Very high resolution interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology · University of Queensland · +2 more institutions
Abstract
We developed interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas (excluding Antarctica) at a spatial resolution of 30 arc s (often referred to as 1-km spatial resolution). The climate elements considered were monthly precipitation and mean, minimum, and maximum temperature. Input data were gathered from a variety of sources and, where possible, were restricted to records from the 1950–2000 period. We used the thin-plate smoothing spline algorithm implemented in the ANUSPLIN package for interpolation, using latitude, longitude, and elevation as independent variables. We quantified uncertainty arising from the input data and the interpolation by mapping weather station density, elevation bias in the weather…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 87.98
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
5- RJRobert J. HijmansCorresponding
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology
- SESusan E. Cameron
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of Queensland, University of California, Davis
- JLJuan L. Parra
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology
- PGPeter G. Jones
International Center for Tropical Agriculture
- AJAndy Jarvis
International Center for Tropical Agriculture
Topics & keywords
- Elevation (ballistics)
- Latitude
- Longitude
- Climatology
- Environmental science
- Multivariate interpolation
- Precipitation
- Data set
- Climate action