2009
DOI: 10.1175/2008jamc1979.1
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Development and Testing of Canada-Wide Interpolated Spatial Models of Daily Minimum–Maximum Temperature and Precipitation for 1961–2003

Abstract: The application of trivariate thin-plate smoothing splines to the interpolation of daily weather data is investigated. The method was used to develop spatial models of daily minimum and maximum temperature and daily precipitation for all of Canada, at a spatial resolution of 300 arc s of latitude and longitude, for the period 1961-2003. Each daily model was optimized automatically by minimizing the generalized cross validation. The fitted trivariate splines incorporated a spatially varying dependence on ground… Show more

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Cited by 383 publications
(380 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…7c; Hutchinson et al 2009). The interpolation process introduces a smoothing of daily precipitation that results in a negative bias for RX1day (underestimation of RX1day values estimated from recorded series) for almost all NRCan grid points next to stations (only two stations in the north had positive biases and these stations were probably not integrated with the NRCan product).…”
Section: Biasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…7c; Hutchinson et al 2009). The interpolation process introduces a smoothing of daily precipitation that results in a negative bias for RX1day (underestimation of RX1day values estimated from recorded series) for almost all NRCan grid points next to stations (only two stations in the north had positive biases and these stations were probably not integrated with the NRCan product).…”
Section: Biasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The NRCan dataset provides daily precipitation and temperature from Environment and climate change Canada stations gridded on a horizontal grid of ~10 km using the thin plate smoothing spline implemented in the ANUSP-LIN climate modelling software (Hutchinson et al 2009). A two-stage approach was applied for interpolating daily precipitation by estimating the spatial domain where precipitation occurred prior to carrying out the interpolation of observed precipitation amounts.…”
Section: Atmospheric Reanalyses and Gridded Surface Observationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Hopkinson et al (2011) precipitation dataset covers the Canadian landmass south of 60°N at a spatial resolution of 0.1°. This Canadian dataset was developed from daily observations from Environment Canada's climate stations, using a thin plate smoothing spline surface fitting method (Hutchinson et al 2009). The gridded daily SWE used for validation is that from Brown et al (2003), available at 0.3° resolution, for the 1979-1996 period.…”
Section: Observed Datasetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the idea of interpolating meteorological data is not new, by definition it is seldom attempted for extensive, data sparse regions with complex terrain. Previous studies have interpolated climate records (Grant et al, 2004), daily meteorological data (Hutchinson et al, 2009), or extreme values (Pereira et al, 2010) but these methods are potentially susceptible to patchy or discontinuous data affecting aggregate statistics. Others simulate multi-site rainfall and temperature using resampling (Buishand and Brandsma, Figure 13 Observed and modelled 10-year return period daily rainfall totals for Network A.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%