Sentences with phrase «ocean air really»

Living in the stunning pine forests of southwestern France, being right next to the ocean and breathing fresh ocean air really helps me to connect to nature and gives me and my Yoga students the chance of a fantastic Yoga experience.

Not exact matches

So it's starting to get really warm in LA, which makes me think of a few things: how I still haven't lost all of my «holiday weight» (whoops), wishing my apartment had central air («an ocean breeze» just isn't the same) and last but not least....
Paris 2015 may be the last chance to agree on global carbon dioxide reductions before there are so many greenhouse gases in the air and the oceans that things get really nasty.
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.
The author has an exceptional ability to highlight the challenges of early air travel, and she really drives home just what a dangerous undertaking an ocean crossing was at the time.
However, it is actually really hard to keep track exactly of your earnings as the system is quite unbelievably complicated for Air France in particular: there are different earning tables for intercontinental, Caribbean and Indian Ocean, European, and domestic flights — and three different levels of earning for a given booking class in Europe depending on the fare type (that's overall 67 different possibilities for Air France alone).
He notes that the sat photos show that cloud cover remains low and that the ice is very mobile at a time when the pack should be most firm (not really a surprise since ocean temps are much more important than air temps, and apparently it's the ocean temps that have been the largest factor in the recent sharp sea ice reduction).
The reason however that for instance Queensland hasn't really been hindered by the current La Niña until recent weeks is, just like in Pakistan several months earlier, much of the energetic build - up in the ocean waters had been masked by relatively high pressure air systems — as long as the ITCZ lay further to the north.
They're a last line of defense against really radically plunging temperatures once water starts getting frozen out of the air and oceans covered with ice.
so, yeah, it is really convenient that ocean surface temperatures have gone down since the 1998 el nino due to wind patterns but that extra heat going into the ocean is just as much a component of warming as air temperatures.
Please, if you copy something, look at what is really written: the 13C / 12C ratio is expressed as per mil d13C, not percent, and is negative for many species (except carbonate deposits and the oceans): C3 plants: -28 per mil C4 plants: -14 per mil air: -8 per mil and falling.
Furthermore warm ocean surfaces really do send the air circulation systems poleward whilst changes in the intensity of the polar high pressure cells work in opposition to those oceanic effects.
-- First we increase the greenhouse gases — then that causes warming in the atmosphere and oceans — as the oceans warm up, they evaporate more H2O — more moisture in the air means more precipitation (rain, snow)-- the southern hemisphere is essentially lots of water and a really big ice cube in the middle called Antarctica — land ice is different than sea ice — climate models indicated that more snowfall would cause increases in the frozen H2O — climate models indicated that there would be initial increases in sea ice extent — observations confirm the indications and expectations that precipitation is increasing, calving rates are accelerating and sea ice extent is increasing.
But, it can warm the air close to the ground, if the air is cooler, and does do that if that very energy just bounces around locally in the air maintaining equilibrium and equipartition, and this is what normally happens (really it is thermalization and re-emission from the GHGs), in your room, on your patio, in a field, on the ocean, its just it can never raise the temperature greater than the local surface itself is.
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