Sentences with phrase «spanning decades or more»

That, according to scientists, means California's risk of a mega-drought — spanning decades or more — is, or will be soon, the highest it's been in millennia.
And you have to love contracts that span a decade or more.

Not exact matches

There are a variety of reasons for this gap in understanding: The time gap between discovery research and the translation of that discovery into a therapeutic or a commercial product can take decades, and public and political attention spans are short; the natural human inclination is to pay more attention to things that don't work rather than things that do.
The implementation timeline spanned more than a decade and was rolled out in only one or two grades per year, always preceded by a year of planning, training, and professional development:
Individuals will not be able to depend on an alert via their credit, and if a lien goes unpaid it can accumulate copious amounts of interest and fees over the span of a decade or more.
Keep in mind that those figures spanned more than a decade of trading, so this was not a fluke or some lucky win streak.
''... With the opening of a comprehensive show of 50 or more paintings spanning four decades of the work of Indian - born New York artist Natvar Bhavsar in the special gallery of its Jane Vorhees Zimmerli Museum, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, became the first university in the country to host such a solo show (March 11 - July 22) by an artist of South Asian Descent...»
I thought he might be unhappy to see: — the adjustment (in the new paper) losing the 1998 RSS high temp shown in Zeke Hausfather's older graph, so the «cooling trend» argument gets hurt, or — the newer graph having one more recent data point than the older, so the «cooling trend» argument gets hurt, or — the newer graph showing a shorter time span and so not showing the lower temps in earlier decades, so the «cooling trend» argument gets hurt, or — the newer graph isn't directly comparable to an older graph he prefers to look at without thinking about the numbers along the side, or — I du n no.
If we look over the charts for predicted vs real temperatures over the span of a decade or more, this is much of what we see: drift, but drift that largely cancels itself out such that the distance between the real and the predicted increases only gradually with the real and the predicted crossing over at various points, particularly early on.
Besides, according to the U.N. World Meteorological Organization, there has been no recorded global warming for more than a decade, or one - third of the span since the global cooling scare.
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