Title of article
CLIMATE HISTORY INFERRED FROM BOREHOLE TEMPERATURES, DATA FROM THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Author/Authors
JAN SAF، نويسنده , , A، نويسنده , , VLADIMIR CERMaK ، نويسنده , , Louise Bodri ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
16
From page
197
To page
212
Abstract
The knowledge of the present-day underground temperatures may be important in the
assessments of the past climate change. The method of inversion of the temperature-depth records
into the ground surface temperature history is briefly introduced by showing an example of synthetic
data and illustrated by a review of existing results obtained from the inversion of temperature logs
measured in holes in the Czech Republic. Underground temperatures observed in holes of the depth
of at least 1000–1500 m seem to confirm the preinstrumental climate pattern of the past several
thousand years. Most of shallower temperature records (500–800 m) revealed general warming of
climate followed the Little Ice Age of the 17–18th centuries and a pronounced increase of the soil
temperatures by at least 1 K since the beginning of this century.
Journal title
Surveys in Geophysics
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Surveys in Geophysics
Record number
403695
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