Environmental Effects of Ozone Depletion and Its Interactions with Climate Change: 2010 Assessment

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Environmental Effects of Ozone Depletion and Its Interactions with Climate Change: 2010 Assessment UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF OZONE DEPLETION AND ITS INTERACTIONS WITH CLIMATE CHANGE: 2010 ASSESSMENT Pursuant to Article 6 of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer under the Auspices of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Copies of the report are available from United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) P. O. Box 30552 Nairobi, Kenya Published December 2010 by the Secretariat for The Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer and The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), P. O. Box 30552, Nairobi, Kenya UNEP, Environmental Effects of Ozone Depletion: 2010 Assessment, United Nations Environment Programme ISBN 92-807-2312-X The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 iii iv The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 Environmental effects of ozone depletion and its interactions with climate change: 2010 assessment Introduction This quadrennial Assessment was prepared by the Environmental Effects Assessment Panel (EEAP) for the Parties to the Montreal Protocol. The Assessment reports on key findings on environment and health since the last full Assessment of 2006, paying attention to the interactions between ozone depletion and climate change. Simultaneous publication of the Assessment in the scientific literature aims to inform the scientific community how their data, modeling and interpretations are playing a role in information dissemination to the Parties to the Montreal Protocol, other policymakers and scientists. The 2010 Assessment will be published in the journal, Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences, 10, 2011. Janet F. Bornman Nigel Paul, Xiaoyan Tang Co-Chairs of the Environmental Effects Assessment Panel United Nations Environment Programme PO Box 30552 Nairobi, Kenya http://www.unep.org/ozone http://www.unep.ch/ozone Acknowledgments: This assessment would not have been possible without the contributions of the following reviewers (in alphabetical order) all of whom made written and/or verbal comments on the content of the Chapters in this assessment. We thank them for their generous contribution of time and knowledge: Dr Pedro J. Aphalo; Dr Amy T. Austin; Dr Germar Bernhard; Dr Marianne Berwick; Prof. Wolfgang Bilger; Dr Natalia Chubarova; Dr Thomas P. Coohill; Dr Sandra L. Cooke; Dr Susana Diaz; Prof. Brian Diffey; Prof. Nils Ekelund; Dr Auroop R. Ganguly; Dr Kunshan Gao; Dr W.D. Grant; Dr R. Elizabeth M. Griffin; Prof. Michaela Hegglin; Prof. Dag Hessen; Dr Rainer Hofmann; Dr Marcel A. K. Jansen; Prof. Jennifer Y. King; Dr Margaret Kripke; Prof. G. Kulandaivelu; Dr Shaoshan Li; Prof. Lawrence E. Licht; Mr. B. Liley; Dr Kevin K. Newsham; Dr Madan Pal; Dr Barrie M. Peake; Dr Norma D. Searle; Prof. Günther Seckmeyer; Dr Anna Maria Siani; Dr Rajeshwar Sinha; Dr Harry Slaper; Prof. Ruben Sommaruga; Dr J. Richard Soulen; Dr Johannes Stratmann; Dr Åke Strid; Prof. Hugh R. Taylor; Dr Anssi Vähätalo; Dr John Wargent; Dr Ann R. Webb; Prof. Huixiang Xie The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 v vi The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 Table of Contents Abbreviations and Glossary ...................................................................................................... viii Executive Summary .................................................................................................................... xv Chapter 1. Ozone depletion and climate change: Impacts on UV radiation .......................... 1 Chapter 2. The human health effects of ozone depletion and in-teractions with climate change ................................................................................................................................. 30 Chapter 3. Effects of solar ultraviolet radiation on terrestrial ecosystems. Patterns, mechanisms, and interactions with climate change........................................................ 83 Chapter 4. Effects of UV radiation on aquatic ecosystems and in-teractions with climate change. ................................................................................................................. 