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Biased Data Undermine Iconic Weather Record

http://www.thegwpf.com/biased-data-undermine-iconic-weather-record/

Biased Data Undermine Iconic Weather Record

Flaws are revealed in a highly cited database that dates back more than two centuries.

Scientists have identified biased data in an iconic meteorological record, and are now challenging conclusions about long-term precipitation trends in England, Wales and possibly other regions.

The England and Wales Precipitation (EWP) series is a continuous monthly record of British snow and rainfall, stretching back to 1766. For decades, climate scientists have used this record — one of the longest-running available — to examine precipitation and atmospheric-circulation patterns in northwest Europe.

Conor Murphy at Maynooth University, Ireland, and his colleagues drew on independent data, including long-term measurements of British snowfall, to reconstruct the record’s early portion. Their reconstruction showed that the EWP underestimated winter precipitation before 1870, whereas summer rainfall was overestimated before 1820. As a result, the widely accepted conclusion that winters have become wetter and summers dryer since 1766 appears to be an artefact.

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The post Biased Data Undermine Iconic Weather Record appeared first on The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF).

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