Sentences with phrase «seasonal change so»

Like other mammals, I know I go through seasonal changes so I'm not going to agonize over it.

Not exact matches

It also depends on so much more: like location, seasonal changes, water, etc..
I, like you, changed my eating habits so much since college and even still I feel that they evolve more and more as I read, learn and experiment with healthy ingredients and recipes using fresh and seasonal recipes.
So when I realized I had lapsed on my seasonal responsibility to consume as much pumpkin as humanly possible, I decided to change that.
Since the arrival of Brutus the brute (this dog was so aptly named, glad we kept his moniker after adopting him) I am very attuned to seasonal changes.
So since the magical trend continues but the weather is changing, this is my seasonal summery spin...
'' So this process is very useful because you can adapt to these huge seasonal changes in environmental color and continue to see and discriminate between colors accurately.»
It's not yet understood, she says, why the increase in seasonal amplitude of carbon dioxide concentration is so large, but it's a clear signal of widespread changes in northern ecosystems.
I don't do a lot of seasonal changes, but the mantel is easy to update and makes me smile whenever I walk by, so thanks for your party motivation to «get on that.»
When it comes to seasonal stuff though I try to stick with budget friendly items because we all know that trends change from season to season...... so these are all pretty budget friendly.
I always like to look for new ideas as I too am big on seasonal changes at home (especially since a few of our rooms are so awkward that it's impossible to move the furniture).
But Friend felt that kids growing up in western Maryland are already familiar with the seasonal changes, so to broaden their understanding of the environment, she decided to approach seasons through the lens of habitat and animals.
Seasonal changes are therefore more pronounced, so it's true that your cat's behavior is likely to change with the seasons.
These rates used to be 35,000 and 55,000 respectively, so these changes are good if you're OK with the seasonal restrictions.
There's plenty to do and see despite the seasonal change, which is why pre-high season accommodation rates are so reasonable.
Shadows are crisp and life - like, and the seasonal changes — up to and including random thunderstorms — are so incredibly beautiful that A Realm Reborn sits in the upper echelons of the PS4's best looking games.
With enough time, you have an ice age, checked only by the fact that the ice can only get so far south, because this all hinges on seasonal insolation changes resulting from the axial tilt of the earth, and this makes no difference at or near the equator — insolation there is constant, regardless of the tilt of the earth, and the days are warm and long enough to hold back any threat of snow and ice.
The lapse rate within the troposphere is largely determined by convection, which redistributes any changes in radiative heating or cooling within the troposphere + surface so that all levels tend to shift temperature similarly (with some regional / latitudinal, diurnal, and seasonal exceptions, and some exceptions for various transient weather events).
Re 9 wili — I know of a paper suggesting, as I recall, that enhanced «backradiation» (downward radiation reaching the surface emitted by the air / clouds) contributed more to Arctic amplification specifically in the cold part of the year (just to be clear, backradiation should generally increase with any warming (aside from greenhouse feedbacks) and more so with a warming due to an increase in the greenhouse effect (including feedbacks like water vapor and, if positive, clouds, though regional changes in water vapor and clouds can go against the global trend); otherwise it was always my understanding that the albedo feedback was key (while sea ice decreases so far have been more a summer phenomenon (when it would be warmer to begin with), the heat capacity of the sea prevents much temperature response, but there is a greater build up of heat from the albedo feedback, and this is released in the cold part of the year when ice forms later or would have formed or would have been thicker; the seasonal effect of reduced winter snow cover decreasing at those latitudes which still recieve sunlight in the winter would not be so delayed).
So while the orbital factors can change the seasonal distribution of insolation, the total insolation is constant.
In farming communities many local volunteers may be planting or harvesting crops in the spring and fall, so your plan must address these types of seasonal fluctuations and known changes throughout the life of the project.
For the entire Northern Hemisphere, there is evidence of an increase in both storm frequency and intensity during the cold season since 1950,1 with storm tracks having shifted slightly towards the poles.2, 3 Extremely heavy snowstorms increased in number during the last century in northern and eastern parts of the United States, but have been less frequent since 2000.11,15 Total seasonal snowfall has generally decreased in southern and some western areas, 16 increased in the northern Great Plains and Great Lakes region, 16,17 and not changed in other areas, such as the Sierra Nevada, although snow is melting earlier in the year and more precipitation is falling as rain versus snow.18 Very snowy winters have generally been decreasing in frequency in most regions over the last 10 to 20 years, although the Northeast has been seeing a normal number of such winters.19 Heavier - than - normal snowfalls recently observed in the Midwest and Northeast U.S. in some years, with little snow in other years, are consistent with indications of increased blocking (a large scale pressure pattern with little or no movement) of the wintertime circulation of the Northern Hemisphere.5 However, conclusions about trends in blocking have been found to depend on the method of analysis, 6 so the assessment and attribution of trends in blocking remains an active research area.
