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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: thousands + climate + skin  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Known for thousands of years for its rejuvenative properties, aloe ...
Baltimore Sun, United States - Jul 31, 2008
Aloe is listed as an ingredient on the labels of hundreds of skin care and beauty products, including lotions, sunblocks and cosmetics. ...
Earth??s most dramatic climate change happened in just one year ...
Fresh News, India - Aug 3, 2008
The injection of fresh water made the sea easier to freeze, and a new skin of ice began advancing south. The warm conveyor belt of Gulf Stream waters soon ...
Perk up your skin
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia - Jul 26, 2008
A big factor in this spending is our climate. We know more about how skin ages, the impact of sun exposure, and that waiting until your 30s or 40s to repair ...
The importance of biodiversity
The New Nation, Bangladesh - Aug 3, 2008
A recent study of cone snails, for example, has identified a painkiller that is up to a thousand times more effective than morphine, but without morphine's ...
Preserving the Landscape
RedOrbit, TX - Aug 3, 2008
Mount Tamalpais was a favorite subject, as were the native coast live oak trees that thrived in the Northern California climate. ...
2008 British Motor Show: Lotus Evora is Here - EXCLUSIVE VIDEO
Autochannel (press release) -
For instance, beneath the skin the entire front-end structure is a high tech aluminium sacrificial modular unit, attached to the main extruded aluminium tub ...
As Arctic sea ice recedes, coastal residents, marine mammals feel ...
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, AK - Jul 28, 2008
His skin was thick and wrinkled, and at times he seemed to shiver. ?It?s tired,? said a man who stopped by in his truck. When someone shined a spotlight ...
Ask the Pilot
Salon - Jul 31, 2008
The total area of damage may indeed be the size of a car, but much of it appears to be superficial -- the outer skin panels are torn away, revealing the ...
Shades of things to come is artist's vision
Las Cruces Sun-News, NM - Aug 3, 2008
"I'm working on getting a grant to do a color chart, just stopping people as they walk by and photographing them, maybe several thousand, if that's what it ...
All aboard the nuclear power superjet. Just don't ask about the ...
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jul 16, 2008
Climate change and the oil crisis are being used to project atomic energy as a green panacea. In fact it is a reckless gamble Are we witnessing the ...
Source: Google News

Temperature, skin color, per capita income, and IQ: An international perspective -
DI Templer, H Arikawa - Intelligence, 2006 - Elsevier
... of the climates one's ancestors have lived in for thousands of years. Another reason
to predict correlations of IQ with temperature and skin color is the ...

… the sea-surface skin temperature: the competing roles of the diurnal thermocline and the cool skin -
PJ Minnett - International Journal of Remote Sensing, 2003 - informaworld.com
... Many tens of thousands of such 'match-ups' between satellite and ... measured at satellite
height are closely related to the skin temperature, the application of ...

[PDF] A generalized algorithm for retrieving cloudy sky skin temperature from satellite thermal infrared … -
M Jin, RE Dickinson - Journal of Geophysical Research, 2000 - climate.eas.gatech.edu
... data sets for the global skin temperature, air tem- perature, wind speed, and surface
insolation, simulations from the NCAR Community Climate Model (CCM3 ...

A field study of temperature relations in the Galapagos marine iguana
GA Bartholomew - Copeia, 1966 - JSTOR
... Since skin and core temperatures closely ap- proximated each ... ure in part Thousands
of lizards at places ... temperature versus activity tem- climate in perature ...

Core Temperature Measurement: Methods and Current Insights. -
DS Moran, L Mendal - Sports Medicine, 2002 - sportsmedicine.adisonline.com
... 1868, 'Fever in Disease', consisted of thousands of observations ... to prove the importance
of measuring temperature. ... a method for measuring skin temperature (T sk ...

A physiological strain index to evaluate heat stress -
DS Moran, A Shitzer, KB Pandolf - American Journal of Physiology- Regulatory, Integrative and …, 1998 - Am Physiological Soc
... strain from 0 to a few hundreds or thousands, depending on ... barometric pressure, wind
velocity, ambient water vapor pressure, skin temperature, skin water vapor ...

