Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide |
Atmospheric carbon dioxide record from Mauna Loa C.D. Keeling and T.P. Whorf Carbon Dioxide Research Group, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, La Jolla, California 92093-0444, U.S.A. Period of Record: 1958-2004 Above is now discontinued: Current Mauna Loa dataset from NOAA CSV files: Monthly CO2ML.csv; Annual: CO2MLan.csv
Atmospheric carbon dioxide record from the South Pole Historical carbon dioxide record from the Siple Station ice core Historical CO2 record derived from a spline fit (20 year cutoff) of the Law Dome DE08 and DE08-2 ice cores Historical CO2 record from the Law Dome DE08, DE08-2, and DSS ice cores
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CRU |
University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) Global average temperature 1856 to 2005
Series discontinued -- see HadCRUT for the cooperative effort between CRU and the Hadley Centre.
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GHCC (noted as UAH MSU) a.k.a. 'satellite' measures current series LT5.2 |
Global Hydrology and Climate Center, University of Alabama - Huntsville, USA
The data used were obtained by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration TIROS-N satellite, and interpreted by scientists Dr. Roy Spencer (University of Alabama at Huntsville) and Dr. John Christy (University of Alabama at Huntsville) at the Global Hydrology and Climate Center (GHCC), a cooperative laboratory involving NASA, the Alabama Space Science and Technology Alliance, and private industry. A brief outline of Globally-Averaged Atmospheric Temperatures may be found here. Monthly means of the lower troposphere (LTv5.2) here and zonal data here. CSV files: Global; Zonal-all regions (does not distinguish between land/water); United States (48); Tropics; Northern Hemisphere; Northern Extratropics; Northern Polar; Southern Hemisphere; Southern Extratropics; Southern Polar and, just in case one file is updated before the other, here's another Global, this time derived from the zonal file.
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GISTEMP |
Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), at Columbia University in New York City, is a laboratory of the Earth-Sun Exploration Division of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and a unit of the Columbia University Earth Institute. GISTEMP: GLOBAL Temperature Anomalies in .01 C base period: 1951-1980 sources: GHCN 1880-09/2005 (meteorological stations only) using elimination of outliers and homogeneity adjustment CSV file: Monthly values since 12/78: GISSglobal.csv GISTEMP Zonal: selected zonal means source: GHCN 1880-12/2004 using elimination of outliers and homogeneity adjustment CSV files - Annual values since 1880: Global; Northern Hemisphere; Southern Hemisphere; 24S-24N (Tropics); EQU-24N; 24N-90N; 24N-44N; 44N-64N; 64N-90N (Arctic); 24S-EQU; 90S-24S; 44S-24S; 64S-44S; 90S-64S (Antarctic) |
Hadley |
The Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, which is part of the Met Office, provides a focus in the United Kingdom for the scientific issues associated with climate change. From Hadley we have the Central England Temperature track dating from 1659. 1659-1973 MANLEY (Q.J.R.METEOROL.SOC., 1974) 1974-ON PARKER ET AL. (INT.J.CLIM., 1992) CSV files: Monthly; Annual
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HadAT2 |
HadAT: globally gridded radiosonde temperature anomalies from 1958 to present HadAT is the Hadley Centre's new radiosonde temperature product. It supersedes HadRT which will continue to be made available in parallel for a short while. This website contains a full audit trail of all the decisions made in the construction of HadAT, a range of fully gridded and globally / regionally averaged products on a monthly or seasonal resolution, and some frequently used graphics. When using HadAT the correct citation is: Thorne, P. W., Parker, D. E., Tett, S. F. B., Jones, P. D., McCarthy, M., Coleman, H., and Brohan, P., 2005, Revisiting radiosonde upper-air temperatures from 1958 to 2002, J. Geophys. Res., 110, D18105, doi:10.1029/2004JD005753. As an absolute minimum requirement for correct usage it is imperative that users read and understand this paper.
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Hadley CRUT
HadCRUT2(v) discontinued, current series now HadCRUT3 |
Cooperative effort between the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research and the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) HadCRUT2(v) Monthly and Annual Regional Averages from 1870 onwards -- now discontinued, see new version HadCRUT3, information here. References HadCRUT2(v): Jones, P.D., Osborn, T.J., Briffa, K.R., Folland, C.K., Horton, B., Alexander, L.V., Parker, D.E. and Rayner, N.A., 2001: Adjusting for sampling density in grid-box land and ocean surface temperature time series. J. Geophys. Res. 106, 3371-3380. Jones, P.D. and Moberg, A., 2003: Hemispheric and large-scale surface air temperature variations: An extensive revision and an update to 2001. J. Climate 16, 206-223. C.K.Folland, N.A.Rayner, S.J.Brown, T.M.Smith, S.S.P.Shen, D.E.Parker, I.Macadam, P.D.Jones, R.N.Jones, N.Nicholls, and D.M.H.Sexton. Global temperature change and its uncertainties since 1861. Geophys.Res.Let., 28:2621-2624, 2001. CSV files: Annual: Global; Northern Hemisphere; Europe; Mediterranean; Saharan Africa; Central Asia; Southern Asia; China; Tropics (30N-30-S); Central America; USA exc Alaska; North America 50N-65N; North America 30N-50N; North America 25N-70N; Central Greenland; Arctic 75N-90N; Southern Hemisphere; Sub-Saharan Africa; South America; Australasia; Antarctic 65S-90S; Antarctic Peninsula; Antarctic Excluding Peninsula.
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NCDC |
National Climatic Data Center produces global land and ocean surface temperature anomalies and an absolute global mean temperature set (others here). These time series are calculated using land surface data from the Global Historical Climatology Network (Version 2) and sea surface temperature anomalies from the United Kingdom MOHSST data set and the NCEP Optimum Interpolated SSTs (Version2). Small differences in anomalies for previous years may occur from time to time due to the addition of recently collected station data or the incorporation of more recent versions of the base data sets.
*In February, 2006 NCDC transitioned to the use of an improved Global Land and Ocean data set (Smith and Reynolds analysis (2005)) which incorporates new algorithms that better account for factors such as changes in spatial coverage and evolving observing methods. (See NCDC Global Surface Temperature Anomalies) The same file states "The global monthly surface temperature averages in the table below can be added to a given month's anomaly (departure from the 1880 to 2004 base period average) to obtain an absolute estimate of surface temperature for that month."
The following are references that can be used when citing GHCN and/or provide additional information on the data set:
CSV files: Absolute Mean; Mean Anomaly; Land Mean; Ocean Mean; Land Anomaly; Ocean Anomaly.
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