Not exact matches
Cake Over Steak • Quick Pumpkin and Kale Risotto + Arancini Twigg Studios • Sausage Stuffing Baked in a Pumpkin Donuts, Dresses and Dirt • Pumpkin Spice Latte Popsicles Cloudy Kitchen • Pumpkin Cake with Vanilla German Buttercream Vegetarian Ventures • Smoky Pumpkin & Black Sesame Hummus Eat Boutique • Pumpkin Scallion Dumplings A Little Saffron • Pumpkin Stuffed Shells Two Red Bowls • Pumpkin & Maple Caramel Baked French Toast Wallflower Kitchen • Mini Pumpkin & Cinnamon Sugar Donuts Wit & Vinegar • Pumpkin Butterscotch Banana Split Style Sweet CA • Pumpkin Creme Brulee Cake Nommable • Pumpkin Biscuits with Mushroom Thyme Gravy With Food + Love • Cinnamon Raisin Pumpkin Seed Bread Hortus • Creamy Roasted Squash Soup + Pumpkin Risotto Sevengrams • Vegan Pumpkin Pie
Ice Cream Jojotastic • 1 Pumpkin, 2 Ways: Pumpkin Trail Mix & Dog Treats Grain Changer • Pumpkin Spice Baked Oatmeal Girl Versus Dough • Pumpkin Cranberry Flax Crisps Earthy Feast • Pumpkin Grits + Pumpkin Home Fries + a Fried Egg Harvest and Honey • Truffled Pumpkin Papardelle Alfredo With Frizzled Sage Tasty Seasons • Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cake Broma Bakery • Pumpkin Butter Pop Tarts Tending the Table • Roasted Pumpkin and Barley Salad The Sugar Hit • Super Soft Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls Delicious Not Gorgeous • Waffles with Spiced Pumpkin Butter and Brown Sugar Walnut Crumble Taste Love and Nourish • Pumpkin Bread Pudding The Green Life • Pumpkin Spice Chocolate Chunk & Hazelnut Skillet Cookie (Vegan) Foolproof Living • Pumpkin Creme Fraiche Pasta with Sage The Monday Box • Pumpkin Mini Bundt Cakes Design Crush • Pumpkin Bourbon Hot Toddy The Road to Honey • Pumpkin Pie & Chocolate Layer Cake My Name is Yeh • Roasted Pumpkin with Yogurt and Hazelnut Dukkah Give Recipe • Orange Chocolate Pumpkin Bread Heartbeet Kitchen • Magic Vegan Pumpkin Pie Fudge Beard and Bonnet • Marbled Pumpkin Muffins Eat Within Your Means • Vegan Pumpkin Blender Muffins Snixy Kitchen • Pumpkin Tapioca Pudding with Candied Pumpkin Seeds Ruby Josephine • Moroccan Sweet Pumpkin + Beef Tagine Lab Noon • Pasta Bake with Roasted Pumpkin and Saffron Sauce, Pistachio and Goat Cheese An Edible Mosaic • Pumpkin Spice Chia Seed Pudding Hey Modest Marce • Mascarpone Pumpkin Pie Inspired By the Seasons • Pumpkin Applesauce Smoothie CaliGirl Cooking • Pumpkin Praline Cinnamon Rolls with Spiked Cream Cheese Glaze Sally's Baking Addiction • Pumpkin Cream Cheese Bundt Cake Well and Full • Spicy Chipotle Pumpkin Hummus Appeasing a Food Geek • Cheese Fondue Stuffed Roasted Pumpkin SweetPhi • Pumpkin Chili Biscuit Bake
Warm Vanilla Sugar • Buttermilk Pumpkin Doughnuts Mademoiselle Poirot • Cinnamon - Pumpkin Mousse on Honey Panna Cotta topped with Hazelnut Brittle Heart of a Baker • Pumpkin Sticky Buns with Vanilla Bean Frosting Flourishing Foodie • Massaman Curry with Pumpkin and Chickpeas Ginger & Toasted Sesame • Pumpkin Jeon Lindsay Jang • Best Ever DIY Pumpkin Spiced Latte Fix Feast Flair • Hokkaido Pumpkin + Sage Mac and Gouda Will Frolic for Food • Pumpkin Kale Patties with Coconut Cilantro Rice A Couple Cooks • Pumpkin