Results 171 to 180 of about 1,848,819 (300)
Slide scanner-based microscopy image datasets of fossil diatoms from Southern Ocean surface sediments. [PDF]
Ishino S, Itaki T.
europepmc +1 more source
Conifers growing in high‐elevation alpine environments in the mountains of Southern California, USA, are highly responsive to atmospheric river (AR) events, which typically produce heavy precipitation over 1–3 days. However, it is the frequency of the AR events, not their magnitude nor annual precipitation totals, that most affects the radial growth of
Paul A. Knapp +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Thinning Antarctic glaciers expose high-altitude nunataks delivering more bioavailable iron to the Southern Ocean. [PDF]
Winter K +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Spatiotemporal Changes in Precipitation Concentration in the Atlantic‐European Region
This study analyses changes in precipitation concentration using ERA5 and E‐OBS datasets. Gini index as a measure of precipitation concentration revealed a gradual expansion of areas with increasing unevenness in precipitation distribution across the Atlantic‐European region since 1961.
Petr Dobrovolný +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Disease surveillance in albatrosses and petrels from the Southwest Atlantic and Southern Ocean. [PDF]
Pereira Serafini P +13 more
europepmc +1 more source
Drought spatiotemporal propagation and direct driving variables are assessed at multiple time steps with high spatial resolution using various drought indices (SPI, SPEI and SPDI) and entropy based mutual information under an ensemble of climate change projections over Tunisia. ABSTRACT Projecting drought occurrence and spatiotemporal propagation under
Haykel Sellami
wiley +1 more source
Southern Ocean humpback whales are shifting to an earlier return migration. [PDF]
Dunlop R, Gumley E, McGrath EH, Noad M.
europepmc +1 more source
Sunshine Duration in Brazil From Meteosat (1983–2020): Climatology, Variability and Long‐Term Trends
Using nearly four decades of Meteosat satellite data (1983–2020), this study presents a country‐wide climatology of sunshine duration (SDU) in Brazil. The results reveal marked regional contrasts, dominant modes of variability, and significant long‐term trends, providing new information on the most relevant meteorological systems that influence SDU and
Maria Lívia Lins Mattos Gava +2 more
wiley +1 more source

