Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses

The linking theme within this thesis is meteorological data rescue, whereby records of past weather and climate in handwritten manuscript or published form are digitised and made available to the wider research community, thereby adding to our knowledge of past weather and climate. Specifically, the...

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Main Author: Burt, Stephen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/2/29804706_Burt_Thesis_Redacted.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/1/29804706_Burt_Thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/3/29804706%20_Burt_Thesis%20deposit%20form.pdf
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spelling ftunivreading:oai:centaur.reading.ac.uk:104769 2023-09-05T13:21:44+02:00 Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses Burt, Stephen 2021-06-30 text https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/ https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/2/29804706_Burt_Thesis_Redacted.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/1/29804706_Burt_Thesis.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/3/29804706%20_Burt_Thesis%20deposit%20form.pdf en eng https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/2/29804706_Burt_Thesis_Redacted.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/1/29804706_Burt_Thesis.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/3/29804706%20_Burt_Thesis%20deposit%20form.pdf Burt, Stephen ORCID logoorcid:0000-0002-5125-6546 (2021) Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses. PhD thesis, University of Reading. doi: https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769 <https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769> Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftunivreading https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769 2023-08-14T18:16:31Z The linking theme within this thesis is meteorological data rescue, whereby records of past weather and climate in handwritten manuscript or published form are digitised and made available to the wider research community, thereby adding to our knowledge of past weather and climate. Specifically, the hourly observational record from the Ben Nevis Summit Observatory (1883-1904) and the daily climatological series from the Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford (since 1772) and Durham University Observatory (since 1841) are examined in detail – the records from Oxford and Durham comprising respectively the longest and second-longest single-site temperature and rainfall series in England. Both records have been affected to a minor extent by urban growth, and one paper explains ‘picking apart’ the signal of Oxford’s urban heat island from observed background climate warming during the last 150 years. Oxford’s non-instrumental records have also been used to publish a unique near-200 year record of thunderstorm occurrence in the city, while the recentlypublished twice-daily barometric pressure series from Durham (1843-1960) — by far the longest such record in northern England — fills a large spatial and temporal gap in reanalysis source data, and will lead to improvements in atmospheric circulation analyses. The validity of the dataset was investigated using a reanalysis dataset as a novel underpinning benchmark to identify errors in the digitised series. Throughout the published works included within this thesis, the importance of both instrumental and non-instrumental metrology and metadata in assembling, analysing and publishing the data series are emphasised; specific research relating to the performance of air temperature sensors and the calibration of meteorological instruments is described. Finally, data rescue and modern synoptic analyses are combined to prepare original case studies of significant climatological events, with particular emphasis on extremes of atmospheric pressure over the North Atlantic and the ... Thesis North Atlantic CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading Ben Nevis ENVELOPE(12.417,12.417,79.650,79.650)
institution Open Polar
collection CentAUR: Central Archive at the University of Reading
op_collection_id ftunivreading
language English
description The linking theme within this thesis is meteorological data rescue, whereby records of past weather and climate in handwritten manuscript or published form are digitised and made available to the wider research community, thereby adding to our knowledge of past weather and climate. Specifically, the hourly observational record from the Ben Nevis Summit Observatory (1883-1904) and the daily climatological series from the Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford (since 1772) and Durham University Observatory (since 1841) are examined in detail – the records from Oxford and Durham comprising respectively the longest and second-longest single-site temperature and rainfall series in England. Both records have been affected to a minor extent by urban growth, and one paper explains ‘picking apart’ the signal of Oxford’s urban heat island from observed background climate warming during the last 150 years. Oxford’s non-instrumental records have also been used to publish a unique near-200 year record of thunderstorm occurrence in the city, while the recentlypublished twice-daily barometric pressure series from Durham (1843-1960) — by far the longest such record in northern England — fills a large spatial and temporal gap in reanalysis source data, and will lead to improvements in atmospheric circulation analyses. The validity of the dataset was investigated using a reanalysis dataset as a novel underpinning benchmark to identify errors in the digitised series. Throughout the published works included within this thesis, the importance of both instrumental and non-instrumental metrology and metadata in assembling, analysing and publishing the data series are emphasised; specific research relating to the performance of air temperature sensors and the calibration of meteorological instruments is described. Finally, data rescue and modern synoptic analyses are combined to prepare original case studies of significant climatological events, with particular emphasis on extremes of atmospheric pressure over the North Atlantic and the ...
format Thesis
author Burt, Stephen
spellingShingle Burt, Stephen
Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
author_facet Burt, Stephen
author_sort Burt, Stephen
title Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
title_short Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
title_full Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
title_fullStr Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
title_full_unstemmed Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
title_sort combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses
publishDate 2021
url https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/2/29804706_Burt_Thesis_Redacted.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/1/29804706_Burt_Thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/3/29804706%20_Burt_Thesis%20deposit%20form.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(12.417,12.417,79.650,79.650)
geographic Ben Nevis
geographic_facet Ben Nevis
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/2/29804706_Burt_Thesis_Redacted.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/1/29804706_Burt_Thesis.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/104769/3/29804706%20_Burt_Thesis%20deposit%20form.pdf
Burt, Stephen ORCID logoorcid:0000-0002-5125-6546 (2021) Combining instrumental data rescue techniques with meteorological metrology to develop applied historical climatological analyses. PhD thesis, University of Reading. doi: https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769 <https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769>
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48683/1926.00104769
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