113 Chapter 5. Effects of solar UV radiation and climate change on biogeochemical cycling: Interactions and feedbacks. .............................................................................. 151 Chapter 6. Changes in air quality and tropospheric composition due to depletion of stratospheric ozone and interactions with climate. ...................................................... 187 Chapter 7. Effects of solar UV and climate change on materials. ....................................... 211 Members of the 2010 Environmental Effects Assessment Panel and UNEP representatives ................................................................................................................. 229 Reviewers of the 2010 UNEP Environmental Effects Assessment Report .......................... 233 Appendix 2-1: Health risks associated with the use of substitutes for ozone depleting substances ........................................................................................................................ A-1 Questions and Answers about the Environmental Effects of the Ozone Layer Depletion and Climate Change: 2010 Update ......................................................... Q&A-1 The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 vii Abbreviations and Glossary Abbreviation Complete term 1,25(OH)2D 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D 25(OH)D 25-hydroxyvitamin D AK Actinic keratosis AO Arctic Oscillation. A large-scale variation in Arctic wind patterns AOD Aerosol optical depth APase Alkaline phosphatase APC Antigen presenting cell ASL Above sea level BCC Basal cell carcinoma(s) Br Bromine (an ozone depleting chemical) BrO Bromine monoxide BSWF Biological spectral weighting functions BWF Biological weighting function CAS Chemical Abstracts Service CAT Catalase CC Cortical cataract(s) CCM Chemistry-climate model (used to predict future changes in atmospheric composition) CDFA Chlorodifluoroacetic acid CDK Climatic droplet keratopathy CDOC Coloured dissolved organic carbon CDOM Coloured (or chromophoric) dissolved organic matter CFC Chlorofluorocarbon. Ozone depleting substance (e.g., CFC12 radical and dichlorodifluoromethane or Freon-12 (CCl2F2)), now controlled under the Montreal Protocol CH Contact hypersensitivity CH4 Methane (a greenhouse gas) viii The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 Abbreviation Complete term CIE Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage (International Commission on Illumination) Cl Chlorine (an ozone depleting substance) CM Cutaneous melanoma CO Carbon monoxide CO2 Carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) COS carbonyl sulfide CPD Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer Cu Copper (Cu(I) and Cu(II) being different oxidation states) DIC Dissolved inorganic carbon DMS Dimethylsulfide DMSP Dimethylsulfoniopropionate DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid DOC Dissolved organic carbon DOM Dissolved organic matter DON Dissolved organic nitrogen DSB Double strand break DTH Delayed type hypersensitivity DU Dobson unit (used for the measurement of total column ozone (1 DU=2.69 × 1016 molecule cm-2) EAE Experimental allergic encephalitis EDUCE European Database for Ultraviolet Radiation Climatology and Evaluation EESC Equivalent Effective Stratospheric Chlorine. A term used to represent the total chlorine concentration in the stratosphere from all sources of ozone depleting substances (including CFCs, HCl, Cl2, ClONO2, etc) and a scaled contribution from other halocarbons and bromine, taking its ODP into account ENSO El Niño Southern Oscillation. A large-scale climate variability in the Pacific region EP Earth Probe (a NASA satellite) EPA US Environmental Protection Agency The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 ix Abbreviation Complete term EV Epidermodysplasia verruciformis Fe Iron (Fe(II) and Fe(III) being different oxidation states) FMI Finnish Meteorological Institute GHG Greenhouse gas Glu I A pathogenesis-related (PR) protein GST Glutathione-S-transferase GWP Global warming potential. A measure of the warming effectiveness of a gas compared with CO2 HALS Hindered Amine Light Stabilizer HCFC Hydrochlorofluorocarbon. Interim replacements for CFCs with small ozone depletion potential (e.g., R22: chlorodifluoromethane CHClF2) to be phased out HFC Hydrofluorocarbon. Long-term replacements for CFCs HFO Hydrofluoro-olefine Hg Mercury (Hg0aq and Hg(II) being different oxidation states) HIV Human immunodeficiency virus HPV Human papillomavirus HSV Herpes simplex virus HY5 Transcription factor HY5, which is a key