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Anthropogenic

Meteorology Antarctic circleAnticyclone

anthropogenic heat"Heat released to the atmosphere as a result of human activities, often involving combustion of fuels. Sources include industrial plants, space heating and cooling, human metabolism, and vehicle exhausts.

 


Anthropogenic of, relating to, or resulting from the influence of human beings on nature
Apparent temperature What the air temperature "feels like" for various combinations of air temperature and relative humidity.

Anthropogenic Source
A pollutant source caused or produced by humans.
Anti-wind ...

Anthropogenic(2)
Made by people or resulting from human activities.
Arctic Oscillation (AO)(6) ...

Anthropogenic factors are human activities that change the environment and influence climate.

Air pollutant - anthropogenic or otherwise unusual substance in the air. Usually harmful.
Air quality model - set of equations, such as a computer program, which predicts air quality, ...

Snow given a golden or yellow appearance by the presence in it of pine, cypress pollen, or anthropogenic material or animal-produced material.
NOAA National Weather Service - Cite This Source - This Definition ...

Yellow Snow: Snow given a golden or yellow appearance by the presence in it of pine, cypress pollen, or anthropogenic material or animal-produced material. Compare with Brown Snow.

In this case, the most abundant greenhouse gas is water vapor.
Anthropogenic - Additional warming caused by having too much carbon dioxide (CO2).
Ground Blizzard Warning When blizzard conditions are solely caused by blowing and drifting snow.

YDAYesterdayYearThe period during which the Earth completes one revolution around the sun.Yellow SnowSnow given a golden or yellow appearance by the presence in it of pine, cypress pollen, or anthropogenic material or animal-produced ...

may result from such factors as changes in solar activity, long-period changes in the Earth's orbital elements (eccentricity, obliquity of the ecliptic, precession of equinoxes), natural internal processes of the climate system, or anthropogenic ...

due to the dissolution of acidic gases such as carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide. In polluted continental areas the pH can drop to as low as 3.0, a condition known as acid rain, due to the production of sulfuric and nitric acids from anthropogenic ...

of formation and the subsequent spreading rates of specific water types, such as the polar water of the Norwegian and Greenland Seas; deep-ocean circulation and ocean- mixing processes, such as advection and upwelling; and the flux of anthropogenic ...

See also: Period, Atmosphere, Earth, Temperature, Weather

Meteorology Antarctic circleAnticyclone

 
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