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Polo verde masculino de manga corta con bordado en el pecho y vaquero oscuro de corte regular. Perfecto casual look de hombre.

 

www.forecast.es

Governor Doug Ducey speaking at the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry's 2015 Legislative Forecast Luncheon at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

Cardigan azul marino de hombre, camisa de manga larga y pantalón de cuadros azul y blanco. Look estilo navy de hombre.

 

www.forecast.es

 

Area Faroes, one of an abstract art series of the 31 Shipping Forecast areas which I created with the ArtRage program.

what more can I say :(

 

Taken through the window so a bit hazy

Sigh... Blai's flight yesterday was cancelled due to fog and he was put onto a flight today. So many other flights today are cancelled again...

Using ECMWF's Forecasts (UEF) meetings provide a forum for exchanging ideas and experiences on the use of ECMWF data and products. UEF2022 took place virtually and in-person from 7 to 10 June 2022, and the theme was ‘Visualising Meteorological Data’.

 

Neil Kaye (Met Office) gave an invited presentation on 'Effective data visualisation for decision making and making an impact'.

 

Presentations and recordings are available at

Using ECMWF's Forecasts (UEF2022).

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes with attendees at the 2023 Legislative Forecast Luncheon hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

Boter, Kaas, Kruideniers- en Grutterswaren.

W. van Dalen

Veerdam 245,

Papendrecht

John Hook speaking with attendees at the 2026 Legislative Forecast Luncheon hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

According to IMARC Group’s latest report, titled “E-Commerce Market: Industry Trends, Share, Size, Growth, Opportunity and Forecast 2020-2025,”. Looking forward, IMARC Group expects the market to continue its double-digit growth during the next five years. E-commerce, or electronic commerce, stands for the commercial transactions conducted electronically via the internet. It includes buying and selling of consumer products, marketplace services, and customer support. E-commerce also includes online auctions, payment gateways, online ticketing, and internet banking. It is typically classified in various business models, viz; Business to Business (B2B), Business to Customer (B2C), Customer to Business (C2B), and Customer to Customer (C2C) model. E-commerce platforms offer multiple benefits, such as a global reach, fewer transaction costs, higher profit margins, direct communication between the parties involved, and fast delivery of goods and services.

 

Want more information about E-Commerce Market: www.imarcgroup.com/e-commerce-market

 

Request a free report sample: www.imarcgroup.com/e-commerce-market/requestsample

 

Contact US:

 

IMARC Group

30 N Gould St, Ste R

Sheridan, WY 82801, USA

Website: www.imarcgroup.com

Email: sales@imarcgroup.com

USA: +1-631-791-1145

Follow us on twitter: @imarcglobal

©2009 Susan Ogden-All Rights Reserved

Images Thruthelookingglass

 

First 3 wks of july....every year, for 12 to 15 years...nearly PERFECT weather! Oddly enough my daughter's used to PRAY for a rain day, so they could go to a movie!

Bjorgavegen - Fv243, Norway, July 2015

His magic ball foretold a United victory.

The weather forecast for tomorrow predicts snow and sleet. All of Metro Atlanta is busy digging in, spooked by the disaster that resulted from the two inches of snow we got two weeks ago.

 

At the grocery store the bread aisle is cleaned out except for buns and specialty loaves. There is lots of empty space on the milk and bottled water shelves, and fire logs are completely sold out. I didn't know people even ate bread much nowadays. What do they plan to do with all that bread and milk - make French toast in their fireplace?

 

While hastily sketching the bread aisle, I chatted with an amused shopper from Indiana.

 

February 10, 2014, 8:30 pm

39°F/4°C and sprinkling a few drops of rain.

Atlanta, Georgia, USA

 

In Waiuku town, 42 km (26 miles) south of Auckland, a large stone shaped like a brick is suspended from a hardwood gallows.

 

Beneath it is a notice with these words:

  

WAIUKU WEATHERSTONE

FORECASTING SERVICE

 

CONDITION OF STONE FORECAST

Stone is wet - Raining

Stone is dry - Not raining

Stone casts shadow - Sunny

White on top - Frosty

Can't see stone - Foggy

Swinging stone - Very windy

Bottom of stone wet - Very high tide

Stone swinging or gone - Tornado

 

As per GME’s latest findings, the Sports Medicine Market will grow gradually at a rate of 5.1% to reach USD 6.7 Billion by 2026. This can be attributed to the demand for sports medicine because of the rapid increase in the number of minimally invasive surgeries across the globe and the rising demand for 3d printed implants for post-recovery treatment management.

