Temperatures
in sentence
377 examples of Temperatures in a sentence
We risk
temperatures
we haven't seen for tens of millions of years over a century.
It lives in the deep ocean, about a mile and a half deep, almost at boiling-water
temperatures.
He worked in high temperatures, tearing down and rebuilding furnaces, cleaning up spilt metal and slag.
Shortly after, Charles Minard charted Napoleon's march on Moscow, illustrating how an army of 422,000 dwindled to just 10,000 as battles, geography and freezing
temperatures
took their toll.
Now, because the sea has a greater thermal inertia than the land, the average
temperatures
over land are actually going to be higher than they are over the sea.
The second thing is that we as human beings don't experience global average
temperatures.
So the next morning, when I woke up on too little sleep, worrying about the hole in the window, and a mental note that I had to call my contractor, and the freezing temperatures, and the meetings I had upcoming in Europe, and, you know, with all the cortisol in my brain, my thinking was cloudy, but I didn't know it was cloudy because my thinking was cloudy.
In painted turtles, for example, warm
temperatures
above the critical temperature will produce females within the eggs, and cool
temperatures
will produce a male.
And this is true all around the world; scientists are figuring out new ways to handle their embryos, to get them to settle, maybe even figuring out the methods to preserve them at low temperatures, so that we can preserve their genetic diversity and work with them more often.
It takes place in a range of
temperatures
that don't burn a living thing.
Above the water, average winter
temperatures
can be as low as -40 degrees Celsius, and the coldest recorded temperature is approximately -68 degrees Celsius.
This prevents
temperatures
in the Arctic regions from reaching the extremes typical of the land surface of Antarctica.
At this distance, shown in blue on this diagram for stars of different temperatures, planets could be warm enough for water to flow on their surfaces as lakes and oceans where life might reside.
I immediately grabbed for my thermometer, and the average
temperatures
in the river were 86 degrees C.
We mapped the
temperatures
along the river, and this was by far the most demanding part of the fieldwork.
And these are average water
temperatures.
We took these in the dry season to ensure the purest geothermal
temperatures.
What's, again, amazing are these
temperatures.
This is a depiction of what we used to think of as the normal distribution of
temperatures.
So we're having record-breaking
temperatures.
These higher
temperatures
are having an effect on animals, plants, people, ecosystems.
Speaking of the North Pole, last December 29, the same storm that caused historic flooding in the American Midwest, raised
temperatures
at the North Pole 50 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than normal, causing the thawing of the North Pole in the middle of the long, dark, winter, polar night.
While all of this is going on, familiar symptoms, like high
temperatures
and swelling, are actually processes designed to aid the immune response.
Right now, on a perfect day at the equator, in the middle of summer on Mars,
temperatures
can actually reach 70 degrees, but then they go down to minus 100 at night.
So, the electromagnetic force, the force that holds us together, gets stronger as you go to higher
temperatures.
They only form when gas is exposed to an electric field or superheated to
temperatures
of thousands or tens of thousands of degrees.
At the end of 30 years, we will have put 850 gigatons of carbon into the air, and that probably goes a long way towards locking in a 2-4 degree C increase in global mean surface temperatures, locking in ocean acidification and locking in sea level rise.
With the right temperatures, times and chemicals, we finally got that successful test result showing us that we had created activated carbon from Styrofoam waste.
We lost our entire electrical grid because of an ice storm when the
temperatures
were, in the dead of winter in Quebec, minus 20 to minus 30.
We fry our hair at
temperatures
of 450 degrees Fahrenheit or higher almost daily, to maintain the straight look.
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