and opening windows to enjoy the ocean breeze.
A place where people would come to relax and enjoy the ocean air while following intellectual pursuits.
Atmos Sala Alcalá 31, Madrid (catalogue) Hemispheres and Continents Matthew Marks Gallery, New York 2012 All Things Pass Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin (catalogue) Patricia Low Contemporary, Gstaad Fullmoon and Night + Fog Domaine de Chaumont - sur - Loire, Chaumont - sur - Loire 2011 Landscape with Path The High Line, New York Xippas, Montevideo L'Abbaye de la Chaise Dieu, Chaise Dieu Nocturne Villa Merkel, Esslingen (catalogue)... between here and the surface of the moon FRAC Auvergne, Clermont Ferrand; traveled to: FRAC Haute - Normandie, Sotteville - lès - Rouen 2010 As it is Alfonso Artiaco, Naples The Principle of Moments Whitecube, London Fullmoon@Eifel Weidingen, Eifel Matthew Marks Gallery, New York PKM Trinity Gallery, Seoul 2009 Sommer Gallery, Tel Aviv Xippas Gallery, Athens Sometimestill Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin 2008 Nail to Nail David Patton, Los Angeles SCAI The Bathhouse, Tokyo In The Between Eye of Gyre, Omotesando Substitute Galleri K, Oslo Fire under snow Parasol unit, London (catalogue) Moons of the Iapetus Ocean White Cube, London (catalogue) 2007 Galleria Alfonso Artiaco, Naples Day Return Castle Ujazdowski — Center for Contemporary Art, Warsaw (catalogue) Night + Fog Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin (catalogue) In the Between Musée d'art contemporain, Montreal SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe Matthew Marks Gallery, New York 2006 Day Return Museum Folkwang, Essen (catalogue) Darren Almond and Janice Kerbel: Impossible Landscapes The Horticultural Society of New York, New York If I had you Domus Artium 2002 — Center for Contemporary Art, Salamanca Darren Almond / Albert Oehlen: Time 2 Kill Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin 2005 Take Me Home Matthew Marks Gallery, New York Alfonso Artiaco, Naples Isolation K21 - Kunstsammmlung Nordrhein - Westfalen, Düsseldorf Only Sound Needs Echo and Dreads its Lack Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris 2004 Live Sentence Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Linz (catalogue) If I Had You Galerie Max Hetzler, St. Johannes Evangelist Church, Berlin 2003 11 miles... from Safety White Cube, London (catalogue) If I Had You Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Palazzo della Ragione, Milan Mine, A Galleri K, Oslo A Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin Full Moon Sommer Contemporary Art, Tel - Aviv 2002 A National Theatre, London; Yorkshire Sculpture Park, commissioned by Public Art Development Trust, London at speed (with Sarah Morris) Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin 2001 Coming up for air Matthew Marks Gallery, New York Kunsthalle Zürich, Zurich (catalogue) Night as Day Tate Britain, London (catalogue) De Appel Foundation - Center for Contemporary Art, Amsterdam Galerie Max Hetzler, E-Werk, Abspannwerk Buchhändlerhof, Berlin 2000 Mean Time Matthew Marks Gallery, New York Geisterbahn The Approach, London Traction Chisenhale Gallery, London 1999 Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin The Renaissance Society, University of Chicago, Chicago 1997 ICA - Institute of Contemporary Arts, comissioned by Toshiba Art & Innovation, London Fan White Cube, London 1995 KN120 Great Western Studios, London 1991 Crawford Art College, Cork
Other factors would include: — albedo shifts (both from ice > water, and from increased biological activity, and from edge melt revealing more land, and from more old dust coming to the surface...); — direct effect of CO2 on ice (the former weakens the latter); — increasing, and increasingly warm, rain fall on ice; — «stuck» weather systems bringing more and more warm tropical air ever further toward the poles; — melting of sea ice shelf increasing mobility of glaciers; — sea water getting under parts of the ice sheets where the base is below sea level; — melt water lubricating the ice sheet base; — changes in ocean currents -LRB-?)