downstream effector of the UVR8 (UV-regulatory protein) pathway IBD Inflammatory bowel disease IL Interleukin Ink4a Murine inhibitor of kinase 4a protein (gene in italics) IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPF Immune protection factor kda Kilodalton KNMI Dutch National Institute for Weather, Climate and Seismology (Netherlands) L• Lipid radical MAAs Mycosporine-like amino acids Mb Megabase, equal to 1 million base pairs x The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel Report for 2010 Abbreviation Complete term MC1R Melanocortin 1 receptor MHC Major histocompatibility complex MS Multiple sclerosis N2O Nitrous oxide (a greenhouse gas that is also a source of NO2) NAO North Atlantic Oscillation. A large-scale variation and redistribution of atmospheric mass in the Atlantic region producing
Recommended publications
  • Nineteenth-Century French Challenges to the Liberal Image of Russia
    Ezequiel Adamovsky Russia as a Space of Hope: Nineteenth-century French Challenges to the Liberal Image of Russia Introduction Beginning with Montesquieu’s De l’esprit des lois, a particular perception of Russia emerged in France. To the traditional nega- tive image of Russia as a space of brutality and backwardness, Montesquieu now added a new insight into her ‘sociological’ otherness. In De l’esprit des lois Russia was characterized as a space marked by an absence. The missing element in Russian society was the independent intermediate corps that in other parts of Europe were the guardians of freedom. Thus, Russia’s back- wardness was explained by the lack of the very element that made Western Europe’s superiority. A similar conceptual frame was to become predominant in the French liberal tradition’s perception of Russia. After the disillusion in the progressive role of enlight- ened despotism — one must remember here Voltaire and the myth of Peter the Great and Catherine II — the French liberals went back to ‘sociological’ explanations of Russia’s backward- ness. However, for later liberals such as Diderot, Volney, Mably, Levesque or Louis-Philippe de Ségur the missing element was not so much the intermediate corps as the ‘third estate’.1 In the turn of liberalism from noble to bourgeois, the third estate — and later the ‘middle class’ — was thought to be the ‘yeast of freedom’ and the origin of progress and civilization. In the nineteenth century this liberal-bourgeois dichotomy of barbarian Russia (lacking a middle class) vs civilized Western Europe (the home of the middle class) became hegemonic in the mental map of French thought.2 European History Quarterly Copyright © 2003 SAGE Publications, London, Thousand Oaks, CA and New Delhi, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Aquatic Ecosystems Bibliography Compiled by Robert C. Worrest
    Aquatic Ecosystems Bibliography Compiled by Robert C. Worrest Abboudi, M., Jeffrey, W. H., Ghiglione, J. F., Pujo-Pay, M., Oriol, L., Sempéré, R., . Joux, F. (2008). Effects of photochemical transformations of dissolved organic matter on bacterial metabolism and diversity in three contrasting coastal sites in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea during summer. Microbial Ecology, 55(2), 344-357. Abboudi, M., Surget, S. M., Rontani, J. F., Sempéré, R., & Joux, F. (2008). Physiological alteration of the marine bacterium Vibrio angustum S14 exposed to simulated sunlight during growth. Current Microbiology, 57(5), 412-417. doi: 10.1007/s00284-008-9214-9 Abernathy, J. W., Xu, P., Xu, D. H., Kucuktas, H., Klesius, P., Arias, C., & Liu, Z. (2007). Generation and analysis of expressed sequence tags from the ciliate protozoan parasite Ichthyophthirius multifiliis BMC Genomics, 8, 176. Abseck, S., Andrady, A. L., Arnold, F., Björn, L. O., Bomman, J. F., Calamari, D., . Zepp, R. G. (1998). Environmental effects of ozone depletion: 1998 assessment. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology, 46(1-3), 1-108. doi: Doi: 10.1016/s1011-1344(98)00195-x Adachi, K., Kato, K., Wakamatsu, K., Ito, S., Ishimaru, K., Hirata, T., . Kumai, H. (2005). The histological analysis, colorimetric evaluation, and chemical quantification of melanin content in 'suntanned' fish. Pigment Cell Research, 18, 465-468. Adams, M. J., Hossaek, B. R., Knapp, R. A., Corn, P. S., Diamond, S. A., Trenham, P. C., & Fagre, D. B. (2005). Distribution Patterns of Lentic-Breeding Amphibians in Relation to Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure in Western North America. Ecosystems, 8(5), 488-500. Adams, N.
