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99 results were found for [77AGG. COM]2d slot mantis 88 hakim slot slot dadu rolex slot darma slot jwx.


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  • 21. BIKF_windrose_2005-2014

    direction (%) Aerodrome Total observations: 14883 Calm: 2.2% Variable winds: 0.55% Average wind speed for wind direction Wind direction (°) Wind speed (knots ) 0 5 10 15 0 45 90 135 180 225 270 315 360 N E S W N (Number of observations for wind direction) Icelandic Met Office 02. júl. 2015 62 1 87 9 97 3 79 5 45 3 30 9 24 2 33 8 23 8 19 1 20 6 30 9 38 1 45 2 65 6 63 1 46 0 42 2 41 7 28 1 30 1 33 2 /media/vedur/BIKF_windrose_2005-2014.pdf
  • 22. BIVM_windrose_2005-2014

    N E S W N (Number of observations for wind direction) Icelandic Met Office 02. júl. 2015 114 8 128 7 84 9 36 1 26 0 13 9 24 3 65 4 136 4 250 3 366 4 298 8 189 6 146 9 99 9 160 6 111 5 83 5 86 1 86 4 80 0 82 6 92 4 96 3 97 5 124 9 109 5 127 7 122 4 115 3 88 0 61 9 52 3 55 3 96 0 109 9 Wind rose BIVM January 2005−2014 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 2010360350340 330 320 310 300 290 280 /media/vedur/BIVM_windrose_2005-2014.pdf
  • 23. VI_2009_013

    to locate earthquakes in Iceland but the SIL-crustal model has no Moho boundary. Using this model in the routine, daily analysis, the majority of the earthquakes in Eyjafjallajökull form a 3-km-wide chimney between 1 and 10 km depth beneath the northern flank of the volcano. A smaller cloud is also visible between 19 and 25 km depth, about 1.5 km west of the main activity/cluster. 13 Figure 3 /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2009/VI_2009_013.pdf
  • 24. VI_2009_012

    Mw(v) plotted against log distance. The coefficient of correlation between Mw(v) and log distance is 0.24. High correlation coefficients have been shown to affect parameter estimates in one step regression methods (see Fukushima and Tanaka, 1990). The Ci values were also calculated from the derived PGA values. Instead of constructing another magnitude scale based on acceleration it was decided /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2009/VI_2009_012.pdf
  • 25. ces-oslo2010_proceedings

    change over the North Atlantic and in some simulations also for Iceland. In all areas, including the North Atlantic and Iceland, a clear climate change signal compared to the spread between the simulations is seen. The standard deviation calculated from 17 of the simulations are less than 1°C in all areas apart from Iceland where it reaches between 1 and 2°C and in parts of the Barents Sea where /media/ces/ces-oslo2010_proceedings.pdf
  • 26. D2.3_CES_Prob_fcsts_GCMs_and_RCMs

    Institution BCCR-BCM2.0 Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Norway CGCM3.1 (T47) Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis CGCM3.1 (T63) same as previous CNRM-CM3 Météo-France CSIRO-MK3.0 CSIRO Atmospheric Research, Australia ECHAM5/MPI-OM Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Meteorology, Germany ECHO-G University of Bonn and Model & Data Group, Germany; Korean Meteorological Agency GFDL /media/ces/D2.3_CES_Prob_fcsts_GCMs_and_RCMs.pdf
  • 27. raisanen_ruosteenoja_CES_D2.2

    Model Institution BCCR-BCM2.0 Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Norway CGCM3.1 (T47) Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis CGCM3.1 (T63) same as previous CNRM-CM3 Météo-France CSIRO-MK3.0 CSIRO Atmospheric Research, Australia ECHAM5/MPI-OM Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Meteorology, Germany ECHO-G University of Bonn and Model & Data Group, Germany; Korean Meteorological Agency GFDL /media/ces/raisanen_ruosteenoja_CES_D2.2.pdf
  • 28. VI_2015_005

    Franz Josef Land. The western boundary at 71 W excludes Hudson Bay and Foxe Basin, both associated with their own storm climate. Baffin Bay is included in its entirety, since storm activity in that region is closely linked to that over the western North Atlantic (Dacre & Gray, 2009). The eastern boundary at 55 E is chosen to completely include the Barents Sea. This results in an area of 21,625,566 /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2015/VI_2015_005.pdf
  • 29. Daniell_etal-2010

    and evaluating impacts (see also Swallow et al. 2001, van Ast and Boot 2003). METHODS AND DATA This article is based on empirical data that originated from the analysis of the participatory exercise in the Dhuenn basin. The strong involvement of researchers from two research projects (NeWater[1] and ACER[2]) linked by a joint case study led to the variety of sources available for exploration, including /media/loftslag/Daniell_etal-2010.pdf
  • 30. CES_D2.4_task1

    is projected to approach 90%. The impact of anthropogenic climate change on precipitation is still estimated to be very small at present. In the middle of this century, typically about 60% of all months are projected to have above-median precipitation in northern Europe, although with a substantial variation with the time of the year. An on-line appendix of this report provides detailed tables /media/ces/CES_D2.4_task1.pdf

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