Assumptions in a thought example: The air today contains 400 ppm CO2 We will emit 40 gt CO2 in the coming year, of which 20 gt ends in the air and 20 gt ends in the ocean / land.
I have a sort of mental chart with lots of arrows: actions that produce GHGs (e.g., coal - burning) causing a plethora of problems (& goods — like power), acid rain, ocean acidification, local ground, air, water pollution, GW, health problems & dangers for miners, military threats / expenses (according to Pentagon studies re oil), etc.; and also many arrows of good (some bad) coming out of measures to abate GW.
I know nothing about this issue, but I just came across a reference to Jacobson, Mark Z., «Studying ocean acidification with conservative, stable numerical schemes for nonequilibrium air - ocean exchange and ocean equilibrium chemistry.»
Re: # 1 One trick pony, one trick pony — substitute habitat destruction, energy security, energy scarcity, air and ocean pollution, depletion of ground water, even your coming ice age — you miss the point of this piece in your ongoing devotion to denying climate change in every thread of DotEarth, regardless of the actual topic of Andy's post.
BUT that if we continue to add CO2 to the air, the air has the added heat capacity to get warmer, IF and ONLY IF driven by the sun, but rapidly come to equilibrium with the ocean, by means of rain and the daily heating & condensation of the water vapor feedback mechanism.
The most reliable source of information for changes in the global mean net air — sea heat flux comes from the constraints provided by analyses of changes in ocean heat storage.
In fact, the ocean has absorbed so much heat — about 20 times as much as the atmosphere over the past half - century — that some models suggest that it is likely to warm the air another degree Fahrenheit (0.55 ° Celsius) worldwide over the coming decades.
The cores coming out of the ocean floor indeed showed slow changes, and so did the ice core from Antarctica — but few understood then about how special Antarctica is, how insulated from the rest of the world its weather can be (that ring of westerlies and its vertical curtain of rising air at 60 ° S) and how its low rates of snowfall limit time resolution.
The evidence comes from direct measurements of rising surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures and, indirectly, from increases in average global sea levels, retreating glaciers, and changes in many physical and biological systems.
So if oceans continue to rise in heat, and the atmosphere continues to trap a much higher amount of heat (let alone, as GG levels continue to rise, more and more of it) current air temperatures don't come close to representing a stases condition, and can't.
The ups and downs, pauses and accelerations come from surface air temperatures being a consequence of sea surface temperatures, which are variable over decades due to ocean currents, overturning - ie things like ENSO, PDO.
In view of what Leif Svalgaard says about the smallness of solar variations I'm coming round to the opinion that virtually all climate change that we observe is simply internal variability induced by the oceans and countered in the air all occurring around a relatively stable equilibrium set by sun and oceans.
Sooner or later the cycle is bound to reverse, at which point we will experience accelerated global surface air warming when the ocean heat comes back to haunt us.
f) all the additional energy coming from the increase of the back radiation is thermalized within the skin layer and then emitted back to the air by increasing radiation, convection, conduction and evaporation into the air so that none part of it is delivered to the ocean — otherwise it would give us the decrease of the cooling of the bulk temperature of the ocean;
On the heels of the shale gas rush that's swept the U.S. for the past decade, another wave of fossil fuel - based projects is coming — a plastic and petrochemical manufacturing rush that environmentalists warn could make smog worse in communities already breathing air pollution from fracking, sicken workers, and expand the plastic trash gyres in the world's oceans.
That's imperceptible when it comes to heating the ocean, as it takes 1,100 more heat energy to heat the oceans than it takes to heat the air... and the heat flux goes from ocean to atmosphere.
The T rise I quoted -LRB-.8 oC) comes from the NASA GISS anlysis which is based on weather station readings and ocean going vessel air temperature readings from as many places around the globe as reliable data is available.
The result was that the low pressure zone was no longer there and moist air ceased to come to the Maya from the ocean.
I also like that I can vary the length easily depending on my mood (the below image shows it with the blind all the way open — perfect when we want to open the windows and allow the fresh ocean air to come in).
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