Pecan Baked Steel Cut Oats Vermilion Red • Pumpkin Pie Souffle B. Britnell • Vegan Pumpkin Pie Displaced Housewife • Brown Butter Pumpkin Donuts Sweet Gula • Pumpkin Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting La Pêche Fraîche • Pumpkin and Condensed Milk Cakes Kitchen Konfidence • Pumpkin Ricotta Gnocchi with Rosemary Brown Butter Sauce Loves Food, Loves to Eat • Savory Pumpkin Bread Pudding Kale & Caramel • Goat Cheese & Sage - Stuffed Pumpkin Challah Okie Dokie Artichokie • Pumpkin Chorizo Chili with Sweet Potatoes + Pinto Beans Salted Plains • Easy Pumpkin Bread Liliahna • Chicken Legs with Pumpkin and Tortellini TermiNatetor Kitchen • Whole Wheat, Pumpkin & Brown Sugar Brioche Vermilion Roots • Sweet Rice Dumplings with Pumpkin Celebrate Creativity • Pumpkin Mini Cheesecake Tarts Serendipity Bakes • Pumpkin Chocolate Cheesecake So Much Yum • Vegan Maple - Glazed Pumpkin Spice Doughnuts The Brick Kitchen • Pumpkin, Pecan & White Chocolate
Ice Cream Sandwiches Lisli • Pumpkin Pie Cake Cookie Dough and Oven Mitt • Pumpkin Pie Dip Fig + Bleu • Pumpkin Granola The Speckled Palate • Pumpkin Caramel Cream Cheese Swirl Blondies Cook Til Delicious • Fall Cliche Cake (Pumpkin Spice Cake / Maple Cream Cheese Frosting / Apple Cider Caramel Sauce) Floating Kitchen • Chicken and Pumpkin Chili The Wood and Spoon • Pumpkin Pecan Cake with Burnt Sugar Frosting Fork Vs Spoon • Pumpkin Streusel Muffins Lemon & Vanilla • Pumpkin and Coconut Caramel Flan Dunk & Crumble • Pumpkin Chocolate Icebox Cake Chicano Eats • Pumpkin Butter Pan de Muerto On the Plate • Pumpkin Pancakes, Salted Caramel & Pecans Rough Measures • Cosy Pumpkin Spice Latte (Caffeine and Dairy Free) Brewing Happiness • Pumpkin Ginger Breakfast Cookies A Butterful Mind • Pumpkin Cheesecake with Vanilla Whipped Cream The Little Loaf • Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chunk Cookies Fork to Belly • Pumpkin Gnocchi The Little Epicurean • Chocolate Hazelnut Pumpkin Pie Bourbon and Honey • Spicy Roasted Pumpkin with Honey and Feta What to Cook Today • Spicy Pumpkin Noodle Soup Food by Mars • Pumpkin Pie (Grain - Free, Diary - Free) The Bojon Gourmet • Pumpkin Butterscotch Pudding Oh Honey Bakes • Pumpkin Cake with Gingersnap Toffee Long Distance Baking • Layered Pumpkin Cheesecake The Jam Lab • Pumpkin Madeleines Dipped in White Chocolate The Lemon Apron • Pumpkin Gingerbread Loaf with an Olive Oil Glaze
Sun Diego Eats • Thai Pumpkin & Sticky Rice Cakes A Cozy Kitchen • Pumpkin Chai Scones with Black Tea Glaze A Cookie Named Desire • Pumpkin Shrubs Eating Clean Recipes • Vegan Pumpkin Chia Pudding Kingfield Kitchen • Vegan Fresh Pumpkin Soup Drink and Cocktail Recipes • Pumpkin Dirty Chai The Pig & Quill • Pumpkin Sage Cannelloni (Dairy - Free) My Lavender Blues • Pumpkin, Banana & Olive Oil Bundt Cake Betty Liu • Pumpkin + Pear Butter Baked Melty Cheese Happy Hearted Kitchen • Cinnamon Roasted Pumpkin with Tahini Yogurt + Hazelnut Dukkah InHappenstance • Pumpkin Scones with Maple Butter Live Eat Learn • Pumpkin Gingerbread Hot Cocoa
The
sun shines
warmer this week, evidenced by puddles that have replaced layers of
ice pack and the softening -LSB-...]
