Sentences with phrase «suggesting global effects»

I detest climate studies that correlated what is happening in the NH directly to the SH, suggesting global effects, and especially ones that denote a signal from short time spans, then correlating the span with global warming, rather than global cooling.

Not exact matches

Given associated government revenue shares in GDP, the latter achievement would also unlock an additional $ 1.4 trillion in global tax revenue, most of it ($ 940 billion) in emerging economies, suggesting the potential self - financing effects of additional public investment into closing global gender gaps.
Japanese data suggested the country's exporters were also seeing the effects of the robust global recovery.
Matthias MÃ 1/4 ller, a visual effects producer and SendOwl customer, suggests that bitcoin has a valuable role to play in the global economy, â $ œI think cryptocurrencies like bitcoin can help to bring back some variety and freedom to the way we run our economyâ $ ¦.
The patterns suggest a developing global culture — a norm that says, in effect, that legitimate regimes in the modern system of states should sponsor secular learning but not religious indoctrination.8
The RIBF results suggest that structure effects, which are commonly neglected in the evaluation of neutron - emission probabilities in calculations of global beta - decay properties for astrophysical simulations, are much more important than generally assumed, in particular in the region «south - east» of 132Sn, where nuclei are very neutron - rich.
Even the most optimistic estimates of the effects of contemporary fossil fuel use suggest that mean global temperature will rise by a minimum of 2 °C before the end of this century and that CO2 emissions will affect climate for tens of thousands of years.
«But if, as global circulation models suggest, drying continues, our results provide evidence that this could degrade the Amazonian forest canopies, which would have cascading effects on global carbon and climate dynamics.»
His research suggested that industrial aerosols could block sunlight and reduce global temperatures enough to overcome the effects of greenhouse gases, possibly triggering an ice age.
However, the discovery in 2015 of an oscillation in Enceladus's rotation known as a libration, which is linked to tidal effects, suggests that it has a global ocean and a much thinner ice shell than predicted, with a mean thickness of around 20 km.
The findings back up a body of data suggesting that «the effects of global [warming] will be seen first, and will be most pronounced, in the arctic region,» says Mark Serreze, an arctic climatologist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado.
Keith adds, however, that the few existing studies suggest albedo modification could help ameliorate some effects of global warming.
They found a small correlation between cosmic rays and global temperatures occurring every 22 years; however, the changing cosmic ray rate lagged behind the change in temperatures by between one and two years, suggesting that the cause of the temperature rise might not be attributable to cosmic rays and cloud formation, but could be caused by the direct effects of the sun.
Dr Li said the latest research findings give a better understanding of changes in human - perceived equivalent temperature, and indicate global warming has stronger long - term impacts on human beings under both extreme and non-extreme weather conditions, suggesting that climate change adaptation can not just focus on heat wave events, but should be extended to the whole range of effects of temperature increases.
The findings, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that concentrations of chemicals considered safe for humans can have insidious effects on amphibians and could be contributing to the global decline in their populations.
Overall the results suggest that the Southern Oscillation exercises a consistently dominant influence on mean global temperature, with a maximum effect in the tropics, except for periods when equatorial volcanism causes ad hoc cooling.
That suggests 44 percent of the forest area that burned during the three decades analyzed burned because of the effects of global warming.
Sulfate aerosols have a cooling effect on the climate, which has led some researchers to suggest that continued reductions will lead to greater global temperature increases in coming decades.
They suggest this «pause» in the acceleration of carbon dioxide concentrations was, in part, due to the effect of the temporary slowdown in global average surface warming during that same period on respiration, the process by which plants and soils release CO2.
In the early 1990s, Palmer also headed a WFA effort to send targeted messages to farmers and legislators, suggesting doubt existed on the effect of carbon dioxide on global warming.
In the «Ozone» series of the 1990s, hazy, fluorescent sparks of orange were splashed upon placid blue skies, suggesting indeterminate atmospheric effects of global warming, smog, sun, and heat.
Does this result suggest, since in the paper for the last decade stratospheric aerosols are low / flat, and since TSI is relatively flat and has small effect, that the recent fluctuation of global temperatures is mostly ENSO related?
I think that only illustrates the bizarre use of the global average and models that in effect suggest cutting down trees would increase albedo and cool the planet.
Model projections suggest that although increased temperature and decreased soil moisture will act to reduce global crop yields by 2050, the direct fertilization effect of rising carbon dioxide concentration -LRB-[CO2]-RRB- will offset these losses.
However, your statement appears to suggest that you also believe that, for example, the Global Mean Temp from the years 2070 thru 2100, will depend on chaotic effects.
