Affiliation:
1. Climate Change Research Centre University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia
2. ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia
3. Australian Bureau of Meteorology Melbourne VIC Australia
4. NSW Department of Planning and Environment Sydney NSW Australia
Abstract
AbstractPreparing for environmental risks requires estimating the frequencies of extreme events, often from data records that are too short to confirm them directly. This requires fitting a statistical distribution to the data. To improve precision, investigators often pool data from neighboring sites into single samples, referred to as “superstations,” before fitting. We demonstrate that this technique can introduce unexpected biases in typical situations, using wind and rainfall extremes as case studies. When the combined locations have even small differences in the underlying statistics, the regionalization approach gives a fit that may tend toward the highest levels suggested by any of the individual sites. This bias may be large or small compared to the sampling error, for realistic record lengths, depending on the distribution of the quantity analyzed. The results of this analysis indicate that previous analyses could potentially have overestimated the likelihood of extreme events arising from natural weather variability.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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