Phil Jones
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- This article is about the climatologist. For Phil Jones, the journalist, see here.
Philip D. Jones (1952-) is a climatologist at the University of East Anglia, notable for maintaining of the time series of the instrumental temperature record [1]; this work figured prominently in the IPCC TAR SPM [2]. He is director of the Climatic Research Unit and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich. His research interests are instrumental climate change, palaeoclimatology, detection of climate change and the extension of riverflow records in the UK. He was a contributing author to the IPCC TAR chapter 12 Detection of Climate Change and Attribution of Causes. Together with Michael Mann he has published on the temperature record of the past 1000 years.
[edit] Publications
- Jones, P.D. & Mann, M.E. (2004), “Climate over past millennia”, Reviews of Geophysics 42 (RG2002): 42, doi:10.1029/2003RG000143, <http://iri.columbia.edu/~goddard/EESC_W4400/CC/jones_mann_2004.pdf>. Retrieved on 18 April 2007
- Mann, Michael E. & Jones, Philip D. (2003), “Global Surface Temperatures over the Past Two Millennia”, Geophysical Research Letters 30 (15): CLM 5-1~5-4, doi:10.1029/2003GL017814, <http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Publications/PDF_Papers/Mann_Jones1.pdf>. Retrieved on 18 April 2007
- Jones, P. D. & Moberg, A. (2003), “Hemispheric and Large-Scale Surface Air Temperature Variations: An Extensive Revision and an Update to 2001”, Journal of Climate 16 (2): 206–223, doi:10.1175/1520-0442(2003)016%3C0206:HALSSA%3E2.0.CO;2, <http://www.sfu.ca/~jkoch/jones_and_moberg_2003.pdf>. Retrieved on 18 April 2007
- Jones, P. D. & Osborn, T.J. (2003), “Estimating Sampling Errors in Large-Scale Temperature Averages”, Journal of Climate 10 (10): 2548–2568, doi:10.1175/1520-0442(1997)010%3C2548:ESEILS%3E2.0.CO;2, <http://ams.allenpress.com/archive/1520-0442/10/10/pdf/i1520-0442-10-10-2548.pdf>. Retrieved on 18 April 2007
[edit] Awards
- Hans Oeschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society in 2002 [3] for his remarkable contribution and sustained effort in reconstructing the climate of the last 250 years at the global and regional scales
- International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteoological Society for papers published in the last five years in 2002
- Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper "A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere," by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996)
[edit] External links
- Home page
- BBC article on the temperature record of the past 1000 years controversy
- BBC article: Climate crisis: All change in the UK?
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