Spatial variability of soil temperature in an urban area: A case study for a medium-sized European city
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Published:2021
Issue:1
Volume:25
Page:1-9
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ISSN:0354-8724
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Container-title:Geographica Pannonica
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geographica Pannonica
Author:
Lehnert Michal,Šimáček Petr,Fiedor David,Jurek Martin
Abstract
Even though soil temperature in urban environment influences a range of processes, it has been studied rather sparsely in comparison with surface temperature or air temperature. Our research extends the soil temperature observation in Olomouc (Czechia) and uses semi-stationary measurement to describe detailed spatial variability of soil temperature in the area of a medium-sized Central European city. Differences in soil temperature 20 cm below grass-covered surface may exceed 3°C due to soil type, shadow cast by buildings and grass characteristics, which means that the representativeness of the data on soil temperature from a meteorological station within a city may be limited. Further research and a conceptual approach towards the study of soil temperature in urban landscape is needed.
Publisher
Centre for Evaluation in Education and Science (CEON/CEES)
Subject
Atmospheric Science,Earth-Surface Processes,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management,Geology,Geography, Planning and Development
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2 articles.
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