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Trends of extreme temperatures in Europe and China based on daily observations

Trends of extreme temperatures in Europe and China based on daily observations
Trends of extreme temperatures in Europe and China based on daily observations
Ten of the longest daily temperature series presently available in Europe and China are analysed, focusing on changes in extremes since pre-industrial times. We consider extremes in both a relative (with respect to the time of year) and an absolute sense. To distinguish changes in extremes from changes affecting the main part of the temperature distribution, a percentile smaller than 10 (and/or larger than 90) is recommended for defining an extreme. Three periods of changes in temperature extremes are identified: decreasing warm extremes before the late 19th century; decreasing cold extremes since then and increasing warm extremes since the 1960s. The early decreases and recent increases of warm extremes dominate in summer, while the decrease of cold extremes for winter persists throughout the whole period. There were more frequent combined (warm plus cold) extremes during the 18th century and the recent warming period since 1961 at most of the ten stations, especially for summer. Since 1961, the annual frequency of cold extremes has decreased by about 7% per century with warm extremes increasing by more than 10% per century but with large spatial variability. Compared with recent annual mean warming of about 2–3 ° C/century, the coldest winter temperatures have increased at three times this rate, causing a reduced within-season range and therefore less variable winters. Changes in the warmest summer temperatures since 1961 exhibit large spatial variability, with rates of change ranging from slightly negative to 6 ° C/century. More extensive station observations since 1961 indicate that the single site results are representative of larger regions, implying also that the extremes studied are the result of large-scale changes. Recent circulation changes in daily gridded pressure data, used as an indicator of wind speed changes, support the results by explaining some of the trends.
355-392
Yan, Z.
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Jones, P.D.
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Davies, T.D.
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Moberg, A.
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Bergstrom, H.
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Camuffo, D.
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Cocheo, C.
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Maugeri, M.
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Demaree, G.
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Verhoeve, T.
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Thoen, E.
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Barriendos, M.
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Rodriguez, R.
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Martin-vide, J.
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Yang, C.
ed8ae5dd-5c2d-4f1c-8ab5-a7346235bb5b
Yan, Z.
21c82faa-4f27-449d-a7ba-dc7618e989f9
Jones, P.D.
70cbf9ae-3489-40b1-bf63-e81654fb7edf
Davies, T.D.
0557699c-ecbf-4cca-a368-4cba6d97735f
Moberg, A.
94774c67-6d66-4a50-8f16-38a211b22ca8
Bergstrom, H.
40b8cd2a-6b34-42cd-b588-13eb0cbdd578
Camuffo, D.
ad3628f3-57ea-4e2a-b822-4d4790a8a3bd
Cocheo, C.
94c14320-d133-4ea9-a667-e2c0460416d5
Maugeri, M.
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Demaree, G.
3f8dc432-bf88-4ddf-a55a-6c3e9707ee97
Verhoeve, T.
933f2340-1ba1-41ad-b38b-0716d5fb4936
Thoen, E.
8250131d-1ba8-4496-b53e-f2dc0ef90748
Barriendos, M.
3fac1f9e-769b-43e1-96a7-b3ddac5b3049
Rodriguez, R.
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Martin-vide, J.
e414ec63-d855-4caa-8a47-24b4d26ec580
Yang, C.
ed8ae5dd-5c2d-4f1c-8ab5-a7346235bb5b

Yan, Z., Jones, P.D., Davies, T.D., Moberg, A., Bergstrom, H., Camuffo, D., Cocheo, C., Maugeri, M., Demaree, G., Verhoeve, T., Thoen, E., Barriendos, M., Rodriguez, R., Martin-vide, J. and Yang, C. (2002) Trends of extreme temperatures in Europe and China based on daily observations. Climatic Change, 53 (1-3), 355-392. (doi:10.1023/A:1014939413284).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Ten of the longest daily temperature series presently available in Europe and China are analysed, focusing on changes in extremes since pre-industrial times. We consider extremes in both a relative (with respect to the time of year) and an absolute sense. To distinguish changes in extremes from changes affecting the main part of the temperature distribution, a percentile smaller than 10 (and/or larger than 90) is recommended for defining an extreme. Three periods of changes in temperature extremes are identified: decreasing warm extremes before the late 19th century; decreasing cold extremes since then and increasing warm extremes since the 1960s. The early decreases and recent increases of warm extremes dominate in summer, while the decrease of cold extremes for winter persists throughout the whole period. There were more frequent combined (warm plus cold) extremes during the 18th century and the recent warming period since 1961 at most of the ten stations, especially for summer. Since 1961, the annual frequency of cold extremes has decreased by about 7% per century with warm extremes increasing by more than 10% per century but with large spatial variability. Compared with recent annual mean warming of about 2–3 ° C/century, the coldest winter temperatures have increased at three times this rate, causing a reduced within-season range and therefore less variable winters. Changes in the warmest summer temperatures since 1961 exhibit large spatial variability, with rates of change ranging from slightly negative to 6 ° C/century. More extensive station observations since 1961 indicate that the single site results are representative of larger regions, implying also that the extremes studied are the result of large-scale changes. Recent circulation changes in daily gridded pressure data, used as an indicator of wind speed changes, support the results by explaining some of the trends.

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Published date: 2002

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Local EPrints ID: 1385
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/1385
PURE UUID: feb4ab24-f07a-462d-95d8-d6b00947ac38

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:43

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Contributors

Author: Z. Yan
Author: P.D. Jones
Author: T.D. Davies
Author: A. Moberg
Author: H. Bergstrom
Author: D. Camuffo
Author: C. Cocheo
Author: M. Maugeri
Author: G. Demaree
Author: T. Verhoeve
Author: E. Thoen
Author: M. Barriendos
Author: R. Rodriguez
Author: J. Martin-vide
Author: C. Yang

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