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handle: 10261/74290
This study analyzes the mean maximum and minimum temperature trends on a monthly, seasonal, and annual timescale by applying various statistical tools to data from 476 Spanish weather stations during the period between 1961 and 2006. The magnitude of the trends was derived from the slopes of the regression lines using the least squares method, and the nonparametric Mann-Kendall test was used to determine the statistical significance of the trends. Temperature significantly increased in over 60% of the country in March, June, spring, and summer in the case of maximum temperatures and in March, May, June, August, spring, and summer for minimum temperatures. At the annual resolution, temperatures significantly increased in over 90% of Spain with a rise of around 0.3A degrees C/decade. The maximum temperature increased at a higher rate than the minimum temperature from midsummer to early winter as well as in winter, spring, and summer and also on an annual basis.
The authors would like to acknowledge AEMET (Spanish Meteorological Agency) for providing Tmax and Tmin data.
22 páginas, 6 figuras.
Peer reviewed
Summer temperature, Precipitation variability, Solar-radiation, North-Atlantic oscilation, Winter temperature, Atmospheric circulation, Climate extremes, Spatial Interpolation, Hemisphere temperature, Iberian Peninsula
Summer temperature, Precipitation variability, Solar-radiation, North-Atlantic oscilation, Winter temperature, Atmospheric circulation, Climate extremes, Spatial Interpolation, Hemisphere temperature, Iberian Peninsula
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