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Artificial amplification of warming trends across the mountains of the western United States

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Jared Oyler, Solomon Dobrowski, Ashley P Ballantyne, Anna E. Klene, and Steven W Running, 2015-01, Artificial amplification of warming trends across the mountains of the western United States: Geophysical Research Letters, v. 42, iss. 1.

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Abstract (from http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014GL062803/abstract): Observations from the main mountain climate station network in the western United States (U.S.) suggest that higher elevations are warming faster than lower elevations. This has led to the assumption that elevation-dependent warming is prevalent throughout the region with impacts to water resources and ecosystem services. Here we critically evaluate this network's temperature observations and show that extreme warming observed at higher elevations is the result of systematic artifacts and not climatic conditions. With artifacts removed, the network's 1991–2012 minimum temperature trend decreases from +1.16°C decade−1 to +0.106°C decade−1 and is statistically [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • North Central CASC

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journalGeophysical Research Letters
parts
typedoi
value10.1002/2014GL062803
typestartPage
value153
typeissn
value1944-8007
typeissue
value1
typeendPage
value161
typevolume
value42

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