... by a La Nina Pacific Ocean cooling event. Monthly global temperature report shows the Tropics recorded the fifth coolest month; while the Earth is the coolest in eight years.
A La Nina Pacific Ocean cooling event continues to drive tropical and global
temperatures: Globally, June 2008 was the coolest June since 1999.
... a global average temperature that was 0.05 C warmer than seasonal
norms, 2008 goes into the books as the coolest year since 2000. Global
temperatures during 2008 were influenced by a La Nina ...
... a global average temperature that was 0.05 C warmer than seasonal
norms, 2008 goes into the books as the coolest year since 2000. Global
temperatures during 2008 were influenced by a La Nina ...
... Assessment Report finds that even a lower level of increase in average global temperatures due to greenhouse gas emissions could cause significant problems in five key areas of global concern.
The global average temperature jumped 0.41 C from June to July, the largest one-month jump in the 31-year global temperature record. The global average went from normal in June to ...
The La Nina Pacific Ocean cooling event continues to push temperatures in the tropics downward, with the tropical troposphere chilling for the second consecutive month to its coolest temperature since ...
... “the stone belt” because these states have higher incidences of kidney stones. Rising global temperatures could expand this region; the fraction of the U.S. population living in high-risk stone zones ...
DALLAS, May 21 (UPI) -- U.S. urologists say rising global temperatures might lead to an increase in kidney stones.
Shrinking regions of cooler than normal temperatures in the tropical Pacific
Ocean during July suggest the La Nina cooling event is fading.
Royal Society papers suggest ways to combat global temperature rise through geo-engineering
... to Dr. John Christy, director of the Earth System Science Center at The University of Alabama in Huntsville. Temperatures in the tropics were cooler than seasonal norms for the 12th straight month.
... at The University of Alabama in Huntsville use data gathered
by microwave sounding units on NOAA and NASA satellites to get accurate
temperature readings for almost all regions of the Earth.
... world’s car park is growing. It has become so big that the impact of emissions from today’s road traffic on the global temperature in 2100 will be six times greater than that from today’s air traffic.
The combined global land and ocean surface average temperature for October 2008 was the second warmest since records began in 1880, according to a preliminary analysis by NOAA.