Sentences with phrase «thus warms land»

Not exact matches

That heat tends to warm the far North Atlantic and thus keeps the land downwind of it — Western Europe — warmer than it would otherwise be.
There is no real life proof that «races» differ in any meaningful way besides minor ecological and geographical adaptations and evolutionary differences like my long thin nose to pick a rather vulgar example, which clearly changed from my African forefathers due to their migration to colder climates, thus allowing the more efficient heating of the air inhaled, to avoid hypothermia with the minor drawback of restricting the flow of air and thus reducing the amount that can be inhaled compared to those in warmer lands.
The staccato cadence of Tim Streeto's editing, which clusters together short scenes that excise the beginnings and ends of interactions, often keeps the impact of Bernard's autocratic parenting from registering fully on impact, but the film's tragicomic punch lands in the final act after an otherwise useless therapy session triggers in Walt a warm memory of his mother — thus spawning a stint of self - analysis that doubles as an occasion for viewer reflection.
If there is a hard data gap for this period, then Cato has done a positive service (for once) by pointing out that Warming Island might also have been disconnected from the land in this period... thus deflating the landmark's «poster child» status as an indication of unusual climate change.
thus if the adjusted land based thermometer record was showing more than about 0.07 degC of warming between 1979 to 1996 there is a problem with the adjustments.
Thus even if the satellite data showed say nearly 0.1 degC warming between 1979 to about 1996/7 (which is not statistically significant) then one would expect to see less than this amount of warming in the land based thermometer record if the warming is due to the GHE.
As the ocean warms, more H2O (and CO2) will outgas, which will raise the specific humidity of the air thus leading to amplification of the GHG effect, and then spreading to land areas.
Thus we find the most global warming over land not over water.
They say that world would actually warm up by just 1.64 °C overall, and the vegetation - cooling effect would be stronger over land to boot — thus temperatures on land would would be a further 0.3 °C cooler compared to the present sims.»
A darker — and so more heat - absorbent — Arctic, though, will surely accelerate global warming and may thus encourage melting of the land - bound Greenland ice sheet.
Q. 2: Does this extend to the oceans and / or land surfaces and thus imply that a warmer solid or liquid surface does not absorb radiation from a cooler atmosphere?
... Thus, the evidence appears to be inconsistent with the ocean or land being the source of the warming at the surface.
Although urban areas occupy less than 1 % of China's land mass, the majority of China's observing stations are situated in proximity to urban areas, and thus some of the recorded warming is undoubtedly the consequence of rapid urban development, particularly since the late 1970s.
Thus the warming of the Chinese land - mass is likely overestimated.
Another paper in Climate Change in 2007 stated: Studies that have looked at hemispheric and global scales conclude that any urban - related trend is an order of magnitude smaller than decadal and longer time - scale trends evident in the series (e.g., Jones et al., 1990; Peterson et al., 1999)... Thus, the global land warming trend discussed is very unlikely to be influenced significantly by increasing urbanization (Parker, 2006).
Add at end of line: «In most land regions and in the near - term, the frequency of warm days and warm nights will thus likely continue to increase, while that of cold days and cold nights will likely continue to decrease.
FerdiEgb says: April 9, 2012 at 9:19 am But vegetation works in opposite way: warmer means less ice and more land occupied by plants, thus more sequestering of CO2 ================= So, even though we are running a huge biological filter....
Thus, the global land warming trend discussed is very unlikely to be influenced significantly by increasing urbanisation (Parker, 2006).
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