Scales of climate impacts

Clark, W.C. (1985). Scales of climate impacts. Climatic Change 7 (1) 5-27. 10.1007/BF00139438.

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Abstract

Climates, ecosystems, and societies interact over a tremendous range of temporal and spatial scales. Scholarly work on climate impacts has tended to emphasize different questions, variables, and modes of explanation depending on the primary scale of interest. Much of the current debate on cause and effect, vulnerability, marginality, and the like stems from uncritical or unconscious efforts to transfer experience, conclusions, and insights across scales. This paper sketches a perspective from which the relative temporal and spatial dimensions of climatic, ecological, and social processes can be more clearly perceived, and their potential interactions more critically evaluated. Quantitative estimates of a variety of characteristic scales are derived and compared, leading to specific recommendations for the design of climate impact studies.

Item Type: Article
Research Programs: Environment Program (ENV)
Bibliographic Reference: A longer version of this paper (Clark, 1985), with complete documentation of data sources, was presented at the Social Science Research Council's Conference on Forecasting in the Social and Natural Sciences (Boulder, Colorado, June 10–13, 1984).
Depositing User: Romeo Molina
Date Deposited: 18 Nov 2016 10:27
Last Modified: 27 Aug 2021 17:28
URI: https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/13975

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