These factors helped to retain a greater than normal amount of first -
year ice resulting in the higher - than - predicted minimum extent.
Not exact matches
The
result of
years of careful research, trial - and - error, and a little creative reverse - engineering, Top Secret Recipes ® Step - by - Step hacks: • KFC ® Original Recipe ® Fried Chicken and Cole Slaw • Cinnabon ® Classic Cinnamon Roll • IKEA ® Swedish Meatballs • Outback Steakhouse ® Alice Springs Chicken ® • Pinkberry ® Original Frozen Yogurt • Raising Cane's ® Chicken Fingers and Sauce • Arby's ® Curly Fries • Lofthouse ® Frosted Cookies • Wendy's ® Chili • Panera Bread ® Fuji Apple Chicken Salad • Starbucks ® Cake Pops • Cafe Rio ® Sweet Pork Barbacoa • McDonald's ® McRib ® Sandwich • The Melting Pot ® Cheddar Cheese Fondue • P.F. Chang's ® Chicken Lettuce Wraps • The Cheesecake Factory ® Stuffed Mushrooms • Ben & Jerry's ® Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
Ice Cream • Chick - fil - A ® Chicken Sandwich • Chili's ® Baby Back Ribs • Chipotle Mexican Grill ® Adobo - Marinated Grilled Chicken & Steak • Cracker Barrel ® Hash Brown Casserole • Mrs. Fields ® Chocolate Chip Cookies • Ruth's Chris Steakhouse ® Sweet Potato Casserole
Throughout the
years, the Nagles worked to improve the quality of halibut through the monitoring of bleeding and
icing procedures,
resulting in superior meat textures and a longer shelf life.
Although some of my
ice lolly experiments have been more successful than others, this simple recipe is the family favourite and even gets thumbs up from my eight
year old daughter, who is very honest about the
results of my kitchen experiments.
In addition to his roles as Executive Vice President at Ali Group North America and his Presidency at Scotsman
Ice Systems, where he achieved exceptional
results, his experience includes an 11 -
year tenure at ITW Corporation, where he most recently served as President of ITW Food Equipment Group as well as Hobart North America.
While hooked onto zipping cable for guiding purposes, trekkers can stay safe while learning about First Nation tribes that originally inhabited the area, as well as caves that were created millions of
years ago as a
result of glacier
ice.
Unarmed, Martin was seen carrying an
iced tea and a bag of Skittles candy, when 28
year - old George Zimmerman opened fire on the boy,
resulting in his death.
WAMC's David Guistina talks with Mike Spain of the Times Union about New York State Senate staff looking to finish the budget and leave town to help campaign for the seat once held by former State Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, dangerous
ice in the Adirondacks that
resulted in the death of a 12 -
year - old Greenwich boy, and an interesting story about politics and money in Cohoes.
The team found that
results from the two methods roughly matched and showed that Greenland is losing enough
ice to contribute on average 0.46 millimetres per
year to global sea - level rise.
A topographical map of the area around the Martian volcano Arsia Mons shows evidence (inset) of glacier
ice melting that could have
resulted in habitable reservoirs 210 million
years ago.
«As is typical for this time of
year, winds or currents can compact or spread apart the
ice,
resulting in small daily fluctuations,» the center said in its analysis.
The melting of a rather small
ice volume on East Antarctica's shore could trigger a persistent
ice discharge into the ocean,
resulting in unstoppable sea - level rise for thousands of
years to come.
This exposed tall
ice «cliffs» at their margin with an unstable height, and
resulted in rapid retreat of the glaciers from marine
ice cliff instability between 12,000 and 11,000
years ago.
The researchers determined from the isotope ratio that the Taylor Glacier samples were 120,000
years old, and validated the estimate by comparing the
results to well - dated
ice core measurements of atmospheric methane and oxygen from that same period.
The
results indicate that glaciers in equatorial East Africa advanced between 24,000 and 20,000
years ago at the coldest time of the world's last
ice age.
Their
results show that East Greenland has been actively scoured by glacial
ice for much of the last 7.5 million
years — and indicate that the
ice sheet on this eastern flank of the island has not completely melted for long, if at all, in the past several million
years.
