So you are saying there is a chance......

Comments
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USC 42% lulz
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Wtf thinks USC is beating Oregon? I have all the screen shots I need.
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Who in their right mind thinks Stanford has a 46% chance of winning against Oregon??????
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Colorado with a 16% chance to win at home ... UW only a 5% ...
Fucktarded analysis as usual by ESPN -
5% baby I am in!
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Only 84% against Colorado but 95% against Washington? Wow, it's that bad up there?
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84% at Colorado versus 95 at UW? What the fuck?
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Orgeron will have have that machine firing on all cylinders by late November.AtomicDawg said:Wtf thinks USC is beating Oregon? I have all the screen shots I need.
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But how is ESPN Stats worse than ISIS?
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Yeah baby!
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ElevationTequilla said:Colorado with a 16% chance to win at home ... UW only a 5% ...
Fucktarded analysis as usual by ESPN
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Elevation (disambiguation).
Elevation histogram of the surface of the Earth – approximately 71% of the Earth's surface is covered with water.
A sign at 8000 feet (2438 meters) in the San Bernardino Mountains.
The elevation of a geographic location is its height above or below a fixed reference point, most commonly a reference geoid, a mathematical model of the Earth's sea level as an equipotential gravitational surface (see Geodetic system, vertical datum). Elevation, or geometric height, is mainly used when referring to points on the Earth's surface, while altitude or geopotential height is used for points above the surface, such as an aircraft in flight or a spacecraft in orbit, and depth is used for points below the surface.
This image was generated by NOAA from digital data bases of land and sea-floor elevations on a 2-minute latitude/longitude grid (1 minute of latitude = 1 nautical mile, or 1.853 km). Assumed illumination is from the west; shading is computed as a function of the east-west slope of the surface with a nonlinear exaggeration favoring low-relief areas. A Mercator projection was used for the world image, which spans 390° of longitude from 270° West around the world eastward to 120° East; latitude coverage is ±80°. The resolution of the gridded data varies from true 2-minute for the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Ocean floors and all land masses to 5 minutes for the Arctic Ocean floor.
Less commonly, elevation is measured using the center of the Earth as the reference point.[citation needed] Due to equatorial bulge, there is debate as to which of the summits of Mt. Everest or Chimborazo is at the higher elevation,[citation needed] as the Chimborazo summit is further from the Earth's center, while the Mt. Everest summit is higher above mean sea level.
Contents [hide]
1 Maps and GIS
2 Topography
3 Global 1-kilometer map
4 Hypsography
5 Temperature
6 See also
7 References
8 External links
Maps and GIS[edit]
Part of a topographic map of Haleakala (Hawaii), showing elevation.
Landsat Image over SRTM Elevation by NASA, showing the Cape Peninsula and Cape of Good Hope, South Africa in the foreground.[2]
Heightmap of Earth's surface (including water and ice) in equirectangular projection, normalized as 8-bit grayscale, where lighter values indicate higher elevation.
A topographical map is the main type of map used to depict elevation, often through use of contour lines. In a Geographic Information System (GIS), digital elevation models (DEM) are commonly used to represent the surface (topography) of a place, through a raster (grid) dataset of elevations. Digital terrain models are another way to represent terrain in GIS.
Topography[edit]
The elevation of a mountain usually refers to its summit. The elevation of a hill also refers to the summit. A valley's elevation is usually taken from the lowest point, but is often taken all over the valley.
Global 1-kilometer map[edit]
This map is derived from GTOPO30 data that describes the elevation of Earth's terrain at intervals of 30 arcseconds (approximately 1 km). It uses color and shading instead of contour lines to indicate elevation.
N60-90, W150-180 N60-90, W120-150 N60-90, W90-120 N60-90, W60-90 N60-90, W30-60 N60-90, W0-30 N60-90, E0-30 N60-90, E30-60 N60-90, E60-90 N60-90, E90-120 N60-90, E120-150 N60-90, E150-180
N30-60, W150-180 N30-60, W120-150 N30-60, W90-120 N30-60, W60-90 N30-60, W30-60 N30-60, W0-30 N30-60, E0-30 N30-60, E30-60 N30-60, E60-90 N30-60, E90-120 N30-60, E120-150 N30-60, E150-180
N0-30, W150-180 N0-30, W120-150 N0-30, W90-120 N0-30, W60-90 N0-30, W30-60 N0-60, W0-30 N0-60, E0-30 N0-60, E30-60 N0-60, E60-90 N0-60, E90-120 N0-60, E120-150 N0-60, E150-180
S0-30, W150-180 S0-30, W120-150 S0-30, W90-120 S0-30, W60-90 S0-30, W30-60 S0-30, W0-30 S0-30, E0-30 S0-30, E30-60 S0-30, E60-90 S0-30, E90-120 S0-30, E120-150 S0-30, E150-180
S30-60, W150 S30-60, W120 S30-60, W90-120 S30-60, W60-90 S30-60, W30-60 S30-60, W0-30 S30-60, E0-30 S30-60, E30-60 S30-60, E60-90 S30-60, E90-120 S30-60, E120-150 S30-60, E150-180
S60-90, W150-180 S60-90, W120-150 S60-90, W90-120 S60-90, W60-90 S60-90, W30-60 S60-90, W0-30 S60-90, E0-30 S60-90, E30-60 S60-90, E60-90 S60-90, E90-120 S60-90, E120-150 S60-90, E150-180
Each tile is available at a resolution of 1800 × 1800 pixels (approximate file size 1 MB, 60 pixels = 1 degree, 1 pixel = 1 minute)
Hypsography[edit]
It has been suggested that this section be split into a new article titled Hypsography. (Discuss) Proposed since July 2014.
