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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Changes in North American extremes derived from daily weather data (presentation)

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Peterson TC, Zhang X, India MB, Aguirre JLV
2007
American Meteorological Society (AMS)
American Meteorological Society's 87th Annual Meeting and 19th Conference on Climate Variability and Change held 14-18 January 2007 (San Antonio, TX)

Detailed homogeneity assessments of daily maximum and minimum weather observing station data from Canada, the United States and Mexico enabled analysis changes in North American extremes starting in 1950. The measures of extremes assessed were primarily indices developed by the joint CCl/CLIVAR/JCOMM Expert Team on Climate Change Detection and Indices. Similar decreases in cold extremes and increases in warm extremes were found when examining the 10 th, 5th and 2.5th percentiles. Annual extreme cold temperatures are warming faster than annual extreme warm temperatures when the parameter measured is the actual temperature but cold and warm extremes are changing about the same when examined on a percentile or normalized basis. By any of several measures, heavy precipitation has been increasing in recent decades and the average amount of precipitation falling on days with precipitation has also been increasing. These changes in extremes are likely to impact natural ecosystems as well as agricultural and societal infrastructure.

Expand Abstract

Resource Description

    Precipitation, Temperature
    • Precipitation, Temperature: Cold, Heat
    General Geographic Feature
    Non-United States, United States
    • Non-United States, United States: Non-U.S. North America
    General Health Impact
    Research Article
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