 

Browse 152 Market Data Tables and 90 Figures spread through 175 Pages and in-depth TOC on "Sports Medicine Market - Forecast to 2026"

www.globalmarketestimates.com/market-report/global-sports...

By Product (Body Reconstruction Products, Body Support, Recovery Products, and Accessories), By Application (Knee Injuries, Shoulder Injuries, Foot & Ankle Injuries, Back & Spine Injuries, Hip & Groin Injuries, Elbow & Wrist Injuries, and Others), By End-User (Hospitals, Ambulatory Surgery Centers, Physiotherapy Centers, & Clinics, and Others), By Region (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Rest of the World); and Company Market Share Analysis & Competitor Analysis

Key Market Insights

•Sports medicine is a healthcare division that deals with optimizing the physical ability of individuals

•Sport medicine products help patients heal and avoid potential complications from injuries

•As per application segment is concerned, the knee-injury application will grow the fastest

•From 2020 to 2026, as per product segment, the body support product is ought to grow faster than accessories, body reconstruction products and recovery products.

•Major players in the Sports Medicine market include DJO Global, Arthrex, Inc., Performance Health International Limited, Depuy Synthes Companies (A Part Of Johnson & Johnson), Conmed Corporation, Bauerfeind Ag, Medtronic Plc, Berg, Inc., Karl Storz Gmbh & Co.Kg, Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc., Biotek AG, Össur, Stryker Corporation, Medshape, and Mueller Sports Medicine, Inc., among others.

Browse the Report @ www.globalmarketestimates.com/market-report/global-sports...

 

Product Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Body Reconstruction Products

•Body Support & Recovery Products

• Accessories

 

Application Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Knee Injuries

•Shoulder Injuries

•Foot and Ankle Injuries

•Back and Spine Injuries

•Hip and Groin Injuries

•Elbow and Wrist Injuries

•Other Applications

End-User Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Hospitals

•Ambulatory Surgery Centers

•Physiotherapy Centers, and Clinics

•Other End-Users

Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

North America

•The U.S.

•Canada

•Mexico

Europe

•Germany

•UK

•France

•Spain

•Italy

•Rest of Europe

Asia Pacific

•China

•India

•Japan

•South Korea

•Australia

•Rest of APAC

Central & South America

•Brazil

•Argentina

•Rest of CSA

 

Middle East & Africa

•Saudi Arabia

•UAE

•Rest of MEA

 

Contact: Tracy Simon

Email address: tracy.simon@globalmarketestimates.com

Phone Number: +16026667238

Website: www.globalmarketestimates.com/

Check our Latest Blogs: www.globalmarketestimates.com/blog-posts.php

  

Stena Forecaster moored at Twelve Quays South & Seven Seas Explorer moored at Liverpool

According to a new market research report published by Global Market Estimates, the Global Plant Genomics Market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 8.55% during the forecast period. The demand for Plant Genomics is projected due to the increasing investment in agricultural production and the rising use of novel DNA sequencing technologies.

Browse 180 Market Data Tables and 97 Figures spread through 179 Pages and in-depth TOC on "Plant Genomics Market - Forecast to 2026" www.globalmarketestimates.com/market-report/global-plant-...

By Type (Molecular Engineering, Genetic Engineering, Others), By Trait (Yield improvement, Disease resistance, Herbicide tolerance, Others), By Objective (DNA extraction & purification, DNA/RNA sequencing, Genotyping, GENE expression profiling, Marker-assisted selection, GMO-trait purity testing, Other objectives), By Application (Cereals & Grains, Fruits & Vegetables, Oilseeds & Pulses, Others), By Region (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Rest of the World); and Company Market Share Analysis & Competitor Analysis

Key Market Insights

•Plant genomics is the area in which the gene composition, function, and structure and even the network of a complete plant genome are sequenced, identified, and analyzed.

•The growing instances of insect attacks and a restrictions against cop defense chemicals in early germination in the industry growth

•The DNA / RNA sequencing segment will be the fastest-growing segment to hold the biggest market share in terms of revenue in the global market in terms of objective from 2020 to 2026

• The cereals and grains segment projected to grow faster at a highest CAGR than the cereals & grains segment in the global plant genomics market in 2020-2026

•The Asia-Pacific will grow the fastest-growth rate and the North America is expected to grow at the largest segment in terms of revenue over the coming years

•Major players in the plant genomics market include Qiagen, Floragenex, Traitgenetics GmbH, LC Sciences, Eurofins Scientific, BGI Genomics, Novogene Corporation, Neogen Corporation, Illumina, Inc., NRGene, KeyGene, Genotypic Technologies, Genewiz, Agilent Technologies, and Oxford Nanopore Technologies, among others.

