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    Spatial modeling of winter temperature and precipitation in Arizona and New Mexico, USA

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    Author
    Brown, David P.
    Comrie, Andrew C.
    Affiliation
    Department of Geography and Regional Development, University of Arizona
    Issue Date
    2002
    Keywords
    Temperature
    Precipitation
    Southwest US
    Regression
    Interpolation
    GIS
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Brown, D. P., & Comrie, A. C. (2002). Spatial modeling of winter temperature and precipitation in Arizona and New Mexico, USA. Climate research, 22(2), 115-128.
    Publisher
    Inter-Research Science Center
    Journal
    Climate Research
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/676951
    DOI
    10.3354/cr022115
    Abstract
    The development of a statistical modeling technique suitable for producing mean and interannual gridded climate datasets for a topographically varying domain is undertaken. Stepwise regression models at 1 x 1 km resolution are generated to estimate mean winter temperature and precipitation for the Southwest United States for the years 1961-1990. Topographic predictor variables are used to explain spatial variance in the datasets. Kriging and inverse distance weighting interpolation algorithms are utilized to account for model residuals. The final regression models show a high degree of explained variance for temperature (R2 = 0.98, mean bias error [MBE] = -0.15°C, root-mean-squared error [RMSE] = 0.74°C) and a moderate degree of explained variance for precipitation (R2 = 0.63, MBE = -1.4 mm, RMSE = 27.0 mm). Several smaller-scale precipitation regression models are developed for comparison to the domain-wide model, but do not show marked accuracy improvements. Observed values of winter temperature and precipitation from the years 1961-1999 are compared to the 30 yr modeled means, and the differences are interpolated using kriging (temperature) and inverse distance weighting (precipitation). The result is a 39 yr time series of maps and datasets of winter temperature and precipitation at 1 x 1 km resolution for the Southwest United States.
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    0936-577X
    EISSN
    1616-1572
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.3354/cr022115
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    CLIMAS Publications
    UA Faculty Publications

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