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Statistical reconstruction of daily temperature and sea level pressure in Europe for the severe winter 1788/89

Statistical reconstruction of daily temperature and sea level pressure in Europe for the severe winter 1788/89

Authors :
D. Pappert
M. Barriendos
Y. Brugnara
N. Imfeld
S. Jourdain
R. Przybylak
C. Rohr
S. Brönnimann
Source :
Climate of the Past, Vol 18, Pp 2545-2565 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2022.

Abstract

The winter 1788/89 was one of the coldest winters Europe had witnessed in the past 300 years. Fortunately, for historical climatologists, this extreme event occurred at a time when many stations across Europe, both private and as part of coordinated networks, were making quantitative observations of the weather. This means that several dozen early instrumental series are available to carry out an in-depth study of this severe cold spell. While there have been attempts to present daily spatial information for this winter, there is more to be done to understand the weather variability and day-to-day processes that characterised this weather extreme. In this study, we seek to reconstruct daily spatial high-resolution temperature and sea level pressure fields of the winter 1788/89 in Europe from November through February. The reconstruction is performed with an analogue resampling method (ARM) that uses both historical instrumental data and a weather type classification. Analogue reconstructions are then post-processed through an ensemble Kalman fitting (EnKF) technique. Validation experiments show good skill for both reconstructed variables, which manage to capture the dynamics of the extreme in relation to the large-scale circulation. These results are promising for more such studies to be undertaken, focusing on different extreme events and other regions in Europe and perhaps even further back in time. The dataset presented in this study may be of sufficient quality to allow historians to better assess the environmental and social impacts of the harsh weather.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18149324 and 18149332
Volume :
18
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Climate of the Past
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0ed6b25dd8e45f5a5ce34be884f0862
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-18-2545-2022