The Effect of Urban Warming on the Northern Hemisphere Temperature Average

P. D. Jones Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia. Norwich, United Kingdom

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P. M. Kelly Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia. Norwich, United Kingdom

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C. M. Goodess Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia. Norwich, United Kingdom

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T. Karl National Climate Data Center, Federal Building, Asheville, North Carolina

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Abstract

The significance of the urban warming effect on large-scale and hemispheric mean temperature series is assessed using estimates of the urbanization bias for stations in the United States produced by Karl et al. It is concluded that the Northern Hemisphere landmass average recently compiled by Jones et al. may contain a spurious warming trend which is, at the maximum, 0.1°C over the first eight decades of the twentieth century. This is considerably less than the long-term warming trend observed over the same period.

Abstract

The significance of the urban warming effect on large-scale and hemispheric mean temperature series is assessed using estimates of the urbanization bias for stations in the United States produced by Karl et al. It is concluded that the Northern Hemisphere landmass average recently compiled by Jones et al. may contain a spurious warming trend which is, at the maximum, 0.1°C over the first eight decades of the twentieth century. This is considerably less than the long-term warming trend observed over the same period.

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