Climate and energy exchange on a sub-polar ice cap in summer.
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Climate and energy exchange on a sub-polar ice cap in summer. Arctic institute of North America Devon Island expedition 1961-1963. by B. Holmgren

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Published by Universitetet, Almqvist & Wiksell (distr.) in Uppsala, Stockholm .
Written in

Subjects:

Places:

  • Arctic regions,
  • Arctic regions.

Subjects:

  • Ice caps -- Arctic regions.,
  • Arctic regions -- Climate.

Book details:

Edition Notes

SeriesAbstracts of Uppsala dissertations from the Faculty of Science, 175, Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis., 181.
Classifications
LC ClassificationsQ64 .A63 no. 175, QC994.8 .A63 no. 175
The Physical Object
Pagination15 p.
Number of Pages15
ID Numbers
Open LibraryOL5743141M
LC Control Number70868995

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An ice hat is a cap with ice on top, which can cool you off on a hot day. But it can give you a headache (brain freeze), and care should be taken to avoid direct contact with the ice (frostbite). The aim of the present investigation was to provide more insight into the processes affecting the evolution of the englacial temperature distribution at a non-temperate location on a glacier. Measurements were made in the top 10 m of the ice at the summit of Laika Ice Cap (Canadian Arctic) during the summer (by Blatter et al.).Cited by: Hans T ausen ice cap, North Greenland 83 36 July–Aug Braithwaite: Calculation of sensible-heat flux ov er a melting ice surface 11 EMPIRIC AL ESTIMA TES OF HEA T -TRANSFERAuthor: Roger Braithwaite. Holmgren, B., Climate and energy exchange on a sub-polar ice cap in Institute of North America Devon Island Expedition – Uppsala: Meteorologiska Institutionen, Uppsala Universitet. Meddelande Part A–E. Google Scholar.

  Holmgren, B. Climate and energy exchange on a sub-polar ice cap in summer. Arctic Institute of North America Devon Island Expedition Uppsala: Meteorologiska Institutionen, Uppsala Universitet. Meddelande Part A-E. Google ScholarCited by: [Show full abstract] cover Sea ice Lake ice Frozen ground and permafrost Glaciers and ice sheets Cryosphere-climate linkages and feedbacks Author: Atsumu Ohmura.   Below is a lightly edited version of our exchange. Many of Dybkjær’s statements are very interesting. Dear DMI: I am an American journalist completing a book about climate change and have been studying your Arctic temperature graph for some time. The graph says that the data are obtained by the use of a model.   CO2 emissions from energy production in order to prevent and/or mitigate climate change, claim to have proved that anthropogenic CO2 emissions is the primary climate forcing cause of warming. Assuming for purpose of discussion that CO2 is the culprit, then both the safe high and low limits of these emissions must be determined so that public.

programmes to forestall disasters and migrations at unprecedented scales. The tools are available but they must be applied immediately and aggressively.   The actual climate zones are much more complicated and depend on several geographical factors latitude: amount of insolation controls temperature; altitude: T decreases with elevation; e.g. Mt. Kilimanjaro is near the equator but has an ice cap near its summit at m (though the ice cap has decreased by >80% since about ).   by Judith Curry The AAAS and affiliated professional societies just shot themselves in the foot with the letter to U.S. policy makers. Last week, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) issued a press release entitled Thirty-One Top Scientific Societies Speak With One Voice on Global Climate Change. Punchline: In a consensus letter. Aagard, K., and E.C. Carmack. The role of sea ice and other fresh water in the Arctic circulation. Journal of Geophysical Research ,, Abramovitz.