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Tag: posing
Convicted felon accused of posing as car dealer
2016-04-06 03:44:06| Auto Dealers - Topix.net
People who know him say Domenick Perez is a smooth talker who claims to operate a car sales business. We found half a dozen people, all of whom claim they lost thousands of dollars on rides that didn't exist.
Tags: car
dealer
accused
convicted
Chesapeake waters are warming, study finds, posing challenges to healing bay
2015-11-24 22:25:24| Paper - Topix.net
The Chesapeake Bay's waters are warming, in some places more rapidly than the region's air temperatures, researchers from the University of Maryland say. If unchecked, scientists say, the trend could complicate costly, long-running efforts to restore the ailing estuary, worsen fish-suffocating dead zones and alter the food web on which the bay's fish and crabs depend.
Tags: study
bay
challenges
finds
Online home scammers posing as real estate agents
2015-10-18 23:56:23| Real Estate - Topix.net
It is likely one of the biggest decisions in your life and scammers are jumping at the opportunity to make big bucks at your expense. THIS FROM HAPPENING TO YOU.
Chesapeake waters are warming, study finds, posing challenges for healing ailing bay
2015-10-14 20:00:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Baltimore Sun: The Chesapeake Bay's waters are warming up, in some places rising more rapidly even than the region's air temperatures, a new University of Maryland study finds. If unchecked, scientists say the trend could complicate costly, long-running efforts to restore the ailing estuary, worsen fish-suffocating dead zones and even alter the food web on which the bay's fish and crabs depend. Drawing on remote sensing by satellites, researchers at UM's Center for Environmental Science found that water temperatures...
Tags: study
bay
challenges
finds
Chesapeake waters are warming, study finds, posing challenges for healing ailing bay
2015-10-14 15:05:23| Paper - Topix.net
The Chesapeake Bay's waters are warming up, in some places rising more rapidly even than the region's air temperatures, a new University of Maryland study finds. If unchecked, scientists say the trend could complicate costly, long-running efforts to restore the ailing estuary, worsen fish-suffocating dead zones and even alter the food web on which the bay's fish and crabs depend.
Tags: study
bay
challenges
finds