Hypsography is the study of the distribution of elevations on the surface of the Earth, although the term is sometimes also applied to other rocky planets such as Mars or Venus. The term originates from the Greek word ὕψος "hypsos" meaning height. Most often it is used only in reference to elevation of land but a complete description of Earth's solid surface requires a description of the seafloor as well. Related to the term hypsometry, the measurement of these elevations of a planet's solid surface are taken relative to mean datum, except for Earth which is taken relative to the sea level.
Hypsography of the Earth. Notice that Earth has two peaks in elevation, one for the continents, the other for the ocean floors.
Temperature[edit]
Vertical Distance Comparison
In the troposphere, temperatures decrease with altitude. This lapse rate is approximately 6.5 °C/km.[1]
See also[edit]
Height
Geodesy
Geodesy of North America
Sea Level Datum of 1929 later National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929 (NGVD 29)
North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (NAVD 88)
List of European cities by elevation
List of highest mountains
List of highest towns by country
Normaal Amsterdams Peil
Normalhöhennull
Physical geography
Table of the highest major summits of North America
Topographic isolation
Topographic prominence
Topography
Vertical pressure variation
References[edit]
Jump up ^ [1]
External links[edit]
Look up elevation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
U.S. National Geodetic Survey website
Geodetic Glossary @ NGS
NGVD 29 to NAVD 88 online elevation converter @ NGS
United States Geological Survey website
Geographical Survey Institute
Downloadable ETOPO2 Raw Data Database (2 minute grid)
Downloadable ETOPO5 Raw Data Database (5 minute grid)
Find the elevation of any place -
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Have you ever seen UW play Oregon in the last..... 11 years?haie said:84% at Colorado versus 95 at UW? What the fuck?
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FPI really loves SC for some reason. My guess is the chinamen who built their stay model put in heavy weightings on returning QB and/or TBS rankings.
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Quite honestly, Wazzu has a better chance at beating Oregon than Washington. It's the script. They love going in dry on us. Not one game by less than 17 in over a decade.
The streak stopped being consensual after the first 6 wins. -
I am 81% certain Oregon will beat us.
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ESPN likes #OurBuckeyes a lot:
http://espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi/_/id/194/ohio-state-buckeyes -
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Running up the score on cripples goes a long way in FPI and SRS.PurpleJ said:EspnFS has Mississippi St ranked #1 in this.
espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi?id=145&year=2015
It's why those measurements SUCK. -
When you say SUCK, do you mean like with DSLs or with a flip-top head?TierbsHsotBoobs said:
Running up the score on cripples goes a long way in FPI and SRS.PurpleJ said:EspnFS has Mississippi St ranked #1 in this.
espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi?id=145&year=2015
It's why those measurements SUCK.
In b4 abundance. -
Um, excuse me. Perhaps you didn't know about this little thing called altitude. Call Steve Sarkisian for a lesson.Tequilla said:Colorado with a 16% chance to win at home ... UW only a 5% ...
Fucktarded analysis as usual by ESPN -
Fuck. Made my joke without scrolling down farther. Such a fucking rookie move. I hate myself.GrundleStiltzkin said: -
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I know you're being sarcasmic, but still flagged for disrespecting #MyRebels by calling them Mississippi State.PurpleJ said:EspnFS has Mississippi St ranked #1 in this.
espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi?id=145&year=2015
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Same shit fuck state that is last in everything.dnc said:
I know you're being sarcasmic, but still flagged for disrespecting #MyRebels by calling them Mississippi State.PurpleJ said:EspnFS has Mississippi St ranked #1 in this.
espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi?id=145&year=2015 -
Not in everything. #1 on ESPNFS!!PurpleJ said:
Same shit fuck state that is last in everything.dnc said:
I know you're being sarcasmic, but still flagged for disrespecting #MyRebels by calling them Mississippi State.PurpleJ said:EspnFS has Mississippi St ranked #1 in this.
espn.go.com/college-football/team/fpi?id=145&year=2015
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@PostGameOrangeSlices must be loving the free pub
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Sark will also tell you that Coach Dykes has a strong team st Colorado.Swaye said:
Um, excuse me. Perhaps you didn't know about this little thing called altitude. Call Steve Sarkisian for a lesson.Tequilla said:Colorado with a 16% chance to win at home ... UW only a 5% ...
Fucktarded analysis as usual by ESPN -
ctrl+f "cal ranked too high"
was disappoint.