Another purchase that I made around the same time was
some very shallow shelves for my craft room.
One cupboard has built - in drawers finished with blackboard paint so Mill can leave laundry instructions for the maid; sliding drawer lids are for folding shirts on;
very shallow shelves behind the cupboard door neatly hold Mill's vast collection of eyewear.
Not exact matches
Clathrate occurs in the Antarctic and particularly in the Arctic where it is abundant in the relatively
shallow though
very cold seabed of the vast continental
shelves which almost encircle the Arctic Ocean.
The rock in the middle of the bay has
very steep drop offs to the south and west and an amazing
shelf in the north that is carpeted with wrinkled soft corals in the
shallows.
Water levels in the lagoons are
very shallow with crystal clear water before sloping down to
shelves at a depth of around 60 feet.
Doubling the river runoff results to
very fresh waters at the
shelves restricting the convection to
shallow surface layer.
Clathrate occurs in the Antarctic and particularly in the Arctic where it is abundant in the relatively
shallow though
very cold seabed of the vast continental
shelves which almost encircle the Arctic Ocean.
Researchers at the University of California at San Diego will design, build, and test an electromagnetic (EM) system designed for
very shallow water use and will apply the system to determine the extent of offshore permafrost on the US Beaufort inner
shelf.
Research published last spring in Nature Climate Change made a convincing case that that trek is now engaged in a 40 km retreat, a movement that will only continue to accelerate as warm water laps at the
shallow leading edge of the glacier and as the glacier
very slowly increases its angle of descent off of the continent's land
shelf.
For example, the argument that follows
very substantially from the extent of continental
shelf that there is within the Arctic Basin and, therefore, the particular relationship that warming on that relatively
shallow sea has on trapped methane - for example, the emergence of methane plumes in that continental
shelf, apparently in quite an anomalous way - leading possibly to the idea that there may be either tipping points there or catastrophic feedback mechanisms there, which could then have other effects on things, such as more stabilised caps like the Greenland ice cap and so on.
This is still
very early science, and we have some estimates of what may happen to those from modelling studies, from looking at the way in which the heating of the
very upper layers of the Arctic Ocean is transferred down through the depth of the ocean - even in these relatively
shallow Arctic
shelf regions - and then into the sediments that would allow the methane hydrates to destabilise.