Notable
results included a report from researchers at MIT that Alaska lost an average of 10 and a half cubic miles of
ice each
year from 2003 to 2005.
«We still don't know exactly where the meltwater came from, but given that the average temperature at the nearest weather station has risen by about 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) over the last 50
years, it makes sense that snow and
ice are melting and the
resulting water is seeping down beneath the glacier,» Thompson said.
The incident, which was monitored and recorded by satellite images, aerial photography and a research vessel navigating through the
resulting icebergs, is the largest single event in a 30 -
year series of
ice shelf retreats in the area.
The
result: If that earlier interglacial period is a guide to this one, we have another 15,000
years or so before the
ice sheets should start to grow again.
Scientists have examined
ice cores dating back some 800,000
years and have documented numerous times when increases in summer insolation took place, but not all of them
resulted in deglaciation to present - day
ice volumes.
Results published in May show this region crossed an invisible threshold in 2009, with a dozen major glaciers simultaneously starting to thin, sweating off 60 billion tons of
ice per
year.
The
results of this 20 -
year study show that animal and plant communities were much more changeable during the
ice age than they have been during the last 12,000
years of interglacial climate in which we live today.
Assuming thermosteric contributions are negligible on millennial time scales, our
results constrain global
ice melting to be 1.5 — 2.5 m (sea - level equivalent) since ~ 5500
years before present.
During the last deglaciation, and likely also the three previous ones, the onset of warming at both high southern and northern latitudes preceded by several thousand
years the first signals of significant sea level increase
resulting from the melting of the northern
ice sheets linked with the rapid warming at high northern latitudes (Petit et al., 1999; Shackleton, 2000; Pépin et al., 2001).
«If the structure is indeed the
result of the 2004 impact, we would expect it to have undergone about 10
years of alteration by processes such as snow accumulation, erosion by the wind, and deformation by the flow of the
ice shelf itself.»
the last time such an event occurred, the
result was an
Ice Age known as the Younger Dryas, a period of several thousand years in which England, most of Northern Europe, and the eastern half of North America lay under a blanket of ice and sn
Ice Age known as the Younger Dryas, a period of several thousand
years in which England, most of Northern Europe, and the eastern half of North America lay under a blanket of
ice and sn
ice and snow.
The CDR potential and possible environmental side effects are estimated for various COA deployment scenarios, assuming olivine as the alkalinity source in
ice ‐ free coastal waters (about 8.6 % of the global ocean's surface area), with dissolution rates being a function of grain size, ambient seawater temperature, and pH. Our
results indicate that for a large ‐ enough olivine deployment of small ‐ enough grain sizes (10 µm), atmospheric CO2 could be reduced by more than 800 GtC by the
year 2100.
Writing in Nature Climate Change, two scientists from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) say the melting of quite a small volume of
ice on the East Antarctic shore could ultimately trigger a discharge of
ice into the ocean which would
result in unstoppable sea - level rise for thousands of
years ahead.
As a
result, ships were locked out of the Bering Sea this past
year by record
ice growth, and Alaskans are now shivering in temperatures as low as minus 50 degrees F (minus 46 degrees C).
Seriously... they have a lifespan of only about 20
years and will usually die as a
result of
ice, snow or even rain making their branches too heavy.
Inuit bodies have been discovered from over 1,000
years ago, frozen in the
ice; autopsy
results: ALL of them have severe atherosclerosis and osteoporosis.
Adapted from a 1982 French graphic novel, Snowpiercer drops us in the
year 2031, 17
years after a desperate attempt to curb global warming instead
resulted in a new
ice age.
F. Gary Gray (who directed
Ice Cube's breakout film «Friday» 20
years ago) gives each artist's story the proper attention,
resulting in a nice narrative balance.
No snow and very little
ice but still fun / Lea - Francis 1937 onwards — Michael Worthington - Williams concludes his 3 - part history of the Coventry - based manufacturer / 1911 Austin 15 hp — The fascinating story of a car that has been owned by the same family in South Africa since new in 1912 is told by Michael Jones / How to photograph cars — Professional photographer David Hawtin gives some helpful tips on how to achieve better
results / Dorman engines — The early
years of the company that supplied engines to so many car and commercial manufacturers are revealed by Nick Baldwin.
