
Advanced Search
advanced search
Bulletin nº:
- (-) Remove Vol 56 (3) - 2007 filter Vol 56 (3) - 2007
- (-) Remove Vol 57 (1) - 2008 filter Vol 57 (1) - 2008
- Vol 67 (1) - 2018 (21) Apply Vol 67 (1) - 2018 filter
- Vol 64 (1) - 2015 (18) Apply Vol 64 (1) - 2015 filter
- Vol 68 (1) - 2019 (17) Apply Vol 68 (1) - 2019 filter
- Vol 63 (1) - 2014 (16) Apply Vol 63 (1) - 2014 filter
- Vol 67 (2) - 2018 (16) Apply Vol 67 (2) - 2018 filter
- Vol 63 (2) - 2014 (15) Apply Vol 63 (2) - 2014 filter
- Vol 64 (2) - 2015 (15) Apply Vol 64 (2) - 2015 filter
- Vol 58 (1) - 2009 (13) Apply Vol 58 (1) - 2009 filter
- Vol 65 (1) - 2016 (13) Apply Vol 65 (1) - 2016 filter
- Vol 66 (1) - 2017 (13) Apply Vol 66 (1) - 2017 filter
- Vol 56 (4) - 2007 (12) Apply Vol 56 (4) - 2007 filter
- Vol 57 (3) - 2008 (12) Apply Vol 57 (3) - 2008 filter
- Vol 57 (4) - 2008 (12) Apply Vol 57 (4) - 2008 filter
- Vol 59 (1) - 2010 (12) Apply Vol 59 (1) - 2010 filter
- Vol 60 (1) - 2011 (12) Apply Vol 60 (1) - 2011 filter
- Vol 62 (Special Issue) - 2013 (12) Apply Vol 62 (Special Issue) - 2013 filter
- Vol 65 (2) - 2016 (12) Apply Vol 65 (2) - 2016 filter
- Vol 66 (2) - 2017 (12) Apply Vol 66 (2) - 2017 filter
- Vol 68 (2) - 2019 (12) Apply Vol 68 (2) - 2019 filter
- Vol 58 (3) - 2009 (11) Apply Vol 58 (3) - 2009 filter
- Vol 60 (2) - 2011 (11) Apply Vol 60 (2) - 2011 filter
- Vol 62 (1) - 2013 (11) Apply Vol 62 (1) - 2013 filter
- Vol 57 (2) - 2008 (10) Apply Vol 57 (2) - 2008 filter
- Vol 61 (1) - 2012 (10) Apply Vol 61 (1) - 2012 filter
- Vol 61 (2) - 2012 (10) Apply Vol 61 (2) - 2012 filter
- Vol 62 (2) - 2013 (10) Apply Vol 62 (2) - 2013 filter
- Vol 59 (2) - 2010 (9) Apply Vol 59 (2) - 2010 filter
- Vol 58 (2) - 2009 (7) Apply Vol 58 (2) - 2009 filter
28 contents match your search.
Bulletin nº Vol 56 (3) - 2007
1
Publish Date: 1 July 2007
In the heart of every meteorologist and climatologist beats the soul of a detective. We all appreciate a good mystery and, for those interested in weather, the elements of our atmosphere can often provide the most fascinating puzzles.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
This article discusses some aspects of strategies for enabling the practical use of space observations of weather, climate and water resources for societal benefit.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
Safety at sea has been a primary driver for internationally coordinated marine observations since the foundation of WMO. Over the past two decades, demand has steadily grown for expanding marine observation systems to support other applications that require global observational datasets and prediction products for both the ocean and the overlying atmosphere.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
Contents A fuller account of the January Bulletin 50 years ago is available in the February 2008 edition of MeteoWorld on the Web. The contents of the January 1958 Bulletin...
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
More than 70 agencies in some 50 WMO Member countries contribute ozone observations to WMO’s Global Atmosphere Watch providing data essential for understanding the state of, and changes to, the ozone layer.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
The year 2007, which had thus far been so propitious to the international climate change scientific community, thanks to the approval of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to the IPCC and the auspicious roadmap agreement reached at the UNFCCC’s COP-13 in Bali, among other landmarks, concluded for us all very sadly on 30 December with the death, in Stockholm, of Bert Bolin.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
The non-uniformity of change highlights the challenges of regional climate change that has considerable spatial structure and temporal variability. A foundation of climate research and future projections comes from observations.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
Scientific progress has equipped mankind with tools that can possibly reduce the adverse impacts of natural hazards, enabling some capacity to predict in advance what will happen so that, potentially at least, some kind of preventive action can be taken.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
Hydrological observations are inseparable from the uses to which they are put. They are central to addressing water resources problems related to floods and droughts, agricultural sustainability and global climate change.
Bulletin nº Vol 57 (1) - 2008
1
Publish Date: 1 January 2008
The theme for World Meteorological Day (23 March) in 2008, and the theme for this issue of the WMO Bulletin, is “Observing our planet for a better future”. The feature...