Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans

Trabajo presentado en Early Instrumental Meteorological Series, celebrado en Bern (Suiza), del 18 al 21 de junio de 2018 Along the fifteenth century, Europeans started the open ocean navigation towards their colonies. This required the daily determination of longitude and latitude, which were record...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: García Herrera, Ricardo, Barriopedro, David, Gallego, David, Mellado-Cano, Javier
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/188905
id ftcsic:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/188905
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcsic:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/188905 2024-02-11T10:06:36+01:00 Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans García Herrera, Ricardo Barriopedro, David Gallego, David Mellado-Cano, Javier 2018-06-18 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/188905 en eng Sí Early Instrumental Meteorological Series (2018) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/188905 none comunicación de congreso http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794 2018 ftcsic 2024-01-16T10:42:47Z Trabajo presentado en Early Instrumental Meteorological Series, celebrado en Bern (Suiza), del 18 al 21 de junio de 2018 Along the fifteenth century, Europeans started the open ocean navigation towards their colonies. This required the daily determination of longitude and latitude, which were recorded jointly with meteorological observations in the ships logbooks. Historical wind force observations were not instrumental but estimated and codified as “wind descriptors” in the logbooks. On the other hand, wind direction observations do not suffer from such limitation as they were measured with a compass and hence can be considered a truly instrumental observation, even for the oldest records. Millions of pages of such records have been preserved in different archives. They represent a valuable resource and provide unique information for an area of the globe poorly covered (the oceans) and for a period (c.1680- 1900) when weather observations are sparse. We will show that logbooks extend back the instrumental record with observations of comparable quality to the modern ones, thus reducing the limitations derived from the shortness of current records. This has allowed building centennial series which allow a better characterization of weather extremes and unveiled multi-decadal variability previously unsuspected. We will provide examples as the steady enhancement of the Australian monsoon since the early 19th century, the non-stationary behavior of the Euro-Atlantic atmospheric circulation during the Late Maunder Minimum, the alternation of wet and dry multidecadal periods in the Sahel or the complex relationship between the Western North Pacific Summer Monsoon and the different ENSO modes. Finally, we will describe the status of the UPNAO project, which is currently recovering data from the Eastern Tropical North Atlantic. Peer reviewed Conference Object North Atlantic Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council)
op_collection_id ftcsic
language English
description Trabajo presentado en Early Instrumental Meteorological Series, celebrado en Bern (Suiza), del 18 al 21 de junio de 2018 Along the fifteenth century, Europeans started the open ocean navigation towards their colonies. This required the daily determination of longitude and latitude, which were recorded jointly with meteorological observations in the ships logbooks. Historical wind force observations were not instrumental but estimated and codified as “wind descriptors” in the logbooks. On the other hand, wind direction observations do not suffer from such limitation as they were measured with a compass and hence can be considered a truly instrumental observation, even for the oldest records. Millions of pages of such records have been preserved in different archives. They represent a valuable resource and provide unique information for an area of the globe poorly covered (the oceans) and for a period (c.1680- 1900) when weather observations are sparse. We will show that logbooks extend back the instrumental record with observations of comparable quality to the modern ones, thus reducing the limitations derived from the shortness of current records. This has allowed building centennial series which allow a better characterization of weather extremes and unveiled multi-decadal variability previously unsuspected. We will provide examples as the steady enhancement of the Australian monsoon since the early 19th century, the non-stationary behavior of the Euro-Atlantic atmospheric circulation during the Late Maunder Minimum, the alternation of wet and dry multidecadal periods in the Sahel or the complex relationship between the Western North Pacific Summer Monsoon and the different ENSO modes. Finally, we will describe the status of the UPNAO project, which is currently recovering data from the Eastern Tropical North Atlantic. Peer reviewed
format Conference Object
author García Herrera, Ricardo
Barriopedro, David
Gallego, David
Mellado-Cano, Javier
spellingShingle García Herrera, Ricardo
Barriopedro, David
Gallego, David
Mellado-Cano, Javier
Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
author_facet García Herrera, Ricardo
Barriopedro, David
Gallego, David
Mellado-Cano, Javier
author_sort García Herrera, Ricardo
title Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
title_short Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
title_full Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
title_fullStr Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
title_full_unstemmed Ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
title_sort ship's logbooks historical wind observations for the open oceans
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/188905
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation
Early Instrumental Meteorological Series (2018)
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/188905
op_rights none
_version_ 1790604413471031296