When I drove my kids to school today, it was 35 degrees with
ice on the windhshield... now it's in the upper 50s, and with the
sun shining down it feels almost
warm.
After weeks of snow, freezing temps, and
ice in Chicago, we're ready for a
warm escape and a dose of
sun and sand.
Ice gives comets their characteristic tails: As a comet passes near the sun, the heat warms the ice, causing it to sublimate, releasing gas and du
Ice gives comets their characteristic tails: As a comet passes near the
sun, the heat
warms the
ice, causing it to sublimate, releasing gas and du
ice, causing it to sublimate, releasing gas and dust.
«The icy small bodies
warm up as they approach the
Sun, and the
ice sublimes to form a coma [a dense cloud of gas and dust particles around a nucleus] and often a tail, making the comets observable,» she explained.
But microscopic phytoplankton, which rely on the
sun for their nutrients and form the base of Arctic food webs, have managed to thrive under
ice sheets that are thinning as the poles become
warmer.
Sea
ice reflects most of the
sun's energy, he explained, whereas the open ocean absorbs more energy, and thus the disappearance of sea
ice triggers even more
warming, in a positive - feedback loop called albedo.
If Ceres is acting like a comet, it must have
ice patches that can survive for a long time before being heated by the
sun as it moves into a
warmer part of its orbit.
Unlike what happened on Pluto, any
ice that filled up the basin on Ceres»
warmer surface would have quickly turned to gas from the
sun's heat.
Cassini also resolved a longstanding mystery about why one half of the moon's surface is 10 times as bright as the other: The leading hemisphere of the moon picks up dark debris that is
warmed by the
sun, while brighter
ices condense on the colder, trailing hemisphere.
Its two faces differ strikingly in color, likely the result of thermal segregation: Over time, darker materials (like carbon) have absorbed more heat from the
sun,
warming up and sending lighter, more volatile materials (like
ice) to the colder hemisphere.
A 13th century Norwegian royal treatise called The King's Mirror lauds Greenland's suitability for farming: The
sun has «sufficient strength, where the ground is free from
ice, to
warm the soil so that the earth yields good and fragrant grass.»
For example, the
ice ages during the last several million years — and the
warmer periods in between — appear to have been triggered by no more than a different seasonal and latitudinal distribution of the solar energy absorbed by the Earth, not by a change in output from the
sun.
Some scientists speculate that the
sun may be entering a prolonged inactive phase, similar to the one that lasted from 1645 to 1715 and coincided with the «little
ice age» in Europe — although there is no evidence that the
sun will rescue us from global
warming.
Conversely, when there is less Arctic sea
ice, the ocean absorbs more heat from the
sun, adding to global
warming.
Besides being simply a search for signs of aliens, Breakthrough Listen's efforts could also narrow down the possibilities for «Oumuamua's composition by looking for signs of water vapor sublimating from any
sun -
warmed ice lurking beneath the object's red, desiccated surface.
Another positive feedback of global
warming is the albedo effect: less white summer
ice means more dark open water, which absorbs more heat from the
sun.
Because that meltwater has been
warmed by the
sun's rays and the comparatively
warm atmosphere, it is far
warmer than the basal
ice.
Black carbon
warms the atmosphere because of its ability to absorb radiation from the
sun, but its effect can be especially pernicious in polar regions, where, falling on bright
ice, the soot diminishes the regions» ability to reflect away heat.
