A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)

<jats:p>Abstract. A continuous 305-year (1711–2016) monthly rainfall series (IoI_1711) is created for the Island of Ireland. The post 1850 series draws on an existing quality assured rainfall network for Ireland, while pre-1850 values come from instrumental and documentary series compiled, but...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Climate of the Past
Main Authors: Murphy, Conor, Broderick, Ciaran, Burt, Timothy P, Curley, Mary, Duffy, Catriona, Hall, Julia, Harrigan, Shaun, Matthews, Tom KR, Macdonald, Neil, McCarthy, Gerard, McCarthy, Mark P, Mullan, Donal, Noone, Simon, Osborn, Timothy J, Ryan, Ciara, Sweeney, John, Thorne, Peter W, Walsh, Seamus, Wilby, Robert L
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus GmbH 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3019538/
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-413-2018
id ftunivliverpool:oai:livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk:3019538
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivliverpool:oai:livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk:3019538 2024-09-09T19:57:40+00:00 A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016) Murphy, Conor Broderick, Ciaran Burt, Timothy P Curley, Mary Duffy, Catriona Hall, Julia Harrigan, Shaun Matthews, Tom KR Macdonald, Neil McCarthy, Gerard McCarthy, Mark P Mullan, Donal Noone, Simon Osborn, Timothy J Ryan, Ciara Sweeney, John Thorne, Peter W Walsh, Seamus Wilby, Robert L 2018 https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3019538/ https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-413-2018 en eng Copernicus GmbH Collapse authors list. Murphy, Conor, Broderick, Ciaran, Burt, Timothy P, Curley, Mary, Duffy, Catriona, Hall, Julia, Harrigan, Shaun, Matthews, Tom KR, Macdonald, Neil, McCarthy, Gerard et al (show 9 more authors) , McCarthy, Mark P, Mullan, Donal, Noone, Simon, Osborn, Timothy J, Ryan, Ciara, Sweeney, John, Thorne, Peter W, Walsh, Seamus and Wilby, Robert L (2018) A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016). CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 14 (3). pp. 413-440. Article NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftunivliverpool https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-413-2018 2024-07-22T14:08:13Z <jats:p>Abstract. A continuous 305-year (1711–2016) monthly rainfall series (IoI_1711) is created for the Island of Ireland. The post 1850 series draws on an existing quality assured rainfall network for Ireland, while pre-1850 values come from instrumental and documentary series compiled, but not published by the UK Met Office. The series is evaluated by comparison with independent long-term observations and reconstructions of precipitation, temperature and circulation indices from across the British–Irish Isles. Strong decadal consistency of IoI_1711 with other long-term observations is evident throughout the annual, boreal spring and autumn series. Annually, the most recent decade (2006–2015) is found to be the wettest in over 300 years. The winter series is probably too dry between the 1740s and 1780s, but strong consistency with other long-term observations strengthens confidence from 1790 onwards. The IoI_1711 series has remarkably wet winters during the 1730s, concurrent with a period of strong westerly airflow, glacial advance throughout Scandinavia and near unprecedented warmth in the Central England Temperature record – all consistent with a strongly positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Unusually wet summers occurred in the 1750s, consistent with proxy (tree-ring) reconstructions of summer precipitation in the region. Our analysis shows that inter-decadal variability of precipitation is much larger than previously thought, while relationships with key modes of climate variability are time-variant. The IoI_1711 series reveals statistically significant multi-centennial trends in winter (increasing) and summer (decreasing) seasonal precipitation. However, given uncertainties in the early winter record, the former finding should be regarded as tentative. The derived record, one of the longest continuous series in Europe, offers valuable insights for understanding multi-decadal and centennial rainfall variability in Ireland, and provides a firm basis for benchmarking other long-term ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation The University of Liverpool Repository Climate of the Past 14 3 413 440
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Liverpool Repository
