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Post by nei on Jan 17, 2019 12:13:33 GMT -5
OK, it's interpolation. But it's done by very good methods and using lots of stations to calculate. Numbers seem very reasonable. Zoom in on the map or type location by place name of lat/lon and get monthly temperature, precipitation and dewpoint. Climate normals or any recent historical month. High resolution 1/2 km grid prism.oregonstate.edu/explorer/A worldwide version would be awesome, especially for settling the Göle and Aradahan debate. Of course, won't be that accurate in regions with sparse stations.
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Post by Speagles84 on Jan 24, 2019 8:02:38 GMT -5
OK, it's interpolation. But it's done by very good methods and using lots of stations to calculate. Numbers seem very reasonable. Zoom in on the map or type location by place name of lat/lon and get monthly temperature, precipitation and dewpoint. Climate normals or any recent historical month. High resolution 1/2 km grid prism.oregonstate.edu/explorer/A worldwide version would be awesome, especially for settling the Göle and Aradahan debate. Of course, won't be that accurate in regions with sparse stations. I use a very similar tool (it's only Pennsylvania values though) at work all the time. I'm a civil engineer thay does quite a bit of pavement design and weather conditions are vital to know understand in the design of a pavement structure. Interpolation is the best we have, can't have a weather station every 500 feet lol
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