Ground surface temperature history at a single site in southern Portugal reconstructed from borehole temperatures

Citation
A. Correia et J. Safanda, Ground surface temperature history at a single site in southern Portugal reconstructed from borehole temperatures, GLOBAL PLAN, 29(3-4), 2001, pp. 155-165
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
ISSN journal
09218181 → ACNP
Volume
29
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
2001
Pages
155 - 165
Database
ISI
SICI code
0921-8181(200106)29:3-4<155:GSTHAA>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Reliable reconstruction of ground surface temperature (GST) history from bo rehole temperatures can often be biased by convective heat transport, unrec ognized thermal conductivity variations, topography and vegetation changes near borehole locations. To a great extent, all these factors are negligibl e in the case of a 200-m-deep borehole located near the town of Evora, in s outhern Portugal. This allows confidence in the interpretation of the boreh ole temperature versus depth (T-z) profile in terms of the GST changes duri ng the last 150-200 years. To obtain estimates of the GST history, the func tional space inversion method was used, which allows incorporation of uncer tainties in the data as a priori standard deviations. The method yielded a GST history that indicates warming of about 1 K since the second half of th e last century to the middle of the 1990s, with an increase in the last 10- 15 years. The results agree with the surface air temperatures (SAT) recorde d at the Lisbon meteorological station since 1856, which display a warming trend with an amplitude of about 1 K for the same period. The reduced tempe rature of the studied T-z profile was used to extend the observed SAT serie s to times before the instrumental period by estimating the long-term pre-o bservational mean (POM). The shape of the reduced temperature curve is best fit by POM values that are a few 10ths of a degree Celsius higher than 15. 6 degreesC, which is the mean of the SAT series in the period 1856-1900. (C ) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.