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Thanks funny site http://www.rscdshamiltonandclydesdale.org.uk/stmap_39dykkca.html?butenaf... ciprofloxacino oftalmico nombre comercial Yet, data from the Pliocene tell a different story, says Carys Cook, a doctoral student at Imperial College London. Mean temperatures from the Pliocene were 2°C to 3°C warmer than today, and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations between 350 and 450 parts per million. Some data have also suggested that sea levels were perhaps 22 meters higher than today—and even complete melting of the WAIS and Greenland couldn't account for more than about 12 meters of that, Cook says. Melting of the EAIS would have to have contributed.

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