
Results are preliminary and subject to change without notice.
#EARTHTIME SEA LEVEL RISE DATA SOURCE UPDATE#
This beta version update is being released to allow for additional feedback before final publication. 1960-1969, 1970-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-1999,Ģ022 temperature anomalies relative to 1981-2010 averagesīerkeley Earth has released a beta version of our new high-resolution monthly gridded mean temperature data product covering the whole Earth from 1850 to present with 0.25° x 0.25° resolution.1º x 1º Latitude-Longitude Grid (each decade 200-450 MB).Global Daily Land (Experimental 1880 – Recent).1º x 1º Latitude-Longitude Grid (~140 MB).1º x 1º Latitude-Longitude Grid (~200 MB).Average Temperature (TAVG 1753 – Recent).Average Temperature with Water Temperatures at Sea Ice (1850 – Recent).1º x 1º Latitude-Longitude Grid (~400 MB).Average Temperature with Air Temperatures at Sea Ice (Recommended 1850 – Recent).The equal area grid is the primary data format used in most of our analyses and provides generally smaller files however, that format may be less convenient for many users.ĭatasets marked as “Experimental” below are products that are under development have not peer reviewed, and are included here so that potential users can give us feedback. Two types of grids are provided, a grid based on dividing the Earth into 15984 equal-area grid cells and a latitude-longitude grid. For academic publications and other permissions requests please contact are also provided in a gridded NetCDF format. Attribution under CC BY-NC terms should be given to Berkeley Earth, including reference to when possible.įor licensing in commercial applications, please contact or low cost access is also available for academics and journalists. Accessing the data provided on this page constitutes agreement with these terms. In general, Berkeley Earth’s data is licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC 4.0 International for non-commercial use only. For technical questions or inquiries about the data, please contact Licensing Source and intermediate data is available as well. This allows Berkeley Earth to provide the most comprehensive, high-resolution instrumental temperature data product available.īelow we have made our data accessible at the global, national/regional, and local levels. The newest generation of our products are augmented by machine learning techniques to improve the spatial resolution. Global datasets begin in 1850, with some land-only areas reported back to 1750. Our peer-reviewed methodology incorporates more temperature observations than other available products, and often has better coverage.
#EARTHTIME SEA LEVEL RISE DATA SOURCE SERIES#
Berkeley Earth provides high-resolution land and ocean time series data and gridded temperature data.
