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58 results were found for WA 0852 2611 9277 RAB Interior Rumah Minimalis 2 Lantai 3x6 Meter Kebayoran Baru Jakarta Selatan.


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  • 1. ESC-IASPEI-statement-LAquila-2012-1

    26 October 2012 ESC statement on L’Aquila sentence The European Seismological Commission (ESC) as a Commission of the International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth’s Interior (IASPEI) endorses and adheres to the IASPEI Press Release on the L'Aquila sentence (http://www.iaspei.org/news_items/laquila_IASPEI_press_release_final.pdf /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/hlidarefni/ESC-IASPEI-statement-LAquila-2012-1.pdf
  • 2. BIIS_windrose_2005-2014

    1 6 Wind rose BIIS March 2005−2014 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 2010360350340 330 320 310 300 290 280 270 260 250 240 230 220 210 200 190 180 170 160 150 140 130 120 110 100 2 4 6 8 10 12 Frequency of wind direction (%) Aerodrome Total observations: 2611 Calm: 9.8% Variable winds: 16% 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 /media/vedur/BIIS_windrose_2005-2014.pdf
  • 3. VI_2009_006_tt

    than can be expected to originate from the cauldrons, three to four times the wa- ter equivalent of the accumulation of snow over the watershed of the cauldrons. It has been estimated that flow from the cauldrons, in addition to the jökulhlaups, could be 2–5 m3 s 1 at maximum (Vatnaskil, 2005). It is possible that part of the sulfate-rich groundwater from the glacier comes from the cauldrons /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2009/VI_2009_006_tt.pdf
  • 4. ces_geus_paakitsoq_full_report

    the interior of the ice sheet is somewhat too dry (Fig. 9b). By average a mean negative precipitation bias of 0.16myr−1 results which equals 43% of the mean from Burgess et al. (2010) (Table 2). 6 Bias Correction and Future Scenario Runs After having specified a number of biases in the RCM output the model runs were repeated with bias-corrected RCM data. To correct the temporal bias of Ta, daily /media/ces/ces_geus_paakitsoq_full_report.pdf
  • 5. Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-06-15_IES_IMO

    and western sides of the crater lake is a wall of ice. On the northern side a tephra wall rises 20 meters above the water. The ice walls at the southwestern corner of the crater are melting, i.e. at the site of the vent that was active 4 – 6 June. The rate of melting is assumed to be about one cuber meter per second. Seismic tremor: Low tremor level. Pulses are observed off and on. Earthquakes /media/jar/Eyjafjallajokull_status_2010-06-15_IES_IMO.pdf
  • 6. VI_2014_005

    run, and the blended initial field for the subsequent run. During the first forecast hour, model simulations tend towards the values at the end of the previous run, but especially in the interior of the island, some significant differences remain. 14 For 2-m air temperature and 10-m wind speed, this is illustrated in Figure 5, based on average diurnal cycles, calculated separately for grid points /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2014/VI_2014_005.pdf
  • 7. News

    and orange dots. Older earthquakes are marked by gray dots (December 2009 - March 2010). The grey stars mark the eruption sites, the new one to the west. Black triangles are seismometers and a black square is a GPS meter. An earthquake size 3 is marked by a red star. News 2023 /about-imo/news/bigimg/1865
  • 8. Factsheet-Bardarbunga-20140913

    a meter over the last 24 hours.  The volcanic eruption in Holuhraun is still ongoing with similar strength as last few days. Lava flows at similar rates as yesterday towards East into Jökulsá á Fjöllum.  The lava filed was measured yesterday afternoon to be 24,5 square kilometres.  Accumulated volume of the lava is now estimated to be at least 200 million cubic meters.  Gas cloud from /media/jar/myndsafn/Factsheet-Bardarbunga-20140913.pdf
  • 9. Milly_etal-2008-Stationarity-dead-Science

    drainage works, and land-cover and land-use change. Two other (sometimes indistinguishable) challenges to stationarity have been exter- nally forced, natural climate changes and low-frequency, internal variability (e.g., the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation) enhanced by the slow dynamics of the oceans and ice sheets (2, 3). Planners have tools to adjust their analyses for known human distur- bances /media/loftslag/Milly_etal-2008-Stationarity-dead-Science.pdf
  • 10. Climate Report

    ) noted that Iceland had a maritime climate that was much milder than its position on the globe might suggest. In data from 1981–2010, Iceland annual average temperatures ranged from 6°C at the south coast to 3°C at the north coast, with a substantially colder highland interior. In comparison with the latitudinal average for the same period, the coastal temperatures in Iceland are 8–10°C warmer /climatology/iceland/climate-report

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