Atmospheric and Climate Sciences

Atmospheric and Climate Sciences

ISSN Print: 2160-0414
ISSN Online: 2160-0422
www.scirp.org/journal/acs
E-mail: acs@scirp.org
"An Air Mass Based Approach to the Establishment of Spring Season Synoptic Characteristics in the Northeast United States"
written by Rebecca Zander, Andrew Messina, Melissa Godek,
published by Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, Vol.3 No.3, 2013
has been cited by the following article(s):
  • Google Scholar
  • CrossRef
[1] Analysis of urban Heat Island intensity through air mass persistence: A case study of four United States cities
Urban Climate, 2023
[2] Longer summers in the Northern Hemisphere under global warming
Climate Dynamics, 2022
[3] Recent Climatology (1991–2020) and Trends in Local Warm and Cold Season Extreme Temperature Days and Nights in Arabia
International journal of environmental research and …, 2022
[4] An objective definition of seasons for the Mediterranean region
2021
[5] Effects of Atmospheric Circulation on Stream Chemistry in Forested Watersheds across the Northeastern United States: Part 1. Synoptic‐scale Forcing
2021
[6] Seventy‐year disruption of seasons characteristics in the Arabian Peninsula
2021
[7] Analysis of Urban Heat Island Intensity Through Air Mass Persistence
2021
[8] Defining frigid winter illuminates its loss across seasonally snow-covered areas of eastern North America
2020
[9] Synoptic climate evidence of a late-twentieth century change to earlier spring ice-out on Maine Lakes, USA
2019
[10] A temporal analysis of seasonal start dates across 25 urban environments in the eastern United States
Physical Geography, 2018
[11] Changes in Summer Weather Type Frequency in Eastern North America
International Journal of Food Properties, 2017
[12] Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
2017
[13] Evaluating changes in season length, onset, and end dates across the United States (1948–2012)
International Journal of Climatology, 2015
[14] An Evaluation of Seasonality through Four Delineation Methods: A Comparison of Mortality Responses and the Relationship with Anomalous Temperature Events
2014
Free SCIRP Newsletters
Copyright © 2006-2024 Scientific Research Publishing Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Top