PREVALENCE AND INCIDENCE PATTERN OF SKIN DISEASES IN CALCUTTA -
BN Banerjee, AK Datta, D Dermat - International Journal of Dermatology, 1973 - Blackwell Synergy
... that no less than two thousand skin cases including ... we analyze the incidence pattern
of skin diseases in ... we will dicuss health, hygiene and climate fac- tors ...

Diffusion of Water and Water Vapor Through Human Skin -
K Buettner - Journal of Applied Physiology, 1953 - Am Physiological Soc
... Sweat gland secretion is controlled in close correlation with the average
skin temperature, with exercise, and with mental processes. ...

[PDF] Climate change and human health -
AJ McMichael? - 2003 - who.int
... 163 Disorders of the skin 163 Eye disorders 167 ... References 176 Chapter 9. National
assessments of health impacts of climate change: a review 181 Introduction ...

[BOOK] Touching: The Human Significance of the Skin
A Montagu - 1972 - Harper & Row

Source: Google Scholar
 

Warmer climate will mean thousands more deaths from skin cancer

By FIONA MACRAE -

Deaths from skin cancer and heatstroke could soar and Britain could be blighted by malaria, salmonella and a host of other heat-loving diseases as global warming takes its toll, officials have warned.

Government experts have warned that climate could have huge implications for health, with a temperature rise of just 2C leading to skin cancer rates going up by more than 20 per cent.

The disease already affects more than 70,000 Britons a year and claims 2,000 lives.

Long, hot summers will bring also bring with them the risk of heatstroke, malaria and food poisoning, the Department of Health and Health Protection Agency have warned.

A severe heatwave - where temperatures hit 27C for at least nine days - could quickly kill 3,000 Britons.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

While there is a one in 40 chance of such extreme temperatures in the south east of England by 2012, such heatwaves will become more frequent, and more severe, in the second half of the century.

Malaria could gain a foothold in the UK, with rising temperatures allowing malaria-carrying mosquitoes to thrive in the UK.

Once here, the shallow pools in riverbeds dried out by the sun could provide ideal breeding conditions.

The 111-page report, Health Effects of Climate Change in the UK, also warns: "There will also be greater exposure to mosquitoes as people stay outdoors in warmer summer evenings, or sleep with the windows open."

It notes, however, that malaria outbreaks are likely to be rare - and kept in check by modern medicine.

A switch towards outdoor living would also increase of infections spread by ticks, such as Lyme disease, which, in rare cases, can cause serious heart problems.

Research has shown that other bugs more usually associated with the tropics are spreading to Europe.

Among the most dangerous is the warm-water dwelling Vibrio vulnificus.

Picked up in open wounds while swimming or from eating shellfish, the flesh-eating bacteria is fatal in 50 per cent of cases.

Usually confined to the warmer coastal areas of the US, there have been several recent cases in Europe and at least one death.

Creepy crawlies were are already familiar with may also pose more of a problem as temperatures rise, with midges and fleas both thriving in warm weather.

Allergic reactions from bee and wasp stings and from caterpillar hairs may also get worse.

The report also warns of the "buffet factor", in which flies thriving on rising temperatures will increasingly spread food poisoning bugs.

At the moment, an estimated one in five Britons is struck down with sickness and diarrhoea each year after eating contaminated meat, fish, eggs, milk and other dairy products.

However, some microbiologists fear cases of food poisoning could soar to ten times their current level.

Among the bugs likely to benefit from a warmer climate are salmonella and campylobacter, which are often caught from eating undercooked chicken.

Water polluted during storms could also spread disease rising levels of air pollution will exacerbate asthma and other respiratory diseases.

Global warming is expected to lead to a 3C rise in Britain's temperatures by the end of the century and cause extremes in weather from hotter and more frequent heatwaves to more severe storms and floods.

Britain is already feeling the effects of climate change, with last summer the hottest on record.

This year is already shaping-up to be another record-breaker, with last month the hottest April for at least 150 years.

Health Minister Caroline Flint said it was important that hospitals and nursing homes adapted to ensure they were resilient to the effects of heat, gales and floods.

Professor Robert Maynard, of the Health Protection Agency, said: "The present scientific consensus is that climate is changing and that human activity is contributing significantly to this.

"We have to prepare for the consequences and consider the possible health impacts.

"Some aspects are positive, for example, there are likely to be fewer deaths due to cold weather, but others are potentially negative, including increases in food poisoning and dangers from both floods and droughts."

 
 
 
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