Features

Sign up to the Working It newsletter for everything you need to get ahead at work

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Markets   来源:Investigations  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Mexican bullfighter Diego Silveti touches an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe in the bullring chapel before a bullfight in Aguascalientes, Mexico, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

Mexican bullfighter Diego Silveti touches an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe in the bullring chapel before a bullfight in Aguascalientes, Mexico, Sunday, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

Celebrations were cut short because referee Thomas Bramall had blown his whistle before the goal was scored, which meant VAR could not overturn the decision.Video replays were inconclusive as to whether Bayindir was in control of the ball, having initially let it slip from his grasp.

Sign up to the Working It newsletter for everything you need to get ahead at work

“The TV is clear ... but of course we have to accept it,” Emery said. “It was a mistake. A big mistake.”Villa’s fury was compounded when Amad Diallo put United ahead in the 76th minute. Christian Eriksen added another from the penalty spot late on — prompting sarcastic applause from Emery, who also waited to confront the referee after the final whistle.Villa, which was a Champions League quarterfinalist this year, qualified for the Europa League in sixth place.

Sign up to the Working It newsletter for everything you need to get ahead at work

Man United finished 15th in the 20-team league.In a season in which Newcastle ended its decades long trophy-drought, it very nearly blew the Champions League at the death.

Sign up to the Working It newsletter for everything you need to get ahead at work

Having started the day in fourth, the English League Cup winner dropped out of the top five when Carlos Alcaraz struck for Everton in the second half at St James’ Park.

But Newcastle ended the day and the season in fifth — ahead of Villa on goal difference — courtesy of the events at Old Trafford.Some of the moisture that fueled the storms came from the Gulf of Mexico, where water temperatures were abnormally warm by 1.2°C (2.2°F) compared to pre-industrial temperatures. That warming was made 14 times more likely due to climate change, according to the researchers from universities and meteorological agencies in the United States and Europe.

Rapid analyses from the WWA use peer-reviewed methods to study an extreme weather event and distill it down to the factors that caused it. This approach lets scientists analyze which contributing factors had the biggest influence and how the event could have played out in a world without climate change.The analysis found a rainfall event of April’s intensity could occur in the central Mississippi Valley region about once every 100 years. Even heavier downpours are expected to hit the region in the future unless the world rapidly slashes emissions of polluting gases such as carbon dioxide and methane that causes temperatures to rise, the study said.

“That one in 100 years … is likely to go down to once every few decades,” said Ben Clarke, a researcher at the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London and the study’s lead author. “If we continue to burn fossil fuels, events like this will not only continue to occur, but they’ll keep getting more dangerous.”Heavier and more persistent rainfall is expected with climate change because the atmosphere holds more moisture as it warms. Warming ocean temperatures result in higher evaporation rates, which means more moisture is available to fuel storms.

copyright © 2016 powered by NewsNexusLinkLiveLog   sitemap