Browse the Report @ www.globalmarketestimates.com/market-report/global-plant-...

Type Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Molecular Engineering

•Genetic Engineering

•Others

Trait (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Yield improvement

•Disease resistance

•Herbicide tolerance

•Others

Application Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•Cereals & Grains

•Fruits & Vegetables

•Oilseeds & Pulses

•Others

 

Objective Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

•DNA extraction & purification

•DNA/RNA sequencing

•Genotyping

•GENE expression profiling

•Marker-assisted selection

•GMO-trait purity testing

•Other objectives

 

Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Million, 2020-2026)

North America

•U.S.

•Canada

•Mexico

Europe

•Germany

•UK

•France

•Spain

•Italy

•Rest of Europe

Asia Pacific

•China

•India

•Japan

•South Korea

•Australia

•Rest of APAC

Central & South America

•Brazil

•Argentina

•Rest of CSA

Middle East & Africa

•Saudi Arabia

•UAE

•Rest of MEA

 

Contact: Tracy Simon

Email address: tracy.simon@globalmarketestimates.com

Phone Number: +16026667238

Website: www.globalmarketestimates.com/

Check our Latest Blogs: www.globalmarketestimates.com/blog-posts.php

 

Attendees at the 2022 Legislative Forecast Luncheon hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

Stage at the 2016 Legislative Forecast Luncheon hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

An under construction shot of my latest piece, Forecast. Just got to do the rain drops and a sig and it'll be complete. The rain drops will be a little time consuming though so probably wont complete if for a little while.

 

[Emulsion & Montana Gold on 70cm x 50cm x 4cm canvas]

Forecast close up.

Generic front cover of Winlaton-based Gateshead Storm's match programme for the 2015 National Conference League season. This 12-pager (£2, with admission) was issued for a May Challenge Trophy first round tie with Thornhill Trojans, who won 66-16 in front of 45 spectators.

with a great weather forecast my first day out fotting in 2014 was to Tamworth. A superb day was had bagging many shots on a very busy day. 47805 is seen passing at 12:02 working 5Z33 Crewe Carriage Sidings to Stewarts Lane ECS move 02/01/2014

Technology forecaster Paul Saffo involved Climate-KIC entrepreneurs and UC Berkeley MBA students in a warm-up session before his lecture at Haas School of Business.

 

The 2014 US Start-up Tour is a vital part of Climate-KIC’s mission to create opportunities for innovators to address climate change and shape the world’s next economy, highlighting the opportunities offered by Europe’s flourishing cleantech sector and creating new, global networks.

 

This year’s tour provides participants with vital international experience, mentoring, networking and potential investment opportunities bringing them to Silicon Valley and the Boston area between 7 and 18 September. Follow the tour at www.climate-kic.org/USA2014.

Chambray Dress: Bass Outlet

 

Forecast Cardigan: Made by Me

 

Boots: Naturalizers - perhaps unsurprisingly, I've worn a hole in the bottom of these :(

 

mscleaver.com/2011/05/16/a-chambray-day/

Hey Guys,

Please help me get my design printed by going to Threadless and scoring it!!!

:)

 

bit.ly/wcGt8

Forecast - India Economy Indicators

We're forecasting surprises at this Saturday night's (3/27) Paulkaiju Toy Show. Of course you can expect a bevy of hand painted vinyl toy masterpieces, including a small run of specially painted Party Balls, but also keep your eyes peeled for a handful of everyone's favorite swamp mascot and more "not for sale" giveaways from the Super7 Toy Vault, like a never released to the public unpainted purple Mummy Boy. Snacks and refreshments will be available and Paulkaiju will be in attendance. Festivities begin at 7 p.m., and line numbers will be handed out beginning at 6:30. If there are any toys available after the show, they will be made available for sale at midnight EST in the Super7 Florida Web Shop.

 

via www.super7florida.com/2010/03/yield-paul-kaiju-custom-toy...

"I managed to live in Seattle and never make contact with a ski, snowboard, or showshoe--until I reported this story. I was unsteady, but managed to stay upright throughout the interview." Photo by Scott Pattee.

I correctly forecast single costliest natural disaster ever world wide in great detail.