op_collection_id ftunivliverpool
language English
description <jats:p>Abstract. A continuous 305-year (1711–2016) monthly rainfall series (IoI_1711) is created for the Island of Ireland. The post 1850 series draws on an existing quality assured rainfall network for Ireland, while pre-1850 values come from instrumental and documentary series compiled, but not published by the UK Met Office. The series is evaluated by comparison with independent long-term observations and reconstructions of precipitation, temperature and circulation indices from across the British–Irish Isles. Strong decadal consistency of IoI_1711 with other long-term observations is evident throughout the annual, boreal spring and autumn series. Annually, the most recent decade (2006–2015) is found to be the wettest in over 300 years. The winter series is probably too dry between the 1740s and 1780s, but strong consistency with other long-term observations strengthens confidence from 1790 onwards. The IoI_1711 series has remarkably wet winters during the 1730s, concurrent with a period of strong westerly airflow, glacial advance throughout Scandinavia and near unprecedented warmth in the Central England Temperature record – all consistent with a strongly positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Unusually wet summers occurred in the 1750s, consistent with proxy (tree-ring) reconstructions of summer precipitation in the region. Our analysis shows that inter-decadal variability of precipitation is much larger than previously thought, while relationships with key modes of climate variability are time-variant. The IoI_1711 series reveals statistically significant multi-centennial trends in winter (increasing) and summer (decreasing) seasonal precipitation. However, given uncertainties in the early winter record, the former finding should be regarded as tentative. The derived record, one of the longest continuous series in Europe, offers valuable insights for understanding multi-decadal and centennial rainfall variability in Ireland, and provides a firm basis for benchmarking other long-term ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Murphy, Conor
Broderick, Ciaran
Burt, Timothy P
Curley, Mary
Duffy, Catriona
Hall, Julia
Harrigan, Shaun
Matthews, Tom KR
Macdonald, Neil
McCarthy, Gerard
McCarthy, Mark P
Mullan, Donal
Noone, Simon
Osborn, Timothy J
Ryan, Ciara
Sweeney, John
Thorne, Peter W
Walsh, Seamus
Wilby, Robert L
spellingShingle Murphy, Conor
Broderick, Ciaran
Burt, Timothy P
Curley, Mary
Duffy, Catriona
Hall, Julia
Harrigan, Shaun
Matthews, Tom KR
Macdonald, Neil
McCarthy, Gerard
McCarthy, Mark P
Mullan, Donal
Noone, Simon
Osborn, Timothy J
Ryan, Ciara
Sweeney, John
Thorne, Peter W
Walsh, Seamus
Wilby, Robert L
A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
author_facet Murphy, Conor
Broderick, Ciaran
Burt, Timothy P
Curley, Mary
Duffy, Catriona
Hall, Julia
Harrigan, Shaun
Matthews, Tom KR
Macdonald, Neil
McCarthy, Gerard
McCarthy, Mark P
Mullan, Donal
Noone, Simon
Osborn, Timothy J
Ryan, Ciara
Sweeney, John
Thorne, Peter W
Walsh, Seamus
Wilby, Robert L
author_sort Murphy, Conor
title A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
title_short A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
title_full A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
title_fullStr A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
title_full_unstemmed A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016)
title_sort 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of ireland (1711-2016)
publisher Copernicus GmbH
publishDate 2018
url https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3019538/
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-413-2018
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation Collapse authors list. Murphy, Conor, Broderick, Ciaran, Burt, Timothy P, Curley, Mary, Duffy, Catriona, Hall, Julia, Harrigan, Shaun, Matthews, Tom KR, Macdonald, Neil, McCarthy, Gerard et al (show 9 more authors) , McCarthy, Mark P, Mullan, Donal, Noone, Simon, Osborn, Timothy J, Ryan, Ciara, Sweeney, John, Thorne, Peter W, Walsh, Seamus and Wilby, Robert L (2018) A 305-year continuous monthly rainfall series for the island of Ireland (1711-2016). CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 14 (3). pp. 413-440.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-14-413-2018
container_title Climate of the Past
container_volume 14
container_issue 3
container_start_page 413
op_container_end_page 440
_version_ 1809928619519115264