P
Paul M. Della-Marta
Researcher at University of Bern
Publications - 16
Citations - 6261
Paul M. Della-Marta is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Atlantic multidecadal oscillation. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 5679 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul M. Della-Marta include MeteoSwiss & Bureau of Meteorology.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Observed coherent changes in climatic extremes during the second half of the twentieth century
P. Frich,Lisa V. Alexander,Paul M. Della-Marta,Byron E. Gleason,M. R. Haylock,Amg Klein Tank,Thomas C. Peterson +6 more
TL;DR: A new global dataset of derived indicators has been compiled to clarify whether fre- quency and/or severity of climatic extremes changed during the second half of the 20th century as discussed by the authors.
Book ChapterDOI
Changes in climate extremes and their impacts on the natural physical environment.
Sonia I. Seneviratne,Neville Nicholls,David R. Easterling,Clare Goodess,Shinjiro Kanae,James P. Kossin,Yali Luo,José A. Marengo,Kathleen Mc Innes,Mohammad Rahimi,Markus Reichstein,Asgeir Sorteberg,Carolina Vera,Xuebin Zhang,Matilde Rusticucci,Vladimir Semenov,Lisa V. Alexander,Simon Allen,Gerardo Benito,Tereza Cavazos,John J. Clague,Declan Conway,Paul M. Della-Marta,Markus Gerber,Sunling Gong,Bhupendra Nath Goswami,Mark Hemer,Christian Huggel,Bart van den Hurk,Viatcheslav Kharin,A. Kitoh,Albert Klein Tank,Guilong Li,Simon J. Mason,William Mc Guire,Geert Jan van Oldenborgh,Boris Orlowsky,Sharon Smith,Wassila M. Thiaw,Adonis F. Velegrakis,Pascal Yiou,Tingjun Zhang,Tianjun Zhou,Francis W. Zwiers +43 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors address changes in weather and climate events relevant to extreme impacts and disasters, such as hurricanes, floods, droughts, hurricanes, and floods, which can lead to extreme conditions or impacts.
Journal ArticleDOI
Trends in extreme daily rainfall and temperature in Southeast Asia and the South Pacific: 1961–1998
Michael J. Manton,Paul M. Della-Marta,Malcolm Haylock,Kevin Hennessy,Neville Nicholls,Lynda E. Chambers,Dean Collins,G. Daw,A. Finet,Dodo Gunawan,K. Inape,H. Isobe,T.S. Kestin,P. Lefale,C.H. Leyu,T. Lwin,L Maitrepierre,Nongnat Ouprasitwong,Cher M. Page,Janita Pahalad,Neil Plummer,M. J. Salinger,Ramasamy Suppiah,V.L. Tran,Blair Trewin,I. Tibig,D. Yee +26 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed trends in extreme daily temperature and rainfall from 1961 to 1998 for Southeast Asia and the South Pacific, using high-quality data from 91 stations in 15 countries.
Journal ArticleDOI
Doubled length of western European summer heat waves since 1880
Paul M. Della-Marta,Paul M. Della-Marta,Paul M. Della-Marta,M. R. Haylock,Jürg Luterbacher,Heinz Wanner +5 more
TL;DR: This article analyzed a new data set of 54 high-quality homogenized daily maximum temperature series from western Europe (Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom) to define more accurately the change in extreme warm Daily Summer Maximum Temperature (DSMT).
Journal ArticleDOI
Indices for daily temperature and precipitation extremes in Europe analyzed for the period 1901–2000
Anders Moberg,Philip Jones,David Lister,Alexander Walther,Manola Brunet,Jucundus Jacobeit,Lisa V. Alexander,Paul M. Della-Marta,Jürg Luterbacher,Pascal Yiou,Deliang Chen,Albert Klein Tank,Òscar Saladié,Javier Sigró,Enric Aguilar,Hans Alexandersson,Carlos Almarza,Ingeborg Auer,Mariano Barriendos,Michael Begert,Hans Bergström,Reinhard Böhm,C. J. Butler,John Caesar,Achim Drebs,Dmitra Founda,Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe,Giuseppina Micela,Maurizio Maugeri,Hermann Österle,Kreso Pandzic,Michael Petrakis,Lidija Srnec,Radim Tolasz,Heikki Tuomenvirta,Peter C. Werner,Hans W. Linderholm,Andreas Philipp,Heinz Wanner,Elena Xoplaki +39 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed century-long daily temperature and precipitation records for stations in Europe west of 60°E and defined a set of climatic indices derived from the daily series, mainly focusing on extremes.