  

On the evening of June 15, 1896, the northeast coast of Hondo, the main island of Japan, was struck by a great earthquake wave (tsunami), which was more destructive of life and property than any earthquake convulsion of this century in that empire. The whole coastline of the San-Riku, the three provinces of Rikuzen, Rikuchu, and Rikuoku, from the island of Kinkwazan, 38° 20' north, northward for 175 miles, was laid waste by a great wave moving from the east and south, that varied in recorded height from 10 to 50 feet. A few survivors, who saw it advancing in the darkness, report its height as 80 to 100 feet. With a difference of but thirty minutes in time between the southern and northern points, it struck the San-Riku coast and in a trice obliterated towns and villages, killed 26,975 people out of the original population, and grievously wounded the 5,390 survivors. It washed away and wrecked 9,313 houses, stranded some 300 larger craft—steamers, schooners, and junks—and crushed or carried away 10,000 fishing boats, destroying property to the value of six million yen. Thousands of acres of arable land were turned to wastes, projecting rocks offshore were broken, overturned, or moved hundreds of yards, shallows and bars were formed, and in some localities the entire shoreline was changed.

  

They were all seafaring communities along this coast strip and the fisheries were the chief industry. The shipment of sea products to the great ports was the main connection with the outer world. A high mountain range bars communication with the trunk railway line of the island, and this picturesque, fiord-cut coast is so remote and so isolated that only two foreigners had been seen in the region in ten years, with the exception of the French mission priest, Father Raspail, who lost his life in the flood. With telegraph offices, instruments, and operators carried away, word came slowly to Tokyo, and with 50 to 100 miles of mountain roads between the nearest railway station and the seacoast aid was long in reaching the wretched survivors. When adequate idea of the calamity reached the capital and the cities, men-of-war, soldiers, sappers, surgeons, and nurses were quickly dispatched, and public sympathy found expression in contributions through the different newspapers, amounting to more than 250,000 yen, for the relief of the injured. The Japanese journalist and photographer were quickly on their way, and the vernacular press soon fed the public full of horrors, yet the first to reach the scene of the disaster was an American missionary, the Rev. Rothesay Miller, who made the usual three days' trip over the mountains in less than a day and a half on his American bicycle.

 

There were old traditions of such earthquake waves on this coast, one of two centuries ago doing some damage, and a tsunami of forty years ago and a lesser one of 1892 flooding the streets of Kamaishi and driving people to upper floors and the roofs of their houses. The barometer gave no warning, no indication of any unusual conditions on June 15, and the occurrence of thirteen light earthquake shocks during the day excited no comment. Rain had fallen in the morning and afternoon, and with a temperature of 80° to 90° the damp atmosphere was very oppressive. The villagers on that remote coast adhered to the old calendar in observing their local fêtes and holidays, and on that fifth day of the fifth moon had been celebrating the Girls' Festival. Rain had driven them indoors with the darkness, and nearly all were in their houses at eight o'clock, when, with a rumbling as of heavy cannonading out at sea, a roar, and the crash and crackling of timbers, they were suddenly engulfed in the swirling waters. Only a few survivors on all that length of coast saw the advancing wave, one of them telling that the water first receded some 600 yards from ghastly white sands and then the Wave stood like a black wall 80 feet in height, with phosphorescent lights gleaming along its crest. Others, hearing a distant roar, saw a dark shadow seaward and ran to high ground, crying "Tsunami! tsunami!" Some who ran to the upper stories of their houses for safety were drowned, crushed, or imprisoned there, only a few breaking through the roofs or escaping after the water subsided.

 

Shallow water and outlying islands broke the force of the wave in some places, and in long, narrow inlets or fiords the giant roller was broken into two, three, and even six waves, that crashed upon the shore in succession. Ships and junks were carried one and two miles inland, left on hilltops, treetops, and in the midst of fields uninjured or mixed up with the ruins of houses, the rest engulfed or swept seaward. Where the wave entered a fiord or bay it bore everything along to the head of the ravine or valley and left the mass of debris in a heap at the end. Where the coast was low and faced the open ocean the wave washed in and, retreating, carried everything back with it. Many survivors, swept away by the waters, were cast ashore on outlying islands, or seized bits of wreckage and kept afloat. On the open coast the wave came and withdrew within five minutes, while in long inlets the waters boiled and surged for nearly a half hour before subsiding. The best swimmers were helpless in the first swirl of water, and nearly all the bodies recovered were frightfully battered and mutilated, rolled over and driven against rocks, struck by and crushed between timbers. The force of the wave cut down groves of large pine trees to short stumps, snapped thick granite posts of temple gates and carried the stone cross-beams 309 yards away. Many people were lost through running back to save others or to save their valuables.

