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Jon Eischeid

Researcher at University of Colorado Boulder

Publications -  85
Citations -  8474

Jon Eischeid is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Sea surface temperature. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 83 publications receiving 7611 citations. Previous affiliations of Jon Eischeid include Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences & National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Was there a basis for anticipating the 2010 Russian heat wave

TL;DR: In this paper, the 2010 summer heat wave in western Russia was extraordinary, with the region experiencing the warmest July since at least 1880 and numerous locations setting all-time maximum temperature records.
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On the Increased Frequency of Mediterranean Drought

TL;DR: In this paper, a change in wintertime Mediterranean precipitation toward drier conditions has likely occurred over 1902-2010 whose magnitude cannot be reconciled with internal variability alone, and anthropogenic greenhouse gas and aerosol forcing are key attributable factors for increased drying, though the external signal explains only half of the drying magnitude.
Journal ArticleDOI

Online Rainfall Atlas of Hawai‘i

TL;DR: The Rainfall Atlas of Hawai'i as discussed by the authors is a set of digitalmaps of the spatial patterns of the 1978-2007 meanmonthly and annual rainfall for the major Hawaiian islands.
DatasetDOI

The Global Historical Climatology Network: Long-term monthly temperature, precipitation, sea level pressure, and station pressure data

TL;DR: The Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCNets) as mentioned in this paper is a large-scale data set of worldwide meteorological stations with at least 10 years of data, 40% of which have more than 50 years and 10% having more than 100 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection and Attribution of Twentieth-Century Northern and Southern African Rainfall Change

TL;DR: The spatial patterns, time history, and seasonality of African rainfall trends since 1950 are deducible from the atmosphere's response to known variations of global sea surface temperatures (SSTs) as mentioned in this paper.