Sentences with phrase «relatively modern era»

Not exact matches

The Cost of the Modern Lawn Lawns are a relatively recent phenomenon, dating back to the post-Civil War era when people slowly...
While the film seemed relatively modern well into the «90s, now it is a bygone era for which I'm nostalgic.
While the storyline is relatively simple, and one that has been a staple of Hollywood classics since the beginning of commercial films (this is a movie about movies, after all), the complexity of the characterizations, coupled with the technically proficient presentation despite the multitudinous moving pieces involved, makes it all feel fresh and new in the modern era.
Even into the (relatively) modern era, Alfa remained competitive, and drivers Giuseppe Farina and Juan Manuel Fangio used them to capture the first two Formula One drivers titles in 1950 and 1951.
THE MODERN ERA Except in the United States and Canada, to this day the breed is still known in all other nations as the King Charles Spaniel and must not be confused with its cousin, the relatively modern, more recently re-developed Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, recognized by the AKC inMODERN ERA Except in the United States and Canada, to this day the breed is still known in all other nations as the King Charles Spaniel and must not be confused with its cousin, the relatively modern, more recently re-developed Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, recognized by the AKC inmodern, more recently re-developed Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, recognized by the AKC in 1995.
These types did NOT burn with frequent surface fires in the past, and so land management activities have had relatively little to do with fuel and fire regime changes in the modern era.
A new study confirms that carbon pollution has ended the era of the stable climate conditions that enabled the development of modern civilization High levels of carbon pollution have caused global temperatures to rise above the slow - changing, relatively stable conditions that existed «when humans were figuring out where the climate — and rivers and sea levels — were most suited for living and farming.»
So far - reaching is the impact of modern humans that esteemed palaeoclimatologist Wally Broecker has suggested that we have not entered a new geological epoch, a relatively minor event on the geologic time scale, but a new era — the Anthropozoic — on a par in Earth history with the development of multicellular life.
However, the density of reporting ship traffic over the Atlantic was relatively sparse during the early decades of this record, such that if storms from the modern era (post 1965) had hypothetically occurred during those earlier decades, a substantial number of storms would likely not have been directly observed by the ship - based «observing network of opportunity.»
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