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Currents may save coral reefs from climate changeAccording to the study by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution scientists Kristopher Karnauskas and Anne Cohen, climate change could cause ocean currents to operate in a surprising way and mitigate the warming effect on coral reefs in the Pacific. |
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Isolated Pacific Could Become Safe Haven In A Warming WorldHowever, a recent study by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution scientists Kristopher Karnauskas and Anne Cohen suggests that climate change may also cause ocean currents to operate in ways that could attenuate the warming near a number of islands ... |
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Check out some interesting events in Beachwood this weekend... 5:30 pm for adults and teens with disabilities and their families. There will be a DJ, dancing and snacks. Stonehill Auditorium. $5/no charge for caregivers. For more information contact Carol Anne Cohen 216-831-0700, ext. 1354 or ccohen@mandeljcc.org. |
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Tropical Refuge From Global WarmingWHOI scientists Kristopher Karnauskas and Anne Cohen, using high-resolution computer models, found that the increased upwelling caused by changing currents will reduce the rate of ocean warming around the islands by about 1.25 degrees Fahrenheit per ... |
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Wind Farms Are Making Earth Warmer; Is Your Water Getting Cleaner or Dirtier?The globe is warming, but there are things going on underfoot that will slow that warming for certain parts of certain coral reef islands," added researcher Anne Cohen. [Nature Climate Change] Yellowstone's super-volcano isn't all that super. |
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Małe wyspy nadzieją na przetrwanie raf koralowychBadania autorstwa Kristophera Kamauskasa i Anne Cohen z Woods Hole Ocenaographic Institution dają jednak nadzieję, że rafy przetrwają. Wiejące na równiku pasaty pchają masy wody ze wschodu na zachód. Mniej więcej 100-200 lat poniżej powierzchni wody w ... |
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Los corales podrán refugiarse en islas del Pacífico frente al cambio climáticoEs claramente visible, por ejemplo, alrededor de las Galápagos, pero ha pasado desapercibido en el caso de islas más pequeñas y remotas, explican en la revista Nature Climate Change los investigadores de Woods Hole Kristopher Karnauskas y Anne Cohen. |
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