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78 results were found for WA 0812 2782 5310 Bengkel Las Atap Canopy Baja Ringan Atap Go Green Kajoran Kab Magelang.


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  • 21. Sea ice in December 2008

    five announcements with information about position of sea ice in the month, one dispatch was received from a ship on the 18th. The Coast Guard did not go on an exploration flight this month /sea-ice/monthly/2008/nr/2321
  • 22. Sea ice in December 2009

    50 nm NW of Barði which was drifting southwards. IMO informed, on its web site, that northerly winds would be prevailing the following days, which would most likely lead to further southward drift of the iceflake. The Icelandic Coast Guard did not go on ice-survey flight. The sea ice in the Greenland Strait moved eastwards in the month. Easterly and northeasterly winds prevailed in the Greenland /sea-ice/monthly/2009/nr/2334
  • 23. ces-oslo2010_proceedings

    of snow days throughout the entire study period, while trends in max snow depth go from mostly positive in period I to mostly negative in period II, and both negative and positive in period III. Positive trends in annual maximum snow depth occur mostly in colder regions, where precipitation comes as snow at the height of winter. Number of snow days has decreased in both warm and cold regions /media/ces/ces-oslo2010_proceedings.pdf
  • 24. Group5-Stakeholders_involvement

    /EPP 2 Stakeholders analysis 26 August 2011 PM/YZ/EPP 3 Stake h o l d e r s P u b l i c / p r i v at e P o w e r l e v e l (“ n u i s an ce” ca p a c i t y ) O r i e n tat i o n H or s t e n s m uni c ipal i t y ( c o m pe t e n t a u t h ori t y ) P u b l i c S t ron g Go v ernanc e N eighbour mun i c i p ali t y P u b l i c S t ron g Go v ernanc e Poli c y /media/loftslag/Group5-Stakeholders_involvement.pdf
  • 25. VI_2015_006

    - itation occurred over the ocean and in that part of the coastal zone, with strong onshore winds. In the morning, the most intense band of precipitation was situated over the outlying peninsu- las in the west. As the low moved over the island, the region with the heaviest precipitation shifted south and then cyclonically along the coast to the northeast. Winds were intermediate to strong (3 – 16 m s /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2015/VI_2015_006.pdf
  • 26. Photos of the ice cauldrons at Bárðarbunga

    on extrapolating the current developments of the Bárðarbunga subsidence shows that if the caldera keeps subsiding along a similar trajectory then the subsidence will go on for another 5 to 16 months. The volcanic eruption in Holuhraun could evolve with similar pace and the eruption might last another 4 to 15 months. However, information on the volume of the lava field in Holuhraun is not as accurate /earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/3076
  • 27. Delivery of scientific data

    Iceland, especially concerning geoscience. Upon his retirement, he decided to transfer various scientific resources to Iceland for further use. It was the task of the Icelandic Meteorological Office to receive and process the shipment, which weighs just under one and a half tons.The Icelandic Meteorological Office will go through the well-organized material and forward it to other institutions what /about-imo/news/delivery-of-scientific-data
  • 28. 100 days of gas release at Holuhraun

    rich but not as Laki in the 18th century Sara Barsotti 11.12.2014 The ongoing eruption at Holuhraun, which began in at the end of August 2014, is very rich in gas. We have to go 150 years back to find an event (Trölladyngja) that had a comparable impact on Iceland and its /pollution-and-radiation/volcanic-gas/measurements/
  • 29. Arsgildi.html

    Ársmeðaltöl/Annual data Til baka/Go back Reykjavík Víðistaðir Straumsvík Vífilsstaðir Elliðaárstöð Rjúpnahæð Hólmur Korpa Mosfell Stíflisdalur Stardalur Mógilsá Meðalfell Stóri-Botn Grundartangi Kirkjuból Akranes Neðra-Skarð Andakílsárvirkjun Hvanneyri Stafholtsey Augastaðir Kalmanstunga Síðumúli Brekka Fornihvammur Þverholt Hítardalur Hjarðarfell Böðvarsholt Bláfeldur Arnarstapi Gufuskálar /Medaltalstoflur-txt/Arsgildi.html
  • 30. A heatwave in Iceland

    reached 25.7°C on the standard manned station outside the IMO offices, breaking the former record by 0.8°C. This is, indeed, rare as measurements in Reykjavík go back to the 1870s, and usually there are decades between temperatures above 23°C. The last 10 years have been unusual in this respect. At the automatic station at the same site the maximum temperature was 26.4°C - also a record. Just /about-imo/news/nr/1362

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