Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1991, Page 15

Jökull - 01.12.1991, Page 15
°c 18 - 16 14 12 10 8 10 12 14 16 18 Fig.15 : Comparison of the maximum temperatures in summer for six weather types between four pairs of weather stations. Correlation coeffi- cients (r) of the temperature of July, and in two cases the regression lines between the same stations follow. Mynd 15: Samanburður hámarkshita að sumarlagi í sexflokkum veðurlags milli nokkurra veðurstöðva. Fylgnistuðlar (r) júlíhita milli sömu stöðva, og í tveim tilvikumfylgnilínur, fylgja með. southwestern part, at least when coastal stations are excluded. This was already seen in Fig.6 describing the distribution of the standard deviation of the July temperature. It must be pointed out that examples of this kind would give a rather poor result when comparing two stations, both with a small variation of summer tem- peratures. TEMPERATURE VARIATIONS 1901-1990 Two previously published papers on temperature variations in Iceland should be mentioned. The paper “Temperature variations in Iceland” (Eyþórsson, 1949) was based on measurements at Stykkishólmur, Grímsey, Teigarhom, Vestmannaeyjar and Reykjavík from start of observations and several stations in addition since 1901. It seems that formulae were used without further corrections. The temperature varia- tions were mainly described by using 10-year and 30- year overlapping means up to the year 1948. Two decades later a paper on temperature variations in Iceland 1846-1968 was published (Sigfúsdóttir, 1969), based on conformed temperature measure- ments at Stykkishólmur. In the following the main characteristics of tem- perature variations in Iceland during the present cen- tury will be described, based on partly revised monthly and annual mean temperatures of the select- ed weather stations. It has already been mentioned that the variations of the annual temperature in Iceland from year to year tend to be in phase in different parts of the coun- try, although the amplitudes may be different (see Fig.4). Fig.16, showing the annual temperature from year to year at Reykjavik and Akureyri for the period 1901-1990, confirms this. The variations are gener- ally going in the same direction at both stations but are larger at Akureyri. The difference is particularily large in some cold periods such as 1914-1919 and 1965-1971. It can be concluded from this figure that temperature variations in Iceland have been consid- JÖKULL,No. 41, 1991 13
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