Which means that
the wiggly lines aren't ever going to regain their prior peaks.
AW: It's like having
those wiggly lines slip into the viewers» consciousness through their peripheral vision.
Behind him, a screen displays a series of
wiggly lines and what looks like a graphic equaliser.
One cold, snowy day, Ingrid Daubechies saw a wealth of hidden meaning in a confused jumble of
wiggly lines.
While the higher - CO2 snails were more active in general, they moved in «
wiggly lines, and some even went in a circle,» says study coauthor and marine biologist Sue - Ann Watson of James Cook University in Townsville, Australia.
Steve: And then they are getting rid of it again, and you get this little kind of
wiggly line, but the overall trend is up.
But
this wiggly line that you referred to, that does turn out to be a couple of percent of the entire atmospheric CO2 on an annual basis and one of the messages from that is that the vegetation and the bacteria that are releasing the CO2 from the soil, the vegetation is taking it up from the atmosphere to the sugars.
There's no doubt that when you give it some stick the Evo X is almost hilariously fast and, in the right circumstances, a mind - bogglingly quick way to cover
the wiggly line between point A and point B.
But few talks went without a slide showing
the wiggly line of a deep ice core.
Not exact matches
There is also a simple «smiley face» assessment where the children complete the missing mouth with a smile, straight
line or
wiggly mouth.
And further along you'll find the Tsonga factory shop on your left, as well as Piggly
Wiggly (a kind of strip mall out in the open — not really my style as I prefer the little shops along the road, but hey the kids will probably love the zip
line).
A fountain made of blobby cast metal by Lynda Benglis has a nice grotesquely organic presence; and a field of
wiggly green
lines on a hot pink ground by Sue Williams is sexy and optically captivating.
His work from the early Fifties is typical of the time: brushy areas of color offset by spidery
lines demarcating planes and establishing their own
wiggly independence.
In our paper published last night in ERL we show the newer Church & White data set with less smoothing in Fig. 3 (orange
line), and you can see it is more «
wiggly» — hard to tell whether these wiggles are true oscillations in global sea level or again an effect of the limited number of gauges.
The contrast is all the more marked when we switch to the solid
line of systematic global thermometer measurements, and for the first time we start to see a little bit of that
wiggly data (still smoothed out considerably by the artist, I should add).
What do you think of drawing a straight
line fit through
wiggly noisy data and calling it a trend?
Keep in mind that because resume writing is telegraphic, you don't need complete sentences and so sentence fragments are acceptable (so don't worry about the
wiggly green
lines in your MS Word doc.)