[1] An assessment quantifying the impact of urbanization on temperature trends from the U.S. Historical Climatology Network (USHCN) is described. Stations were first classified as urban and nonurban (rural) using four different proxy measures of urbanity. Trends from the two station types were then compared using a pairing method that controls for differences in instrument type and via spatial gridding to account for the uneven distribution of stations. The comparisons reveal systematic differences between the raw (unadjusted) urban and rural temperature trends throughout the USHCN period of record according to all four urban classifications. According to these classifications, urbanization accounts for 14–21 % of the rise in unadjusted min...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
The 1221 weather observation stations that compose the U.S. Historical Climatology Network were desi...
<p>Supplementary information dataset for the following article:</p> <p>R. Connolly and M. Connolly (...
Records of hemispheric average temperatures from land regions for the past 100 years provide crucial...
The observational temperature record is a critical part of our understanding of changes in Earth’s c...
The observational temperature record is a critical part of our understanding of changes in Earth’s c...
A data set derived from the United States Historical Climate Network has been compared to two global...
All analyses of the impact of urban heat islands (UHIs) on in situ temperature observations suffer f...
Numerous inhomogeneities including station moves, instrument changes, and time of observation change...
The effect of urban development on local thermal climate is ostensibly well documented in scientific...
T he U.S. Historical Climate Network (USHCN;Karl et al. 1990) consists of a subset of stationsfrom t...
The 1221 weather observation stations that compose the U.S. Historical Climatology Network were desi...
Existing climate data sources can be used in two general types of analysis for the detection of urba...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
The 1221 weather observation stations that compose the U.S. Historical Climatology Network were desi...
<p>Supplementary information dataset for the following article:</p> <p>R. Connolly and M. Connolly (...
Records of hemispheric average temperatures from land regions for the past 100 years provide crucial...
The observational temperature record is a critical part of our understanding of changes in Earth’s c...
The observational temperature record is a critical part of our understanding of changes in Earth’s c...
A data set derived from the United States Historical Climate Network has been compared to two global...
All analyses of the impact of urban heat islands (UHIs) on in situ temperature observations suffer f...
Numerous inhomogeneities including station moves, instrument changes, and time of observation change...
The effect of urban development on local thermal climate is ostensibly well documented in scientific...
T he U.S. Historical Climate Network (USHCN;Karl et al. 1990) consists of a subset of stationsfrom t...
The 1221 weather observation stations that compose the U.S. Historical Climatology Network were desi...
Existing climate data sources can be used in two general types of analysis for the detection of urba...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8 °C over ...
The 1221 weather observation stations that compose the U.S. Historical Climatology Network were desi...