  

One loyal schoolmaster carried the emperor's portrait to a place of safety before seeking out his own family. A half-demented soldier, retired since the late war and continually brooding on a possible attack by the enemy, became convinced that the first cannonading sound was from a hostile fleet, and, seizing his sword, ran down to the beach to meet the foe. One village officer, mistaking the sound of crashing timbers for crackling flames, ran to high ground to see where the fire was, and thus saved his life. Another village officer, living on the edge of a hill, heard the crash and slid his screens open to look upon foaming waters nearly level with his veranda. In a moment the waters disappeared, leaving a black, empty level where the populous village had been a few minutes before. Four women clung to one man, seeking to escape to high ground, and their combined weight resisting the force of the receding wave they were all saved. The only survivors of another village were eight men who had been playing the game of "go" in a hillside temple. Eight children floated away and left on high ground were believed to be the only survivors of one village, until one hundred people were found who had been borne across and stranded on the opposite shores of their bay. One hundred and fifty people were found cast away on one island offshore. From two large villages on one bay only thirty young men survived, hardy, muscular young fishermen and powerful swimmers, yet in other places the strongest perished, and the aged and infirm, cripples, and tiny children were miraculously preserved. The wave flooded the cells of Okachi prison and the jailers broke the bolts and let the 195 convicts free. Only two convicts attempted to escape, the others waiting in good order until marched to the high ground by their keepers. The good Père Raspail had just reached Kamaishi from his all-day walk of 50 miles over the mountains and entered his inn, when his assistant called to him from the street. The priest came to the veranda, but in an instant the water was upon him. He was seen later, swimming, but evidently was struck by timbers or swept out to sea, as his body has not been recovered. Japanese men-of-war cruised for a week off Kamaishi, recovering bodies daily. The Japanese system of census enumeration is so complete and minute that the name of every person who lost his life was soon known, and the Official Gazette was able to state that out of a population of 6,529 at Kamaishi 4,985 were lost and 500 injured, while 953 dwellings and 867 warehouses and other structures were destroyed or carried away, and 176 ships carried inland or swept out and lost.

 

The survivors were so stunned with the appalling disaster that few could do anything for themselves or others. With houses, nets, and fishing-boats carried away and the fish retreating to further and deeper waters, starvation faced them, and, the great heat continuing while so many bodies were strewn along shore and imprisoned in ruins, the atmosphere fast became poisonous. The north-coast people are opposed to cremation and insisted on earth burial, which delayed the disposal of the dead and augmented the danger of pestilence. Disinfectants were sent in quantity, and the work of recovery and burial was so pressing that soldiers were put to it after all available coolies had been impressed. The Red Cross Society, with its hospitals and nurses, had difficulty in caring for all the wounded, the greater number of whom, besides requiring surgical aid, were suffering from pneumonia and internal inflammations consequent upon their long exposure in wet clothing without shelter and from the brine, fish oil, and sand breathed in and swallowed while in the first tumult of waters. Besides the generous relief fund subscribed by the people, the government has made large assignments from its available funds and sent stores of provisions, clothing, tools, etc., to the 60,000 homeless, ruined, bereaved, and starving people of the San-Riku coast.

 

The wave was plainly felt two hours later on the shores of the island of Yesso, 200 miles north of the center of disturbance on the San-Riku coast, the water advancing 80 feet beyond high-tide mark on the beach at Hakodate. Eight hours later there was a great disturbance of the waters on the shores of the Bonin islands, more than 700 miles southward, the water rising three or four feet and retreating violently. Six hours later, on the shores of Kaui, the most northern of the Hawaiian islands, distant 3,390 miles, the waters receded violently and washed on shore in a wave some inches above the normal height.

 

The plainest inference has been that the great wave was the result of an eruption, explosion, or other disturbance in the bed of the sea, 500 or 600 miles off the San-Riku coast. The most popular theory is that it resulted from the caving-in of some part of the wall or bed of the great "Tuscarora Deep," one of the greatest depressions of the ocean bed in the world, discovered in 1874 by the present Rear-Admiral Belknap, U. S. N., while in command of the U. S. S. Tuscarora, engaged in deep-sea surveys.

 

The "Tuscarora Deep" is nearly five and one-third statute miles in depth, being exceeded, so far as known, only by the still more profound depths discovered last year in the South Pacific by Commander A. F. Balfour, of the British Navy.

 

That disturbances were taking place in this tremendous abyss was again suggested at six o'clock on the morning of July 4, when the Canadian Pacific Railway Company's mail steamer Empress of Japan, sailing directly over it in a smooth sea, was shaken as if a propeller blade had been lost or the ship had struck an obstruction. Every one was roused by the peculiar shock, but no visible explanation was furnished. The destructive wave and this incident together should stimulate further investigation of this dangerous, bottomless pit of the Pacific ocean, which owes its discovery to United States explorers by deep-sea soundings.

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