WUWT reader Pethefin writes: Finally someone addresses
the really big elephant in the room: the ocean vents and their role in climate modelling: I covered this possibility in a previous post: Do underwater volcanoes have an effect on ENSO?
Not exact matches
Nice article... I used to be one of those staunch Wenger fans through the years... I used to believe he is superior than Sir Alex, because with almost nothing to spend and playing with kids, he managed to keep us up there every year... I was
really caught up with that half season wonder we used to show... In the summer 2013, him or the board (I don't recall) came out and said we are much stable financially and now we can fight with the
biggest bullies, I got my hopes high, I thought we are definitely signing a top striker and DM, that what we need... What happened, only hours before the window closed we managed to sign a top AMF (remember we have our best player for the season 2012 - 2013 was AMF, Cazorla if you remember), I was
really depressed seen Giroud leading the line every match... then comes winter window, and we were right there top of the table... My friend send me a poster of an
elephant on a tree, and on the bottom of it «no one knows how it got there but everybody knows how it will get down»... I told my friend that we are only one decent striker far from the gold... and what happened, we signed an old injured DM on loan... That for me was a completely arrogance and stubbornness cost us the league title... There I completely lost the plot with Wenger... I wish yesterday I was with those who raised that banner... I would write in my banner «Enough talks and philosophy, we need results»
Fun carnival details such as a flappy
elephant's ear or the
big top flag
really set sleepy circus Grobag apart from all the other baby sleeping bags.
Elephants don't mate with oak trees to produce
really big acorns.
Overall, Gwiazdowski concludes, «Surprisingly, cryptic species are being uncovered among
really big, supposedly well - known animals, like
elephants and orcas.
We come across the rest of our Rovos Rail group parked up ahead and look into the near distance to spot a family of
elephants - there must be at least 25 of them - from
really big ones to youngsters who scuttle around under their elders» bellies.
Johnson said heavy storm activity this winter with «
really big surf» has apparently been sweeping
elephant seal pups off the rocks in the rookeries and away from their mothers.
«It's
really kind of a performance sculpture, and it's a very strange animal, it's an uncaged animal, it's this
big animal — a whale or an
elephant has a similar impact,» Jetzer said.