Description
An explanation of how global temperatures are measured and analysed, for meteorologists, climatologists and hydrologists.
About the Author
Ian Strangeways obtained his degree in electronic engineering, physics and mathematics from Bangor University, followed by a PhD in meteorological instrumentation from Reading University. After 24 years at the Institute of Hydrology as head of the Applied Physics Section, concerned with measuring the hydrometeorological environment, he became Director of TerraData, a consultancy in meteorological and hydrological data collection. He is also the author of Measuring the Natural Environment, now in its second edition (2003, Cambridge University Press) and Precipitation: Theory, Measurement and Distribution (2007, Cambridge University Press). He has written many papers on the topic of data collection, climate measurement and instrumentation, and has written extensively for the Royal Meteorological Society's (RMetS) magazine Weather, for which he received the Gordon Manley Award in 2005. He is on the committee of the RMetS Special Interest Group on Meteorological Observing Systems, which he also chaired for three years. He has travelled extensively to many remote areas of the world, advising on the monitoring of the weather and rivers, and has given talks at major international conferences. He has been an external lecturer on the subject at Newcastle University, and has also taught at the Open University and instructed students overseas. He is an Associate Fellow of the RMetS and an Associated Member of the British Hydrological Society and the Institution of Civil Engineers.
Reviews
'I can thoroughly recommend this book to the scientific community and to the layman with concern for climate and what may or may not be happening to it.' John Rodda, The Newsletter of the British Hydrological Society
'... an excellent account of the problems and difficulties encountered in measuring global mean temperature, an important climate variable which has become perhaps the most intensely discussed parameter in the present global warming & climate change debate ... a very readable account ...' Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Bulletin
'... a valuable reference on measuring surface temperatures ...' Eos
Book Information
ISBN 9780521898485
Author Ian Strangeways
Format Hardback
Page Count 252
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 650g
Dimensions(mm) 253mm * 178mm * 16mm