je.st
news
Tag: sea
CAE to upgrade German Navys Sea King MK41 helicopter simulator
2016-02-26 01:00:00| Naval Technology
CAE has been contracted by Nato Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) to perform a comprehensive upgrade on the German Navy's Sea King MK41 helicopter simulator, located at the Nordholz Naval Airbase.
Statoil makes oil discovery near Oseberg field in North Sea
2016-02-25 01:00:00| Offshore Technology
Statoil Petroleum has made an oil discovery near the Oseberg South field in the central part of the North Sea, Norway.
Sea Levels Rose Faster Last Century Than In Previous 2,700 Years, Study Finds
2016-02-23 19:53:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
National Public Radio: A new study suggests that sea levels are rising at an unprecedented rate and that the problem will continue well into this century. "Sea level rise in the 20th century was truly extraordinary by historical standards," says Bob Kopp, an associate professor of Earth and planetary sciences at Rutgers University, and who is lead author on the study, which appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Sea levels rose by roughly 5 inches in the past hundred years, Kopp...
Tags: years
previous
study
levels
Sea levels rising at fastest rate in 2,800 years due to global warming, studies show
2016-02-23 03:24:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Associated Press: Sea levels are rising several times faster than they have in the past 2,800 years, with the process accelerating because of manmade global warming, according to new studies. An international team of scientists examined two dozen locations across the globe to chart rising and falling seas over centuries and millennia. Until the 1880s and the worlds industrialisation, the fastest seas rose was about 3cm to 4cm a century. During that time global sea levels did not get much higher or lower than...
Sea Level Mapped From Space With GPS Reflections
2016-02-23 02:11:54| rfglobalnet Home Page
The GPS signal used for ‘sat-navs’ could help improve understanding of ocean currents, according to newresearch published inGeophysical Research Letters by National Oceanography Centre (NOC) scientists, alongside colleagues from the University of Michigan and Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Sites : [103] [104] [105] [106] [107] [108] [109] [110] [111] [112] [113] [114] [115] [116] [117] [118] [119] [120] [121] [122] next »