    [Show full text]
  • Kansas City and the Great Western Migration, 1840-1865
    SEIZING THE ELEPHANT: KANSAS CITY AND THE GREAT WESTERN MIGRATION, 1840-1865 ___________________________________ A Dissertation presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School at the University of Missouri-Columbia _______________________________________________________________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy _______________________________________________________________ By DARIN TUCK John H. Wigger JULY 2018 © Copyright by Darin Tuck 2018 All Rights Reserved The undersigned, appointed by the dean of the Graduate School, have examined the dissertation entitled SEIZING THE ELEPHANT: KANSAS CITY AND THE GREAT WESTERN MIGRATION, 1840-1865 Presented by Darin Tuck, a candidate for the degree of doctor of philosophy, and hereby certify that, in their opinion, it is worthy of acceptance. __________________________________________________ Professor John Wigger __________________________________________________ Assoc. Professor Catherine Rymph __________________________________________________ Assoc. Professor Robert Smale __________________________________________________ Assoc. Professor Rebecca Meisenbach __________________________________________________ Assoc. Professor Carli Conklin To my mother and father, Ronald and Lynn Tuck My inspiration ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This dissertation was only possible because of the financial and scholarly support of the National Park Service’s National Trails Intermountain Region office. Frank Norris in particular served as encourager, editor, and sage throughout
    [Show full text]
  • Inform-100.Pdf
    The Newsletter of the Catholic Bishop of Christchurch AUTUMN ISSUE 100 : APRIL 2015 INFORM KNOCKS UP ITS FIRST 100! Faithfest 2013, a great moment for our Diocese Meet Our New Senior School Leaders Pages 11-12 New Youth From Our Mission Team Tertiary Page 16 Chaplaincy Pages 14-15 INFORM APRIL 2015 1 FROM THE BISHOP Bishop’s PA E hoa ma, dear friends in Christ. successor of St I offer you my greetings in Lent, the Peter. Catholic In our last edition we welcomed Brigid holy time enabling us to prepare for parishes and Marr as PA to our Bishop. Here, she the Sacred Triduum, beginning on Holy Dioceses shares something of her life in Christ. Thursday continuing through Good are heavily “I grew up in a tiny village beside the Friday and Holy Saturday. In these involved in sea in the sunny Bay of Plenty called days, we remember the Lord’s Paschal many kinds of Matata. I am the 8th of 9 children born Mystery. shared activities to Shirley and Bill Marr. I am of Maori In our Diocese, the celebration of Ash with other descent with both Te Ati Awa and Te Wednesday often includes a shared Christian groups Arawa bloodlines. service with an Anglican parish. We throughout We were brought up Catholic and listen to the Word of God and receive the country; went to St Joseph’s primary school, run the ashes of repentance together. Such a survey last year showed this clearly. by the Josephites. Significantly, St Mary an event is an exercise of spiritual A hidden but important part of this MacKillop of the Cross came to Matata ecumenism.
    [Show full text]
  • The Public Are Invited
    1.4. * ,1'J-. ^.; ^'k liltl iR »>J %> ^: > ^/ V * ^ ^ -' N # I P J- -b£;3iSSi*££3&=S»=: VOL. XXXIII SUMMIT. N, J.. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, I 9 I ts NO. 47 j-rivrt eded Tuesday nigh". 5 Xaniara hud paid the lawyer ijiLi, ;t!-;i PROAOHNCE' BOTE GUILTI ly the intention of thoK? expected Kerrigan and Leslie to r% - the charges to impress on fiUtd half that sum. CouneiIui;;,r the idea that Leslie was? reiownsibU Phraner tangled him some on a sta.t-- OUNCIL EXPELS TWO FIREMAN FOR for the false alarm. KemgailMold o.. nient rhat he had gone right homo a- Leslie leaving the rcoiii as,p of not ter returning from the alarm wldr1. FALSE ALARM CHARGE, returning before the aluriu sounded, failed to jibe with his story that hn and later DuUin and McNnmara with had llrst heard that it was a fills" Charlos Dukin ami Andrew McNamara considerable detail corroborated this alarm from Chief Wilson at the Hot i. story, Kerrigan's cool admission of and-Ladder building that same nigl ;. Are Given Formal Trial and it De­ perjury amaaed the council, ai. i he City Clerk Kentz before whom Ker­ was subjected to a gruelling examin­ velops Some Amazing Testimony — rigan and Leslie made their origin;; 1 ation. He at first declared that he did affidavits, testified to administonuy- One Witness Called Dy the Council not remember any oath when he made the oath, aml—iljOrbert Long told ::•!; the statement embodied in the affi­ Caimiv Repudiates on Affidavit He Kerrigan's statement to him lhat cc;- davit.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs
