The temperature dependence of the backbone motions in Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI was studied on multiple time scales by 15N nuclear magnetic spin relaxation. Laboratory frame relaxation data at 285, 300, and 310 K were analyzed using the model-free and reduced spectral density approaches. The temperature dependence of the order parameters was used to define a characteristic temperature for the motions of the backbone N-H bond vectors on picosecond to nanosecond time scales. The characteristic temperatures for secondary structure elements, loops, and the C-terminus are approximately 1000, approximately 300, and approximately 170 K, respectively. The observed variation in the characteristic temperature indicates that the energy landscape, and thus the configurational heat capacity, is markedly structure dependent in the folded protein. The effective correlation times for internal motions do not show significant temperature dependence. Conformational exchange was observed for a large number of residues forming a contiguous region of the protein that includes the coiled coil formed by helices alpha A and alpha D. Exchange broadening in the CPMG experiments decreased with increased temperature, directly demonstrating that the microscopic exchange rate is faster than the pulse repetition rate of 1.2 ms. The temperature dependence of the exchange contributions to the transverse relaxation rate constant shows approximately Arrhenius behavior over the studied temperature range with apparent activation enthalpies of approximately 20-50 kJ/mol. Numerical calculations suggest that these values underestimate the activation barriers by at most a factor of 2. The present results obtained at 300 K are compared to those reported previously [Mandel, A. M., Akke, M., & Palmer, A. G., III (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 246, 144-163] to establish the reproducibility of the experimental techniques.