the annual variations in
monthly global land surface temperatures are 4 times higher than those of TLT.
As noted in my earlier reply, the annual variations in
monthly global land surface temperatures are 4 times higher than those of TLT.
Not exact matches
References Rennie, J.J. and coauthors, 2014, The International
Surface Temperature Initiative
Global Land Surface Databank:
Monthly Temperature Data Version 1 Release Description and Methods.
My amateur spreadsheet tracking and projecting the
monthly NASA GISS values suggests that while 2018 and 2019 are likely to be cooler than 2017, they may also be the last years on Earth with
global average
land and ocean
surface temperature anomaly below 1C above pre-industrial average (using 1850 - 1900 proxy).
> We analyze and compare the
monthly global land - sea
surface temperature datasets HADCRUT3 and HADCRUT4 for 1850 - 2010 by subtracting two analytically modeled components and demonstrating with a suitable low - pass filter that the residue contains no significant fluctuations with periods longer than the 22 - year Hale cycle.
Monthly averages of
global mean
surface temperature (GMST) include natural variability, and they are influenced by the differing heat capacities of the oceans and
land masses.
The National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), has maintained
global average
monthly and annual records of combined
land and ocean
surface temperatures for more than 130 years.
The standard deviation of the
monthly MSU 2R anomalies has a much more zonally symmetric structure (Fig. 4 and Fig. 5) so that relative to the
surface there is a much larger contribution from the northern oceans and a generally smaller contribution over
land and near the equator to the hemispheric and
global means.
NCDC merges their Extended Reconstructed Sea
Surface Temperature version 3b (ERSST.v3b) with the Global Historical Climatology Network - Monthly (GHCN - M) version 3.2.0 for land surface air temper
Surface Temperature version 3b (ERSST.v3b) with the
Global Historical Climatology Network -
Monthly (GHCN - M) version 3.2.0 for
land surface air temper
surface air temperatures.
Provisional estimates of average
global temperatures based on
monthly climatological
land - station and sea -
surface temperature records have suggested it could be the warmest year on record.
For those of a data availability persuasion we have just released a beta of a new
global land surface databank consisting of over 39,000 station records at
monthly resolution.
These datasets include: NOAA Climate Data Record (CDR) of Sea
Surface Temperature - WHOI, Version 1.0 U.S.
Monthly Extremes
Global Historical Climatology Network —
Monthly (GHCN - M) Version 3 African Easterly Wave Climatology Version 1 NOAA Climate Data Record (CDR) of Daily Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR), Version 1.2 NOAA Climate Data Record (CDR) of
Monthly Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR), Version 2.2 - 1
Global Surface Summary of the Day — GSOD
Monthly Summaries of the
Global Historical Climatology Network — Daily (GHCN - D) I nternational
Surface Temperature Initiative (ISTI)
Global Land Surface Temperature Databank — Stage 1
Monthly International
Surface Temperature Initiative (ISTI)
Global Land Surface Temperature Databank — Stage 2
Monthly International
Surface Temperature Initiative (ISTI)
Global Land Surface Temperature Databank — Stage 3
Monthly International
Surface Temperature Initiative (ISTI)
Global Land Surface Temperature Databank — Stage 1 Daily... Continued