At a global scale, increased CO2 concentrations could partially offset expected yield declines caused by lower soil moisture and higher temperature, but recent models suggest a significantly smaller fertilization effect from CO2 than previously predicted (25).
The observed warming is likely the result of a combined effect: data strongly suggest that the AMO has been in a warming phase for the past two or three decades, and we also know that at the same time anthropogenic global warming is ongoing.
Further investigation has suggested that this is primarily a correlation between some Bristlecone pine ring widths (or densities) and «global» temperature — they are the dominant element of Mann's PC1 and in their absence there is very little correlation (MM and subsequently Wahl and Amman have shown this effect).
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).
Now contrast this with a paper published in July in a fairly obscure journal by two other respected scholars — Peter Webster and Greg Holland — suggesting that global warming has a huge effect on hurricanes.
In the late 17th Century for instance, our work has suggested about a 50 - 50 split between volcanic and solar effects (compared to the late 18th Century) which enhances the global cooling.
Nature magazine, arguably the leading scientific journal in the world, published a paper this week by two widely - respected scholars — Gabriel Vecchi and Brian Soden — suggesting that global warming may have a minimal effect on hurricanes.
They say their findings, which focused on the effect titling had on forest clearing and disturbance in the Peruvian Amazon between 2002 and 2005, suggest that the increasing trend towards decentralized forest governance via granting indigenous groups and other local communities formal legal title to their lands could play a key role in global efforts to slow both tropical forest destruction, which the researchers note is responsible for about the same amount of greenhouse gas emissions as the transportation sector, and climate change.»
The team set out to present its findings «in plain English» to congress and the media — findings which suggested a lack of significant or human - caused global warming while concluding that «if the earth were to warm slightly, and atmospheric CO2 were to increase, the effects would be mostly beneficial.»
Read: New Research Suggests CO2 Can Be Scrubbed From the Atmosphere to Avoid Climate Change Crisis Global Carbon Emissions From Fossil Fuels Remained Relatively Flat for 3 Consecutive Years Climate Change Effect: Soils to Become a Net Source of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide in the Future
A new analysis suggests that a more «European» schedule would reduce the effects of climate change By Jason Koebler Want to reduce the effects of global warming?
As suggested by the UC Berkley cite above, normally the question is, what is the effect of something, e.g. does gravity curve light or does an increase in CO2 cause an increase in global mean temperature?
Overall, the evidence suggests that these effects are not enough to account for the global warming observed since 1880.
A 90 % level of confidence doesn't mean that 10 % of the evidence suggests that an effect is not occurring — in fact there is no reliable evidence showing that manmade global warming is not taking place.
«Before he died in 1991,» reports Findley, «Revelle produced a paper with [former NASA climate scientist Frederick] Singer suggesting that people should not be made to become alarmed over the greenhouse effect and global warming.»
Although he doesn't actually come out and say it, Evans suggests that the global warming trend in the surface temperature record is an artifact caused by the urban heat island (UHI) effect:
This stability in TSI has 2 effects: (i) as you say it makes global average temperatures remarkably stable (but I suggest the temperature stability is principally down to the TSI stability) and (ii) estimating the effect of a TSI forcing on global average temperatures is difficult when you have only a 0.3 % forcing range.
Basic physical science considerations, exploratory climate modeling, and the impacts of volcanic aerosols on climate all suggest that SWCE could partially compensate for some effects — particularly net global warming — of increased atmospheric CO2.
The study used computer models to suggest pollution particles in the atmosphere would cause a cooling effect in global temperatures.
The second IPCC report, published in 1995, invoked the «sulfate - aerosol effect» and produced the memorable but essentially meaningless phrase that «the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate.»
Factorial simulations with multiple global ecosystem models suggest that CO2 fertilization effects explain 70 % of the observed greening trend.
d) G. Geoff Wang, Sophan Chhin, William L. Bauerle: Effect of natural atmospheric CO2 fertilization suggested by open - grown white spruce in a dry environment, Global Change Biology, (March 2006) Volume 12, Issue 3, pp. 601 — 610.
AOGCM experiments suggest that global - average annual mean precipitation will increase on average by 1 to 3 % / °C under the enhanced greenhouse effect (Figure 9.18).
I would suggest you do a simple Google Scholar search of «arctic response global warming» and read for a few days before making any more comments about the effects of global warming on the Arctic.
The simulated change of GM in the last 30 yr has a spatial pattern that differs from that during the Medieval Warm Period, suggesting that global warming that arises from the increases of greenhouse gases and the input solar forcing may have different effects on the characteristics of GM precipitation.
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