T
Timothy D. Mitchell
Researcher at University of East Anglia
Publications - 12
Citations - 7856
Timothy D. Mitchell is an academic researcher from University of East Anglia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Global warming. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 12 publications receiving 7609 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An improved method of constructing a database of monthly climate observations and associated high-resolution grids
Timothy D. Mitchell,Philip Jones +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a database of monthly climate observations from meteorological stations is constructed and checked for inhomogeneities in the station records using an automated method that refines previous methods by using incomplete and partially overlapping records and by detecting inhomalities with opposite signs in different seasons.
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Ecosystem Service Supply and Vulnerability to Global Change in Europe
Dagmar Schröter,Wolfgang Cramer,Rik Leemans,I. Colin Prentice,Miguel B. Araújo,Nigel W. Arnell,Alberte Bondeau,Harald Bugmann,Timothy R. Carter,Carlos Gracia,Anne Cristina de la Vega-Leinert,Markus Erhard,Frank Ewert,Margaret J. Glendining,Joanna Isobel House,Susanna Kankaanpää,Richard J. T. Klein,Sandra Lavorel,Marcus Lindner,Marc J. Metzger,Jeannette Meyer,Timothy D. Mitchell,Isabelle Reginster,Mark Rounsevell,Santi Sabaté,Stephen Sitch,Ben Smith,Jo Smith,Pete Smith,Martin T. Sykes,Kirsten Thonicke,Wilfried Thuiller,G. Tuck,Sönke Zaehle,Bärbel Zierl +34 more
TL;DR: A range of ecosystem models and scenarios of climate and land-use change to conduct a Europe-wide assessment of ecosystem service supply during the 21st century, finding that many changes increase vulnerability as a result of a decreasing supply of ecosystem services.
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Pattern Scaling: An Examination of the Accuracy of the Technique for Describing Future Climates
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effect of scaling a spatial response pattern from a GCM by a global warming projection from a simple climate model using a particular GCM (HadCM2) and found that there is a linear relationship between the scaler and the response pattern.
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Climate data for political areas
TL;DR: The origins of the idea that humans might be enhancing the natural greenhouse effect through emissions of carbon dioxide (and other greenhouse gases) stretch back into the nineteenth century (Tyndall 1863; Arrhenius 1896a 1896b), but it did not ‘fire the imagination of the scientific community’ until the 1970s (Kellogg 1987, 113) as discussed by the authors.