Sentences with phrase «suggest dynamic change»

They become finite, yet their range of motifs and marks, and their disorienting perspectives and dimensions suggest dynamic change.
The changes to the deep convection discovered in the study suggested a dynamic change in the climate system was responsible for the change in rainfall.

Not exact matches

The organic model we are suggesting pictures reality as composed of multitudes of embodied beings who presently inhabit a planet that has evolved over billions of years through a process of dynamic change marked by law and novelty into an intricate, diverse, complex, multi-leveled reality, all radically interrelated and interdependent.
This movement suggests that the result of being inclusive of the vast range of experiences is a dynamic philosophy which promotes and reflects change.
This more dynamic view of conservation, which allows for species» adaptation to human - altered habitats and changing climates, may be a way to maintain a portion of endangered genetic ancestry, the scientists suggest.
The more dynamic picture in the new simulations suggests that the rate of change in the first half of this century — which does not involve a significant contribution from processes like marine ice - cliff instability, or hydrofracturing — is essentially uncorrelated with the rate of change later in the century.
The museum uses a range of logos that move in and out of focus, «suggesting the dynamic nature of Tate — always changing but always recognizable» [18] Variations include a standard logo, a blurred version, a faded version and a halftone version consisting of dots rather than smooth fading.
Here we show that fluctuations in Antarctic Ice Sheet discharge caused by relatively small changes in subsurface ocean temperature can amplify multi-centennial climate variability regionally and globally, suggesting that a dynamic Antarctic Ice Sheet may have driven climate fluctuations during the Holocene.
5) Regional variations suggest dynamics that overpower any CO2 effect — and yet the CO2 effect, plus other GHGe, plus land use changes, plus deforestation, and cement use, and and and clearly suggests dynamic drivers that overpower natural regional variations — by either mitigating them or accelerating them and at times evening them out.
In a more recent paper, our own Stefan Rahmstorf used a simple regression model to suggest that sea level rise (SLR) could reach 0.5 to 1.4 meters above 1990 levels by 2100, but this did not consider individual processes like dynamic ice sheet changes, being only based on how global sea level has been linked to global warming over the past 120 years.
It is that climate is unpredictable — and as people keep saying — a chaotic climate implies a certain dynamic sensitivity and rationally suggests that making changes to a system that is a priori unpredictable carries some risk.
Some more astute voices have been speculating about this potential since the turn of the century — and suggesting that with dynamic climate shifts there are even greater risks of extreme hydrological and temperature changes.
Zwally deemed it necessary to acknowledge climate change fears and suggested that if the rate of dynamic thinning continues, Antarctica could begin exhibiting a net loss of ice within the next 20 years, but only if there was no compensating snowfall.
As people keep saying — a chaotic climate implies a certain dynamic sensitivity and rationally suggests that making changes to a system that is a priori unpredictable carries some risk.
It suggests that climate is highly sensitive to small changes in conditions in dynamic ways that are still quite obscure.
The more dynamic picture in the new simulations suggests that the rate of change in the first half of this century — which does not involve a significant contribution from processes like marine ice - cliff instability, or hydrofracturing — is essentially uncorrelated with the rate of change later in the century.
The changes Sampson suggested much more effectively demonstrate the dynamic skillset he has and the breadth and depth of his experience and knowledge.
This is in contradiction with assumptions of static models, but is in line with the dynamic models, such as the theory of Sampson and Laub (1993, 2005) suggesting that correlates of delinquency may change during the life - course.
Transactions between these individual and contextual factors are suggested to be dynamic and reciprocal, and these transactions are expected to change over time and developmental course.
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