Left unchecked, the haze could absorb solar radiation,
warming the Arctic and in turn aggravating global
warming by melting the
ice and snow that reflect some of the
Sun's rays back into space.
The knock - on effects of such a transition would be huge — they would cause marked increase of
warming at the pole, since open water absorbs more of the
sun's energy than
ice - covered seas.
With the
sun continuing to heat the ocean water at the tropical latitudes regardless of
ice cap conditions up north, it would seem that the presence of an
ice cap would result in a
warmer ocean over the long term, with the converse also being true.
No, nothing that interesting happened, but I enjoyed the
sun and
warm weather, ate tons of
ice cream and rested my body and mind.
What better characterizes the summer than
sun - kissed skin, wind - tangled hair, and that careless feeling of watching the sky fade into a
warm sunset, dotted with fireflies and punctuated with an
ice - cold glass of rosé?
After weeks of snow, freezing temps, and
ice in Chicago, we're ready for a
warm escape and a dose of
sun and sand.
This resource includes the following: 81 Spring words with illustrations (3 per page) 2 blank templates for your customization 1 Word wall Label (8.5 x 11) 2 Word wall Labels (4.3 x 11) colored and black»n white 1 blank Word wall Label for your customization The words include the following: April apple blossom awake baseball bike birds birth bloom blossom bright bunny butterfly breeze buds calf caterpillar cherry blossom chick chirp colors daffodils daisy duck duckling Easter eggs fawn field flowers frog fun furrow galoshes garden grass earth hat hatchling heat hoe
ice - cream kite jacket ladybug lamb lemonade March May meadow mud mulch nest outdoor picnic rain rainbow raincoat robin roller skates sap sapling seed seeding shoot showers sky smell smile spade spring sprout
sun thunder tulip umbrella
warm water watering can worm yard (C) Nicole Hernandez A Teacher's Idea
There is of course a lot of uncertainty about the details, that affect the melt rates, we just don't know how quickly
warmer seawater will undercut floating glaciers, and buildup of darker older snow /
ice layers will increase the amount of absorbed
sun light.
Geoengineering proposals fall into at least three broad categories: 1) managing atmospheric greenhouse gases (e.g., ocean fertilization and atmospheric carbon capture and sequestration), 2) cooling the Earth by reflecting sunlight (e.g., putting reflective particles into the atmosphere, putting mirrors in space to reflect the
sun's energy, increasing surface reflectivity and altering the amount or characteristics of clouds), and 3) moderating specific impacts of global
warming (e.g., efforts to limit sea level rise by increasing land storage of water, protecting
ice sheets or artificially enhancing mountain glaciers).
These wildfires release soot into the atmosphere, which accelerates the rate of melting of glaciers, snow and
ice it lands upon, which can lead to less reflectivity, meaning more of the
sun's heat is absorbed, leading to more global
warming, which leads to even more wildfires, not to mention greater sea level rise, which is already threatening coastal areas around the world.
As a result, while a layer of
ice - cold fresh water sits just beneath the sea
ice, about 20 meters (65 feet) down there is a layer of denser, saltier water that has been gradually
warmed by the
sun's rays.
However, it leads primarily to the onset of
ice ages or cool periods rather than a
warmer period (due to volcanic ash that blocks out the
sun).
According to the scientist conducting the study, the soot — which comes from the Chindia belt, as well as the Western world — and which is black, absorbs heat from the
sun more readilly than white
ice, thereby accelerating the
warming and melting of the glaciers even more than the Greenhouse effect.
This is what I get out of it: the Arctic -
ice - albedo situation is more complicated than earlier thought (due to clouds,
sun - filled summers, dark winters, etc), but NET EFFECT, the
ice loss and all these other related factors (some negative feedbacks) act as a positive feedback and enhance global
warming.
«Around March, as the air
warms and the
sun gets more intense, the snow melts, allowing light to penetrate the
ice.
This occurs because as
warming causes sea
ice near the poles to melt, energy from the
sun that would have been reflected away by the
ice is instead absorbed by the ocean.