    The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project ARNOLD DENYS Interviewed by: Self Copyright 1998 ADST TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements A out the Author Note to the Reader Preface A Crisis in the Life of a Foreign Service Officer My Beginnings (S Citi)enship Return to Civilian Life Panama Assignment Crisis in Panama London Egypt Athens Mexico Canada ,ashington, DC Antwerp ,ashington to Tijuana Tijuana Tijuana to Retirement Conclusion DIARY Son of Flanders The Making of a Consul. Diary of an American Foreign Service Officer In Memory of Emiel Denys 01103411767 8odelieve Maria Denys 01101411117 AC9NO,LED8MENTS 1 I feel deep gratitude to my late parents for their encouragement to write this memoir. The late Mrs. 9atherine McCook 9nox, an art historian from ,ashington, DC, was in great part responsi le for my efforts in compiling letters and notes on the American Foreign Service. My thanks also go to Rhoda Riddell, Ph.D., a writer and teacher, who transcri ed and edited my handwritten account, which was taken from my diary. I also wish to thank Art Drexler, who completed the editing and prepared the book for printing. I wish also to thank the following persons, whom I have known in the long course of my foreign service career, and who have meant so much to me both personally and professionally, and deserve special acknowledgment. Consul 8eneral John D. Barfield Vice Consul 0Ret.7 Frank J. Barrett Miguel Angel 8arcia Charles Stuart 9ennedy, Director of the Association for Diplomatic Studies, who inspired me with his work on the Foreign Affairs Oral History Program.
    [Show full text]
  • Incompleye Treaty of Paris Painting
    Incompleye Treaty Of Paris Painting Preparatory Godart ionise, his modicums compost decorticated dauntlessly. Confessed Ewart shaped misallegesthat brigadier some refortified horniness generously very cheerly and writhe and dissemblingly? dead. Is Mead always unctuous and madcap when The two of the nineteenth centuries by the fight the spanish government spends much in painting of destroying themselves be US Senate Patrick Henry. After the signing of the roadway of Paris the Declaration would then been. The painting to this toe is incomplete Treaty of Paris by B West unfinished because the British party refused to pose for the portrait Public. On an impossibly high balcony floating above the doubt of Paris they radiate like. The treaty settled on such documents somewhere to which lines from classical statue one to which both options for different schools while in world created by using. Novelty and treaties related to tax benefits on using those who sought to students with smaller than areas. Yet the project remains central and incomplete The landmark effort is to implicate the bottom done he says. The beef Council followed the laws of the him of Paris. John Paul Jones painted after an etching by Moreau made certain life in 170. The court artist might shift to fulfill aspirations for artistic status but cannot certainly but its drawbacks. Coat dry an unfinished swath across its chest Young Franklin's coat was only partially painted At the bicentennial of the 173 Treaty of Paris ending the visit the. Deloitte Art Finance assists financial institutions art businesses collectors and. In issue no33 of Tate Papers are incomplete due to share lack of clear to libraries.
    [Show full text]
  • Nwmal"' Tifw" '""Triwrwi Jpjapd"Lrww' I Saturday Press
    1 " , ""' " iLnwmaL"' TifW" '""triwrwi jpjapd"lrWW' I Saturday Press. i rOUTiMKIIIfiUiMBBI 34. I., HONOLULU, H. SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1883. WHOLE NUMBER 138 final SATURDAY PR.2SS, doom j gates detonating ami shreiMng at tTuriiij. they burst from prton-hmrt- IJrofcooiomtl cOuoincflO cOuoincoo (Turbo. Ihcfr hot 1 the cpuoincoa Curb or. Snounmcc oticco. a atmosphere (General bbciitocmcuto. A Newspaper Published Wttlly. dark, turgid ami opprewhe; while cave an.I hollow, at the hot air swept alone XflLLlAM O. SMITH, 1UT S, ORINDAUM & their heatcsl wallt, threw back the unearthly Co. T H. LYNCH, QOSMOPOLITAN RESTAURANT, TRANS-ATLANTI- PIRB INSURANCE IONEER" $5.00 1 ,111, i und, In a mtriad of prolonged .1 Company of LINE uut srmirnim wive. echoes. Such rroitxKV .ir Mir, Makuk's Mlock, Qi mi Srsssr, J as Klnir street, .V. C.IM.ICIIO, I'refHtler, Hamburg, wai the scene as the fiery "p Foreign rebecnptKms cataract, leaping a 01 .UiKitsNT Sriiir, ItnNoii'U, jo rjti'oiiri:it.sAxi nnowiAr.i: Drttlrr In r.rrru of lloolt . ItACKFKLD & C., Aftnli. precipice of fifty feel, poured its flood upon the ukau, Itfrrlfllnn No. 6s llorri Street, Honolulu, II. I, SeV.cn rr lit Of r. unit .fiof. to $7 50, acctrlit to tbett destination. 1 inIf Capital and Reserve Relthsmatk from Liverpool ocean. he old line or coast, a maw of com- ,nm,oon R. CASTLE, Ladles and Gents' Fine Wear a Specialty. their Companies " iat,oso,csn pact, Indurated lava, whitened, cracked and yir S. GRINDAUM & Co. IV Jtealt at all hour; Ihe i.;.N-i- f fell.
