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North American Snow Cover | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/03/04/north-american-snow-cover
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data Part II. Second Thoughts on Methods to Combine Station Data →. North American Snow Cover. March 4, 2010. After reading about Steve Goddard’s Snowjob. Figure 1. North American continental land mass plus Greenland. The legend is the fraction of the gridcell that contains land. The figure is based on a land mask created by Carl Mears at Remote Sensing Systems (RSS). The year-to-year variations are somewha...
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Second Thoughts on Methods to Combine Station Data | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/03/06/second-thoughts-on-methods-to-combine-station-data
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! North American Snow Cover. Theme change and other things →. Second Thoughts on Methods to Combine Station Data. March 6, 2010. In my last three posts on station data ( here. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. North American Snow Cover. Theme change and other things →. Second Thoughts on Methods to Combine Station Data. March 7, 2010 at 8:15 am. Or are you saying something else? March 7, 2010 at 2:34 pm. March 7, 2010 at 7:40 pm.
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Better Late Than Never | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/better-late-than-never
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Theme change and other things. Not Blogging Lately Part 2 →. Better Late Than Never. May 19, 2010. Load the station inventory ( v2.temperature.inv. And data ( v2.mean. Consolidate each station’s duplicate entries (if applicable) by computing a monthly offset for each station such that the sum of the squared differences between each station after the offset is applied is at a minimum (See Tamino. I think this is a non-obvious error that ev...
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Almost back! | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/09/14/almost-back
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Not Blogging Lately Part 2. The Forest has Burned Down →. September 14, 2010. I’m keeping my old external drive warm downloading fresh data from PCMDI. I hope I can fit everything I need into 500 GB with room to spare! Only 20 GB of data left to download! This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Not Blogging Lately Part 2. The Forest has Burned Down →. September 15, 2010 at 6:57 am. September 16, 2010 at 1:25 am. Http:/ troyca.wordpres...
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Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data – Part II | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/02/16/combining-inhomogeneous-station-data-–-part-ii
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data – Part I. North American Snow Cover →. Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data Part II. February 16, 2010. As in the last post, I’ve implemented the same step changes but I’ve added spurious warming of 4 C/century to an additional station. Figures 1 and 2 show the data for all 20 stations. To better visualize how this affects the coverage of the grid box, here’s the station count over time. Table 1. R...
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Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data – Part I | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/02/13/combining-inhomogeneous-station-data
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Methods to Combine Station Data. Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data Part II →. Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data – Part I. February 13, 2010. Simple Averaging Method (SAM). First Difference Method (FDM). Climate Anomaly Method (CAM). Reference Station Method (RSM). To make the station data more realistic, I’ve added two types of inhomogeneities:. Figure 1. Station data before and after artificial trends were introduced. Figure 4....
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September | 2010 | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/09
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Monthly Archives: September 2010. September 14, 2010. I’m keeping my old external drive warm downloading fresh data from PCMDI. I hope I can fit everything I need into 500 GB with room to spare! I’m going to reprocess the atmospheric temperature and surface temperature data into a … Continue reading →. Chris Colose's Climate Change. Only In It For The Gold. Statistics and Other Things (Roman). The Air Vent (Jeff ID). The Science of Doom.
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The Forest has Burned Down | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2011/02/26/the-forest-has-burned-down
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! The Forest has Burned Down. February 26, 2011. My plan is to make a fresh start, someday soon. Thanks to everyone who provided useful, critical and inspiring comments to further along my analysis. You’ll have a chance to do that again soon. But for now, the Forest has officially burned down. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. The Forest has Burned Down. February 26, 2011 at 6:57 pm. Following every winter and every fire,.
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July | 2010 | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/07
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Monthly Archives: July 2010. Not Blogging Lately Part 2. July 26, 2010. The forest has been quiet for quite some time now. I’ve been very busy working on multiple climate-related projects. You’ll read about one pretty soon. My lack of blogging is also because I’ve lost some interest and inspiration for topics … Continue reading →. Chris Colose's Climate Change. Only In It For The Gold. Statistics and Other Things (Roman).
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Methods to Combine Station Data | Trees for the Forest
https://treesfortheforest.wordpress.com/2010/02/10/methods-to-combine-station-data
Trees for the Forest. Formerly the most awesome blog on wordpress! Combining Inhomogeneous Station Data – Part I →. Methods to Combine Station Data. February 10, 2010. Tamino’s done some exciting work on combining station data and his posts have motivated me to revive an old project that never quite got done. In this post I’ll discuss four methods that can be used to combine station data. The four methods I’ll evaluate are. First Difference Method (Peterson et al., 1998). 3533 N – 5.62 E. Thus the FDM wi...