1. Validation of a homogeneous 41-year (1961–2001) winter precipitation hindcasted dataset over the Iberian Peninsula: assessment of the regional improvement of global reanalysis.
- Author
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Sotillo, M. G., Martín, M. L., Valero, F., and Luna, M. Y.
- Subjects
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PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *RADIATIVE transitions , *SOLAR radiation simulation , *TOPOCLIMATOLOGY , *GEOSTROPHIC wind , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *ANTHROPOGENIC soils , *ECOLOGICAL zones , *DEPOSITIONS , *CONDENSATION , *CLIMATE extremes , *BIOCHEMICAL toxicology , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *POLYWATER , *GREENHOUSE effect , *ACID-forming emissions - Abstract
A 44-year (1958–2001) homogeneous, Mediterranean, high-resolution atmospheric database was generated through dynamical downscaling within the HIPOCAS (Hindcast of Dynamic Processes of the Ocean and Coastal Areas of Europe) Project framework. This work attempts to provide a validation of the monthly winter HIPOCAS precipitation over the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands and to evaluate the potential improvement of these new hindcasted data versus global reanalysis datasets. The validation was performed through the comparative analysis with a precipitation database derived from 4,617 in situ stations located over Iberia and the Balearics. The statistical comparative analysis between the observed and the HIPOCAS fields highlights their very good agreement not only in terms of spatial and time distribution, but also in terms of total amount of precipitation. A principal component analysis is carried out, showing that the patterns derived from the HIPOCAS data largely capture the main characteristics of the observed field. Moreover, it is worth to note that the HIPOCAS patterns reproduce accurately the observed regional characteristics linked to the main orographic features of the study domain. The existence of high correlations between the hindcasted and observed principal component time series gives a measure of the model performance ability. An additional comparative study of the HIPOCAS winter precipitation with global reanalysis data (NCEP and ERA) is performed. This study reveals the important regional improvement in the characterization of the observed precipitation introduced by the HIPOCAS hindcast relative to the above global reanalyses. Such improvement is effective not only in terms of total amount values, but also in the spatial distribution, the observed field being much more realistically reproduced by HIPOCAS than by the global reanalysis data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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