Climatology of Alaskan wildfires with special emphasis on the extreme year of 2004
暂无分享,去创建一个
Martin Stuefer | Blake Moore | Martha Shulski | G. Wendler | M. Stuefer | M. Shulski | J. Conner | Gerd Wendler | Blake W. Moore | J. Conner | G. Wendler | M. Shulski | B. Moore
[1] G. Wendler,et al. Low-Level Temperature Inversions in Fairbanks, Central Alaska , 1975 .
[2] R. M. Reap. Climatological Characteristics and Objective Prediction of Thunderstorms over Alaska , 1991 .
[3] Martin A. Uman,et al. A Gated, Wideband Magnetic Direction Finder for Lightning Return Strokes , 1976 .
[4] N. Guttman,et al. A SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS OF THE PALMER HYDROLOGIC DROUGHT INDEX , 1991 .
[5] G. Wendler,et al. Some environmental effects of forest fires in interior Alaska , 1983 .
[6] G. Wendler,et al. A Century of Climate Change for Fairbanks, Alaska , 2009 .
[7] Martha Shulski,et al. The climate of Alaska , 2020 .
[8] John E. Walsh,et al. IMPACTS OF LARGE‐SCALE ATMOSPHERIC–OCEAN VARIABILITY ON ALASKAN FIRE SEASON SEVERITY , 2005 .
[9] Janice L. Coen,et al. Simulation of the Big Elk Fire using coupled atmosphere–fire modeling , 2005 .
[10] E. Johnson,et al. Large-scale climatic patterns control large lightning fire occurrence in Canada and Alaska forest regions , 2006 .
[11] David L. Verbyla,et al. Spatial patterns of lightning strikes in interior Alaska and their relations to elevation and vegetation , 2003 .
[12] W. Sullivan. LOW-LEVEL CONVERGENCE AND THUNDERSTORMS IN ALASKA , 1963 .
[13] A. Shabbar,et al. The Association Between Circulation Anomaliesin the Mid-Troposphere and Area Burnedby Wildland Fire in Canada , 1999 .
[14] P. Bieniek. Climate and predictability of Alaskan wildfires , 2007 .
[15] M. Flannigan,et al. Trends and periodicities in the Canadian Drought Code and their relationships with atmospheric circulation for the southern Canadian boreal forest , 2004 .
[16] D. Dissing. Landscape Control Of Thunderstorm Development In Interior Alaska , 2003 .
[17] R. Balling,et al. Relation of surface climate and burned area in Yellowstone National Park , 1992 .
[18] H. Lettau,et al. EVAPOTRANSPIRATION CLIMATONOMY: I. A NEW APPROACH TO NUMERICAL PREDICTION OF MONTHLY EVAPOTRANSPIRATION, RUNOFF, AND SOIL MOISTURE STORAGE , 1969 .
[19] J. Bradley,et al. Automated visibility measurements for airports , 1985 .
[20] G. Wendler,et al. Temperature and precipitation of Alaska: 50 year trend analysis , 2000 .
[21] W. Alley. The Palmer Drought Severity Index: Limitations and Assumptions , 1984 .
[22] C. W. Thornthwaite. An approach toward a rational classification of climate. , 1948 .
[23] M. Rorig,et al. The 2000 Fire Season: Lightning-Caused Fires , 2002 .
[24] Sue A. Ferguson,et al. Characteristics of Lightning and Wildland Fire Ignition in the Pacific Northwest , 1999 .
[25] David L. Martell,et al. A 500 hPa synoptic wildland fire climatology for large Canadian forest fires, 1959–1996 , 2002 .
[26] E. Kessler. Thunderstorm morphology and dynamics , 1986 .
[27] R. M. Reap. Evaluation of Cloud-to-Ground Lightning Data from the Western United States for the 1983–84 Summer Seasons , 1986 .
[28] T. Swetnam,et al. Mesoscale Disturbance and Ecological Response to Decadal Climatic Variability in the American Southwest , 1998 .
[29] E. Krider,et al. Lightning Direction-Finding Systems for Forest Fire Detection , 1980 .
[30] J. A. Turner. The drought code component of the Canadian forest fire behavior system , 1972 .