Not exact matches
Young city dwellers appreciate the property's 89 «studio» rooms, each of which evokes a high - ceilinged
urban loft (and comes with
cool extras like pebble - floored showers, iPod docking
stations, and locally roasted coffee).
In addition, local inhomogeneities are variable; some
urban stations show little or no warming, or even a slight
cooling, relative to rural neighbors.
As we discussed above, for almost all of NASA's adjustments to remove an
urban warming trend there is an equivalent adjustment to remove an «
urban cooling» trend from another
station.
------------------------------------ And here's what the proxies vs. the highly adjusted instrumental data that have been hopelessly corrupted by removing thousands of rural
stations and keeping
urban stations, moving rural sites to airports, «mostly made up» SH sea surface temperatures,
cooling down the 1930s and 1940s artificially to remove 0.5 C from the early 20th century warming... look like.
``... this robust old
station, despite the
urban effects, shows that there's been no statistically significant warming in Prague since 1800 (and at most 0.5 °C or so in 200 years, and I haven't subtracted any corrections for the intensification of Prague's
urban heat island which may be as much as 0.6 °C per century and which would probably revert the 200 - year trend to a significant
cooling!)
many «
urban» observations are likely to be made in
cool parks, to conform to standards for siting of
stations.
Parker noted that Peterson found no impact of urbanization in trends between sites, when controlling for «elevation, latitude, time of observation, and instrumentation...» Parker went on to say «One possible reason for this finding was that many «
urban» observations are likely to be made in
cool parks, to conform to standards for siting of
stations.»
3) While there seems to be some residual
Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect in the U.S. Midwest, and even some spurious
cooling with population density in the Southwest, for all of the 1,200 USHCN
stations together there is little correlation between
station temperature trends and population density.
Traditionally adorning London Underground and New York subway
stations, metro brick tiles make it easy to bring some
urban cool into your home.