sort of a heatwave here in Nice i guess.
Not exact matches
They show that warming increased the likelihood
of a
heatwave of the
sort that hit Europe in 2003 — claiming...
I'm taking advantage
of the
heatwave of sorts and pulling out my favorite casual winter outfit (pre-cold front)
of this statement sleeve sweater and flippy skirt.
Maggie O'Farrell is another literary writer with the
sort of insight into family dynamics that Laurie seems to be looking for — and her latest, Instructions for a
Heatwave just went on sale this week.
In the midst
of a
heatwave, their father vanishes, and they're left to
sort out what happened.
We happened to visit Tokyo in September during a
heatwave and I don't think there was a proper AC system because that bathroom was almost like a sauna, and I
sort of dreaded going in it.
The fact that we've seen extreme weather systems that just
sort of sit in place — like the 2003 European
heatwave, the 2011 Oklahoma and Texas drought and
heatwave, the 2010 Moscow wildfires, Pakistan's floods.
And while neither Russian
heatwave nor Australian flood can be conclusively attributed to AGW, these
sorts of events are exactly what we will see more
of as warming (and precipitation change) continue.
Or is it the case that there have already been such events — e.g. the 2003 European
heatwave that reportedly killed tens
of thousands
of people, or hurricane Katrina — but that since it can always be said that «no individual extreme event can be directly attributed to global warming», that no event, no matter how extreme, will ever cause the
sort of «tipping point» in public consciousness that the 9/11 attacks did?