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Nonparametric tests against trend

Henry B. Mann
- 01 Jul 1945 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 3, pp 245-259
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This article is published in Econometrica.The article was published on 1945-07-01. It has received 10523 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Nonparametric statistics.

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Early warning of climate tipping points

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the most promising approaches to early warning of tipping points in a climate system, where an external forcing causes a qualitative change in a system, such as the Greenland ice sheet tipping point.
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River discharges of water and nutrients to the Mediterranean and Black Sea: Major drivers for ecosystem changes during past and future decades?

TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and temporal variability of these inputs since the early 1960s, based on a review of available data on water discharge, nutrient concentrations and climatic parameters, is presented.
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Theoretical explanation of observed decreasing failure rate

Frank Proschan
- 01 Feb 2000 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the theorem that a mixture of distributions each having a non-increasing failure rate (e.g., a mix of exponential distributions) itself has a non increasing failure rate, and the apparent decreasing failure rate of the pooled air-conditioning life distribution was satisfactorily explained.
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Widespread global increase in intense lake phytoplankton blooms since the 1980s

TL;DR: Three decades of high-resolution Landsat 5 satellite imagery are used to investigate long-term trends in intense summertime near-surface phytoplankton blooms for 71 large lakes globally, revealing a worldwide exacerbation of bloom conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changing climate both increases and decreases European river floods

Günter Blöschl, +47 more
- 05 Sep 2019 - 
TL;DR: Analysis of a comprehensive European flood dataset reveals regional changes in river flood discharges in the past five decades that are broadly consistent with climate model projections for the next century, suggesting that climate-driven changes are already happening and supporting calls for the consideration of climate change in flood risk management.
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