The
Sun is
warmer than it has been since the end of the little
ice age.
Melting of arctic sea -
ice, antarctic
ice shelves, and mountain
ice and snow exposes the darker rock, soil, or sea beneath; which then absorb more of the
Sun's heat and further
warm the Earth.
Things that could increase to higher: 1)
Sun effects 2) Ocean effects 3) Feedbacks related to changing
ice mass 4) Continue whatever reason for the
warming over the last 400 years.
12) Loss of
ice and snow in the Arctic enhances climate
warming by increasing absorption of the
sun's energy at the surface of the planet.
In spring, however, cloudy conditions begin to dominate, causing temperatures to
warm on average and move the
ice closer to its melting temperature, even before the newly risen
Sun is strong enough to matter.
Snowfall decreases and the
Sun removes
ice every year until it gets
warm again.
The loss of large areas of
ice on the surface could accelerate global
warming because less of the
sun's energy would be reflected away from Earth to begin with (refer back to our discussion of the greenhouse effect).
Loss of sea
ice means more heat from the
sun is absorbed by the ocean surface, adding to Arctic
warming.
Conversely, during low solar activity during the Little
Ice Age, transport of warm water was reduced by 10 % and Arctic sea ice increased.17 Although it is not a situation I would ever hope for, if history repeats itself, then natural climate dynamics of the past suggest, the current drop in the sun's output will produce a similar cooler climate, and it will likely be detected first as a slow down in the poleward transport of ocean heat.22 Should we prepare for this possibili
Ice Age, transport of
warm water was reduced by 10 % and Arctic sea
ice increased.17 Although it is not a situation I would ever hope for, if history repeats itself, then natural climate dynamics of the past suggest, the current drop in the sun's output will produce a similar cooler climate, and it will likely be detected first as a slow down in the poleward transport of ocean heat.22 Should we prepare for this possibili
ice increased.17 Although it is not a situation I would ever hope for, if history repeats itself, then natural climate dynamics of the past suggest, the current drop in the
sun's output will produce a similar cooler climate, and it will likely be detected first as a slow down in the poleward transport of ocean heat.22 Should we prepare for this possibility?
(See: NYT: Missing Its Spots: «
Sun may be on verge of falling into an extended slumber» — could cause «extended chilly period» — «Cosmic ray levels correlate well with climate extending back thousands of years» — July 21, 2009 & Also see: «
Sun Sleeps»: Danish Scientist declares «global
warming has stopped and a cooling is beginning... enjoy global
warming while it lasts» —
Sun is «heading towards «a grand minimum» as we saw in Little
Ice Age» — Sept. 11, 2009)
«
Sun Sleeps»: Danish Scientist declares «global
warming has stopped and a cooling is beginning... enjoy global
warming while it lasts» —
Sun is «heading towards «a grand minimum» as we saw in Little
Ice Age» — Sept. 11, 2009
The
sun warms the ocean, and the atmosphere (and sea
ice) reduces the net flow of energy from ocean to space.
The fact that global
warming has been happening «naturally» since the end of the last
ice age means that it is happening spontaneously completely independent of the need for that
warming to be caused by the
sun heating the oceans (and land of course).
AGW climate scientists seem to ignore that while the earth's surface may be
warming, our atmosphere above 10,000 ft. above MSL is a refrigerator that can take water vapor scavenged from the vast oceans on earth (which are also a formidable heat sink), lift it to cold zones in the atmosphere by convective physical processes, chill it (removing vast amounts of heat from the atmosphere) or freeze it, (removing even more vast amounts of heat from the atmosphere) drop it on land and oceans as rain, sleet or snow, moisturizing and cooling the soil, cooling the oceans and building polar
ice caps and even more importantly, increasing the albedo of the earth, with a critical negative feedback determining how much of the
sun's energy is reflected back into space, changing the moment of inertia of the earth by removing water mass from equatorial latitudes and transporting this water vapor mass to the poles, reducing the earth's spin axis moment of inertia and speeding up its spin rate, etc..