Zobrazeno 1 - 4
of 4
pro vyhledávání: '"Neil M. Taylor"'
Autor:
Timothy Wiechers, Zen Mariani, Lubos Spacek, David Sills, Dominique Brunet, Y. Su, Neil M. Taylor, William R. Burrows, Paul Joe, Laura X. Huang, C. Duhaime, J. R. Brook, D. Henderson, Nathan Hilker, George A. Isaac, N. Driedger, S. Wren, J. de Grandpré, J. P. Charland, Jonathan M. Wang, Joan Klaassen, Craig Stroud, Sylvie Leroyer, T. Munoz, A.-B. Filion, Greg J. Evans, Stéphane Bélair, Jennifer K. Vanos, V. Bouchet, Y. J. Rochon, Hai Lin, Cheol-Heon Jeong, E. Hung, Armin Dehghan, Ismail Gultepe, Kerolyn K. Shairsingh, Alain Robichaud, Janti Reid, Alexandria J. Herdt, M. MacDonald, T. Yip, J.A. MacPhee, R. Frenette, David Johnston, James A. Voogt, N. B. Bernier, H. Yang
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 99:921-953
The Pan and Parapan American Games (PA15) are the third largest sporting event in the world and were held in Toronto in the summer of 2015 (10–26 July and 7–15 August). This was used as an opportunity to coordinate and showcase existing innovativ
Publikováno v:
Boundary-Layer Meteorology. 163:143-159
The “Effects of Lake Breezes on Weather in Manitoba” project was conducted during 6–24 July 2013 to better understand local lake-breeze characteristics. Data were collected using a variety of platforms including Doppler wind lidar, rawinsondes,
Publikováno v:
Atmosphere-Ocean. 54:93-107
The Effects of Lake Breezes On Weather–Manitoba (ELBOW-MB) field project, conducted around Lakes Manitoba and Winnipeg in July 2013, was the first in-depth field study of lake breezes in Manitoba, Canada. Using observational data collected during E
Autor:
Susan Skone, Craig D. Smith, David Sills, Geoff S. Strong, Neil M. Taylor, Jason A. Milbrandt, John M. Hanesiak, Patrick J. McCarthy, Julian C. Brimelow
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 92:739-763
Severe thunderstorms are a common occurrence in summer on the Canadian prairies, with a large number originating along the Alberta, Canada, foothills, just east of the Rocky Mountains. Most of these storms move eastward to affect the Edmonton–Calga