The Awakening trilogy is the
result of four
years spent travelling, and depicts desolate environments including mountains, cliffs, deserts and
ice plains.
The presently low maximum sea
ice extent in the Western Nordic Seas is unique over the last 800 years, and results from a sea ice decline started in late - nineteenth century after the Little Ice Age.&raq
ice extent in the Western Nordic Seas is unique over the last 800
years, and
results from a sea
ice decline started in late - nineteenth century after the Little Ice Age.&raq
ice decline started in late - nineteenth century after the Little
Ice Age.&raq
Ice Age.»
Dr. Pollard and Dr. DeConto ran a five - million -
year computer simulation of the
ice sheet's comings and goings, using data on past actual climate and ocean conditions gleaned from seabed samples (the subject of the other paper) to validate the
resulting patterns.
Years ago, I pushed the idea of developing a reality - TV show, «Extremities,» on science at the edge of what's possible, sort of Mythbusters with a rotating cast that'd include biologists climbing cliffs in Greenland to study nesting falcons, the team I joined on the sea
ice near the North Pole and — certainly — scientists driving around Oswego, N.Y., with portable Doppler radars to plumb the innards of storms that produce that region's astounding lake - effect snow, one
result of which is depicted in this photo (NOAA):
I an attempt to find these and in lack of a proper tool I played a little with excel,
result found on http://virakkraft.com/GISP2.xls The first curve is the
ice core data, the second a simulated curve besed on the assumption that the most siginificant cycles are 20000, 3500, 3000, 875, 437 and 150
years.
In the 2006 Nature paper (Moran et al., 2006, The Cenozoic Palaeoenvironment of the Arctic Ocean, vol 441, 601 - 605), they revisited their initial
results and suggest that perennial
ice cover was present in the Arctic for at least the last 14 million
years.
The authors of the study — Ricarda Winkelmann and Anders Levermann from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution for Science and Andy Ridgwell of the University of Bristol — find that the loss of the entire Antarctic
ice sheet would take millenniums, but up to 100 feet of sea level rise could
result within 1,000
years, with the rate of the rise beginning to increase a century or two from now.
What was astounding about 2007 was the quick melt of Multi
year ice, since 2012 has a whole lot more 1st
year ice, any weather conditions approaching 2007 will lead to my estimated
result.
The
result is that the tents, which were nearly buried in
ice and snow when I visited, are now so exposed that they'll have to be repositioned by next
year.
John Mercer, in 1968 and 1970, called attention to the fact that the West Antarctic
Ice Sheet (WAIS) was grounded mostly below sea level, calling it a «marine ice sheet» that was therefore inherently unstable, and proposed that the higher sea level resulted from its LIM collapse 125,000 years a
Ice Sheet (WAIS) was grounded mostly below sea level, calling it a «marine
ice sheet» that was therefore inherently unstable, and proposed that the higher sea level resulted from its LIM collapse 125,000 years a
ice sheet» that was therefore inherently unstable, and proposed that the higher sea level
resulted from its LIM collapse 125,000
years ago.
What if the Arctic is
ice - free in summer the next
year or two and the, and the
resulting amplification of temps far inland?
This is what may have contributed in part to lingering
ice in this region as a
result of thicker first -
year ice (due to a more severe winter and higher winter
ice growth) as well.
For example, recent
results from the Met Office do show that there is a detectable human impact in the long - term decline in sea
ice over the past 30
years, and all the evidence points to a complete loss of summer sea
ice much later this century.
On another subject, now that we know from Al Gore's researches, that our SUVs, which keep raising the CO2 levels at Mauna Loa, are the direct cause of the Mediaeval Warm Period (remember that was just 800
years before the present rising CO2 event); we can predict with near certainty, that when everybody who signed on to the Kyoto accords, meets their obligations,
resulting in a coming dearth of atmospheric CO2, that is going to directly cause an event which will become known as the little
ice age which happened in the 1600 to 1840 time range.
The very next
year the same magazine reported that «The world may be inching into a prolonged warming trend that is the direct
result of burning more and more fossil fuels...» The
ice - age theories, said the article, «are being convincingly opposed by growing evidence of human impact.»