So for any future updates you can simply go to this link to copy the elements:
Bubble Bubble Editor - topshelf-elementsBuild stuff without code and launch a startup without a tech-cofounder! Bubble is a visual programing language. Instead of typing code, use a visual editor to build applications.
The shelf-life of guar-based bubble juice seems to be more variable than juice made with other polymers. As a natural product, guar gum seems to be more vulnerable to biological contaminants than artificial polymers. A great many people experience no problems and some people report a brief shelf-life. Since I experience great shelf-life with both unopened bottles of bubble juice (I've used some a year after mixing) or used juice stored in its dipping containers, I can't really study the shelf-life issues. See: Shelf Life
The issue of greatest interest to us is the shelf-life of unused juice. The procedure described in this section is designed to help us determine what is contributing to poor shelf-life for those people that experience it.
Two months ago Chromium developers started working on a new user experience for downloads in Chrome, shortly after they added the downloads button to the toolbar and now they have added the basic structure of the download bubble (in Chrome Canary), this is what it looks like:
One of the comments in the patch also confirms that Google's ultimate goal is to replace the download bar (at the bottom of the window) with the download bubble in the toolbar, I say this because in some articles it was said that the downloads button would be some kind of "complement" to the download bar and it is not, this is the comment I'm talking about:
Abstract:Seeps found offshore in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf may mark zones of degrading subsea permafrost and related destabilization of gas hydrates. Sonar surveys provide an effective tool for mapping seabed methane fluxes and monitoring subsea Arctic permafrost seepage. The paper presents an overview of existing approaches to sonar estimation of methane bubble flux from the sea floor to the water column and a new method for quantifying CH4 ebullition. In the suggested method, the flux of methane bubbles is estimated from its response to insonification using the backscattering cross section. The method has demonstrated its efficiency in the case study of single- and multi-beam acoustic surveys of a large seep field on the Laptev Sea shelf.Keywords: active acoustic survey; seeps; permafrost; taliks; Laptev sea; East Siberian Arctic Shelf
We always seem to find ourselves with moving supplies. If you just came off a big move or you have some extra bubble wrap (thanks, Amazon), create this fun Ready to Roll Elf on the Shelf in Bubble Wrap idea.
This is a stunningly beautiful deep purple amethyst, it is decorated with distinct phantom shapes on the inside which give it a nice glow under light as seen in the photos. There is also an Enhydro bubble in this crystal!
This fun chalkboard styled as a speech bubble is great for serious reminders and messages as well as a bit of fun to say what you want to say! Perfect for the kitchen, study, children's bedrooms etc.
Metal fixing on the back to hang it onto the wall and a handy little shelf for chalk. A stick of chalk is included. Not recommended to be used with chalk pens.
An updated design proposal has been submitted by Amazon.com's architect with a "different look for the bubble-like office building that would be the visual focus of its three-block Denny Triangle development," the Seattle Times reported. The revised plan "gives the three intersecting spheres a more organic, cellular look instead of the angular panels of the original proposal."
Amazon will also build a two-block cycle track around its office towers on Seventh Avenue and "provide stalls for about 400 bikes in each of its towers," the Seattle Times wrote, noting that the cycle track project emerged last year from discussions between the city and Amazon, which "sought to acquire public alleys running through each of its three blocks. In exchange for those, Amazon agreed to pay for the Seventh Avenue cycle track on its blocks and to install bike crossings across Westlake, among other things."
"Cyclists are part of the fabric of Seattle, and so we're thrilled to be creating a new cycle track that will make the ride to and from downtown safer and easier for all cyclists in the community," said John Schoettler, Amazon director of global real estate and facilities.
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Amazon.com's new North Texas regional offices will be located in Plano. The Dallas Morning News reported that the Granite Park III building on the Dallas North Tollway in West Plano has been selected after the online retailer "scouted locations up and down the tollway for about 100,000 square feet of office space for the new operation." Amazon is also building distribution centers in Coppell and Haslet.
Klamath Knoll is a carbonate-capped accretionary ridge offshore southern Oregon. Bubble streams are extruding from beneath a carbonate shelf in 730 meter (2395 feet) water depth. These carbonate platforms are essential habitat for fish, deep-sea corals and invertebrates.
The U.S. West Coast continental shelf is known to host methane bubble streams, formerly thought to be rare. However, results of a recently published paper indicate that nearly 3,500 methane bubble streams, clustered into more than 1,300 methane emission sites, emanate from the seafloor from the Strait of Juan de Fuca in the north to the Mendocino Fracture Zone off northern California in the south, in an area known as the Cascadia Margin. Derived from data collected during multibeam mapping surveys on Ocean Exploration Trust's Exploration Vessel (E/V) Nautilus, the University of Washington's Research Vessel (R/V) Thompson, NOAA Ship Rainier and historical data, the discovery sheds new light on the extent and distribution of seafloor methane seeps. These seeps may provide important habitat for marine life and could play an important role in ocean warming.
In the Frontiers of Earth Science paper, scientists present the analyses of detailed seafloor and co-registered acoustic water column data from eight large-scale multibeam sonar surveys on the U.S. Cascadia Margin with previous historical data. The analyses resulted in a remarkably detailed view of where the 3,500 bubble streams (clustered into 1,300 methane emission sites) are located as well as the seafloor features associated with the seeps.
Off the coast of Washington, columns of bubbles rise from the seafloor, as if evidence of a sleeping dragon lying below. But these bubbles are methane that is squeezed out of sediment and rises up through the water. The locations where they emerge provide important clues to what will happen during a major offshore earthquake.
The authors analyzed data from multiple research cruises over the past decade that use modern sonar technology to map the seafloor and also create sonar images of gas bubbles within the overlying water. Their new results show more than 1,778 methane bubble plumes issuing from the waters off Washington State, grouped into 491 clusters.
The sediments off the Washington coast are formed as the Juan de Fuca oceanic plate plunges under the North American continental plate, scraping material off the ocean crust. These sediments are then heated, deformed and compressed against the rigid North American plate. The compression forces out both fluid and methane gas, which emerges as bubble streams from the seafloor.
The bubble columns are located most frequently at the boundary between the flat continental shelf and the steeply sloped section where the seafloor drops to the abyssal depths of the open ocean. This abrupt change in slope is also a tectonic boundary between the oceanic and continental plates.
A previous study from the UW had suggested that warming seawater might be releasing frozen methane in this region, but further analysis showed the methane bubbles off the Pacific Northwest coast arise from sites that have been present for hundreds of years, and are not related to global warming, Johnson said.
Instead, these gas emissions are a long-lived natural feature, and their prevalence contributes to the continental shelf area being such productive fishing grounds. Methane from beneath the seafloor provides food for bacteria which then produce large quantities of bacterial film. This biological material then feeds an entire ecological chain of life that enhances fish populations in those waters.
To understand why the methane bubbles occur here, the authors used archive geologic surveys conducted by the oil and gas companies in the 1970s and 1980s. The surveys, now publicly accessible, show fault zones in the sediment where the gas and fluid migrate upward until emerging from the seafloor.
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