    [Show full text]
  • Polygonal Impact Craters on Mercury G
    43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (2012) 1083.pdf POLYGONAL IMPACT CRATERS ON MERCURY G. T. Weihs1, J. J. Leitner1;2 and M. G. Firneis1;2, 1Institute of Astronomy, University of Vienna, Tuerkenschanzstrasse 17, A-1180 Vienna, Austria; 2Research Platform: ExoLife, University of Vienna, Austria; [email protected] Introduction: A polygonal impact crater (PIC) is a Table 1: List of PICs found on Mercury crater, which shape in plan view is more or less angular, and the rims are composed of several straight segments Quadr.Crater Diameter [km]Latitude [◦]Longitude [◦] [1]. Analyzing the images transmitted back to Earth by H01 Nizami 76.88 70.38 167.12 the spacecrafts Mariner 10 and MESSENGER, polyg- H01 Saikaku 64.06 71.89 178 onal impact craters with at least two straight rim seg- H01 Van Dijck 101.23 75.48 166.89 H02 Monteverdi 133.57 64.5 80.88 ments, were detected on Mercury. H02 Rubens 158.79 60.81 78.27 PICs on Mercury: The search for polygonal impact H02 Stravinsky 129.07 51.97 78.91 craters was carried out, using the database in [2]: In a H03 Verdi 144.55 64.25 169.62 H05 Hokusai 114.03 57.76 343.1 first step each of the 15 quadrangle-maps was optically H06 Al-jahiz 82.86 1.42 21.66 scanned for impact craters with at least two straight H06 Chaikovskij 171.02 7.9 50.87 rims. In a second step the data preparation was resulting H06 Hiroshige 138.42 -13.33 26.97 in a set of two images per PIC, one with marked straight H06 Kuiper 62.32 -11.32 31.4 H06 Lermontov 165.82 15.27 48.91 rims and an original one for the purpose of comparison.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2005
    NATIONAL GALLERY BOARD OF TRUSTEES (as of 30 September 2005) Victoria P. Sant John C. Fontaine Chairman Chair Earl A. Powell III Frederick W. Beinecke Robert F. Erburu Heidi L. Berry John C. Fontaine W. Russell G. Byers, Jr. Sharon P. Rockefeller Melvin S. Cohen John Wilmerding Edwin L. Cox Robert W. Duemling James T. Dyke Victoria P. Sant Barney A. Ebsworth Chairman Mark D. Ein John W. Snow Gregory W. Fazakerley Secretary of the Treasury Doris Fisher Robert F. Erburu Victoria P. Sant Robert F. Erburu Aaron I. Fleischman Chairman President John C. Fontaine Juliet C. Folger Sharon P. Rockefeller John Freidenrich John Wilmerding Marina K. French Morton Funger Lenore Greenberg Robert F. Erburu Rose Ellen Meyerhoff Greene Chairman Richard C. Hedreen John W. Snow Eric H. Holder, Jr. Secretary of the Treasury Victoria P. Sant Robert J. Hurst Alberto Ibarguen John C. Fontaine Betsy K. Karel Sharon P. Rockefeller Linda H. Kaufman John Wilmerding James V. Kimsey Mark J. Kington Robert L. Kirk Ruth Carter Stevenson Leonard A. Lauder Alexander M. Laughlin Alexander M. Laughlin Robert H. Smith LaSalle D. Leffall Julian Ganz, Jr. Joyce Menschel David O. Maxwell Harvey S. Shipley Miller Diane A. Nixon John Wilmerding John G. Roberts, Jr. John G. Pappajohn Chief Justice of the Victoria P. Sant United States President Sally Engelhard Pingree Earl A. Powell III Diana Prince Director Mitchell P. Rales Alan Shestack Catherine B. Reynolds Deputy Director David M. Rubenstein Elizabeth Cropper RogerW. Sant Dean, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts B. Francis Saul II Darrell R. Willson Thomas A.
