A CLIMATE DEPARTURE INDEX FOR THE STUDY OF CLIMATIC VARIABILITY |
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Authors: | Philip W. Suckling |
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Affiliation: | Department of Geography , University of Georgia , Athens, Georgia 30602 |
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Abstract: | Three versions of a Climate Departure Index (CDI) are presented for studying how “normal” or “unusual” a particular year or event is compared to the long-term average for the region under consideration. Comparisons of a Simple CDI, Absolute Value CDI and Least-Squares CDI are made through the use of hypothetical examples and two case studies involving seasonal snowfall variations in northern New England and last spring-freeze date variations in the southeastern United States. Results clearly show that the Simple CDI is the inferior formulation owing to a compensation problem whereby above and below average sites within a region for a particular year cancel each other when computing the index value. Little difference in identifying extreme years was found between use of the Absolute Value CDI and Least-Squares CDI in the case studies examined. Nevertheless, a hypothetical example suggests that the least-squares approach for closeness of fit is the more appropriate method, thus making the Least-Squares CDI the preferred version. |
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Keywords: | landslide erosion weathering gneiss Calabria |
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