The summer - winter changes in insolation are much larger than those due to human - induced greenhouse gas changes; the seasonal change is mainly in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum while the greenhouse gas forcing is in the infrared; the greenhouse gas influence is global while the seasonal changes are opposite in the two hemispheres; and we have a much longer history of observing the seasonal changes, so a more or less correct prediction can be made empirically, without any physical understanding.
Climate models are like weather models for the atmosphere and land, except they have to additionally predict the ocean currents, sea - ice changes, include seasonal vegetation effects, possibly even predict vegetation changes, include aerosols and possibly atmospheric chemistry, so they are not like weather models after all, except for the atmospheric dynamics, land surface, and cloud / precipitation component.
So far the seasonal changes of CO2 between biosphere and atmosphere can not explain the continuous increase rate of CO2 in the atmosphere — even not a little bit rising rate of the increase.
Third, the ice core data how conclusively that, during natural climate cycling, changes in temperature precede changes in carbon dioxide by an average 800 years or so (Fischer et al, 1999; Indermuhle et al, 2000; Mudelsee, 2001; Caillon et al, 2003); similarly, temperature change precedes carbon dioxide change, in this case by five months, during annual seasonal cycling (Kuo, Lindberg and Thomson, 1990).
I will stick with concept that Weather is Climate... so that the climate changes as the weather changes... and the Sun drives the weather through daily, seasonal, solar and Milankovitch cycles.
We have to be careful with how we draw conclusions on these outer planets, since their «year» is so long, seasonal changes can last decades.
«Skeptics» have not produced GCMs so that they can evaluate its seasonal and regional variations before going on to climate change.
By the winter of 2007 - 08, I became so concerned about climate change that I gave up my winter seasonal job in the Everglades.
But there is so much inter seasonal and inter annual noise that it may take 30 years to assess how it is changing.
How the seasonal weather changes at a particular climate depends on ocean currents so you can have correlation between volcanic eruptions and «global climate» but one is not necessarily affected by the other.
RE: 4th Error -RCB- Poses an objection to the non-scientific term catastrophic [NOTE: Scientific «consensus» is often being used & / or implied in standard climate - change discourse - Yet Consensus is a Political Term - NOT a Scientific Term]- HOWEVER - When Jim Hansen, the IPCC & Al Gore, et - al - go from predicting 450 — 500 ppm CO2 to 800 — 1000ppm by the end of the 21st century -LCB- said to the be highest atmospheric CO2 content in 20 — 30 Million YRS -RCB-; — & estimates for aver global temps by 21st century's end go from 2 * C to 6 * C to 10 * C; — & increased sea level estimates go from 10 - 20 cm to 50 - 60 cm to 1M — 2M -LCB- which would totally submerge the Maldives & partially so Bangladesh -RCB-; — predictions of the total melting of the Himalayan Ice caps by 2050, near total melting of Greenland's ice sheet & partial melting of Antarctica's ice sheet before the 21st century's end; — massive crop failures; — more intense & frequent hurricane -LCB- ala Katrina -RCB- for much longer seasonal durations, etc, etc, etc... — IMO That's Sounds pretty damned CATASTROPHIC to ME!
As humans push agriculture to ever - high levels of productivity, crops become an ever - bigger contributor so seasonal changes in atmospheric CO2, researchers say.
So I will ask again (paraphrasing): Do you think it is inappropriate to remove the seasonal change in the Earth's average temperature (which is implicitly done via the the use of anomalies rather than absolute temperatures)?
Progressive also allows you to adjust your policy with seasonal changes, so that you never have to pay for coverages you don't need.
Changing your filters every 90 days will save energy, keep your home clean and prevent expensive HVAC repairs so it really should be on our seasonal to do list.
Seasonal changes are my favorite, so I couldn't wait to make a few summer updates to this tiny room.
As we've made big changes to this house over the years, changes like painting the cabinets and installing new flooring and purchasing new furniture, I've found that when it comes to seasonal decorating, I so love the backdrop that I've created I don't feel like I need to «frou - frou» it up all that much.
One of my favorite ways to change out my seasonal decor is by changing pillows... although this can get quite expensive and take up lots of non-existent storage (at our house at least) so the easier option is to make my own pillow covers and just switch out the covers.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z