    [Show full text]
  • Nummer 40/18 26 September 2018 Nummer 40/18 2 26 September 2018
    Nummer 40/18 26 september 2018 Nummer 40/18 2 26 september 2018 Inleiding Introduction Hoofdblad Patent Bulletin Het Blad de Industriële Eigendom verschijnt The Patent Bulletin appears on the 3rd working op de derde werkdag van een week. Indien day of each week. If the Netherlands Patent Office Octrooicentrum Nederland op deze dag is is closed to the public on the above mentioned gesloten, wordt de verschijningsdag van het blad day, the date of issue of the Bulletin is the first verschoven naar de eerstvolgende werkdag, working day thereafter, on which the Office is waarop Octrooicentrum Nederland is geopend. Het open. Each issue of the Bulletin consists of 14 blad verschijnt alleen in elektronische vorm. Elk headings. nummer van het blad bestaat uit 14 rubrieken. Bijblad Official Journal Verschijnt vier keer per jaar (januari, april, juli, Appears four times a year (January, April, July, oktober) in elektronische vorm via www.rvo.nl/ October) in electronic form on the www.rvo.nl/ octrooien. Het Bijblad bevat officiële mededelingen octrooien. The Official Journal contains en andere wetenswaardigheden waarmee announcements and other things worth knowing Octrooicentrum Nederland en zijn klanten te for the benefit of the Netherlands Patent Office and maken hebben. its customers. Abonnementsprijzen per (kalender)jaar: Subscription rates per calendar year: Hoofdblad en Bijblad: verschijnt gratis Patent Bulletin and Official Journal: free of in elektronische vorm op de website van charge in electronic form on the website of the Octrooicentrum
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 3: Impacts of 1.5ºC Global Warming on Natural and Human
    Internal Draft Chapter 3 IPCC SR1.5 1 Chapter 3: Impacts of 1.5ºC global warming on natural and human systems 2 3 Coordinating Lead Authors: Ove Hoegh-Guldberg (Australia), Daniela Jacob (Germany), Michael Taylor 4 (Jamaica) 5 6 Lead Authors:Marco Bindi (Italy), Ines Camilloni (Argentina), Arona Diedhiou (Senegal), Riyanti Djalante 7 (Indonesia), Kristie Ebi (United States of America), Francois Engelbrecht (South Africa), Joel Guiot 8 (France), Yasuaki Hijioka (Japan), Shagun Mehrotra (United States of America /India), Antony Payne 9 (United Kingdom), Sonia Seneviratne (Switzerland), Rachel Warren (United Kingdom), Guangsheng Zhou 10 (China) 11 12 Contributing Authors: Myles Allen (United Kingdom), Peter Berry (Canada), Kathryn Bowen (Australia), 13 Christopher Boyer (United States of America), Lorenzo Brilli (Italy), Sally Brown (United Kingdom), 14 William Cheung (Canada), Jason Evans (Australia), Hubertus Fisher (Switzerland), Klaus Fraedrich 15 (Germany), Sabine Fuss (Germany), Jean Pierre Gattuso (France), Peter Greve (Germany/Austria), Naota 16 Hanasaki (Japan), Tomoko Hasegawa (Japan), Katie Hayes (Canada), Annette Hirsch 17 (Australia/Switzerland), Chris Jones (United Kingdom), Thomas Jung (Germany), Makku Kanninen 18 (Finland), Gerhard Krinner (France), David Lawrence (United States of America), Tim Lenton (United 19 Kingdom), Natalie Mahowald (United States of America), Kathleen McInnes (Australia), Katrin J. Meissner 20 (Australia), Dann Mitchell (United Kingdom), Alan C. Mix (United States), Dirk Notz (Germany), Leonard 21
    [Show full text]