986 resultados para Marché de proximité
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ContentsFighting for freedomIsraeli tensions could lead to a rise in U.S, gas pricesMedia prolong influence of racismSpring blossoms in AmesMusic in Ames plays at the cutting edgeDo college degrees still carry weight?Torrescano shines for softball team
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ContentsPutting a face to the causeAg pavilion receives $2 million donationSterle receives professorship in animal scienceSpangler wrestles with concussionsBleak future could await AmericaSustainability finds a new twist with feminism
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ContentsKnight, Brown victoriousOne 'happy' accidentMarch for Malawi finds funds for AfricaChampionship chances now up in the air after loss to WildcatsEco-star contest picks ISU senior for final five
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ContentsISU Foundation president steps downResiding in debtForbes names Des Moines top citySenior reach end of the roadH.R. 347 protects upper classScore steals at local thrift shops
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ContentsPermit sales, tickets drive Parking DivisionNBA future for White up in the airMidwestern Moxie: Magazine caters to IowansLearn facts before debatingInjuries hamper wrestlers
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ContentsFacing ObstaclesStudent interests influence catalogMisconceptions inspire professor to author bookOsemele, Cyclones work out at Pro DayCelebrate events with cake popsTaking flight from hectic everyday life
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ContentsSo Long, RoycePolitics of parenting in 'Carnage'Blood drive helps those in needBattle: Is the new iPad worth the upgrade? Bride-to-be juggles soccer and ceremony
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ContentsRelaying a legacyCady works for impartial judiciaryTornado Alley preps to weather stormsHow to be an American: Claim your basic rightsBuilding 'greener' homes in MexicoBoxers hit up tournament
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ContentsBiden to discuss economics on campusChasing her dreamRhoads to make $1.6 million for 2012 seasonISU sophomore races for cure in Death ValleyUniform design unites fansCricket Club qualifies for tournamentKaleidoquiz: 26 hours of craziness
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ContentsBiden: Bring back jobsProfessor works to bring pandas to Des MoinesIT draws attention to email scamsSelfless senior allows Cyclones to shineGSB fails to focus on major issuesStudents work to create sustainable life in Uganda
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Contents'More than just one day'Teams take ideas from dream to reality at eventUpset seals sweet senior send-off
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Contents'Juggling Act'Market determines Iowa State's payrollCandidates vie for 437 delegates on Super TuesdayBe smart about sun on Spring Break 2012Obama doesn't control prices at gas pumpsCyclones turn focus toward Kansas City
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Contents25-year anniversary of ISU goldProposed Iowa gun bills could offer more protectionDivision III team ready for 1st shot at titleThe fall of the Iowa HouseHockey team finds positives in rebuilding seasonSmoothie movement helps health
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ContentsOWI costs livesPlay garners national awardsBiorenewables builds a new homeMen's hoops preps for Big 12Free speech demands back talkNew album, new 'Fate' released
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Analysing historical weather extremes such as the tropical cyclone in Samoa in March 1889 could add to our understanding of extreme events. However, up to now the availability of suitable data was limiting the analysis of historical extremes, particularly in remote regions. The new “Twentieth Century Reanalysis” (20CR), which provides six-hourly, three-dimensional data for the entire globe back to 1871, might provide the means to study this and other early events. While its suitability for studying historical extremes has been analysed for events in the northern extratropics (see other papers in this volume), the representation of tropical cyclones, especially in early times, remains unknown. The aim of this paper is to study to the hurricane that struck Samoa on 15-16 March 1889. We analyse the event in 20CR as well as in contemporary observations. We find that the event is not reproduced in the ensemble mean of 20CR, nor is it within the ensemble spread. We argue that this is due to the paucity of data assimilated into 20CR. A preliminary compilation of historical observations from ships for that period, in contrast, provides a relatively consistent picture of the event. This shows that more observations would be available and implies that future versions of surface-based reanalyses might profit from digitizing further observations in the tropical region.