Climate & Meteorological Science References

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1. Anderson, Katharine. Predicting the weather: Victorians and the science of meteorology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005.
2. Appenzeller, C., T.F. Stocker and M. Anklin, “North Atlantic Oscillation Dynamics Recorded in Greenland Ice Cores.” Science 282.5388 (October 1998): 446-7.
3. Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. Impacts of a Warming Arctic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
4. Beaudoin, Alwynne B.“What They Saw: The Climatic and Environmental Context for Euro-Canadian Settlement in Alberta.” Prairie Forum 40.1 (1999): 1-40.
5. Behringer, Wolfgang. “Weather, Hunger and Fear: Origins of the European Witch-Hunts in Climate, Society and Mentality.” German History 13 (1995): 1-27.
6. Bobylev, Leonid P., Kirill Ya. Kondratyev, and Ola M. Johannessen, Arctic Environment Variability in the Context of Global Change. Berlin; New York: Springer, 2003.
7. Bradley, Raymond S. and Philip D. Jones, eds. Climate Since AD 1500. London; New York: Routledge, 1992. 
8. Brádzil, Rudolf. “Patterns of Climate in Central Europe Since Viking Times.” In Climate Development and History of the North Atlantic Realm, eds G. Wefer, W. Berger, K.-E. Behre and E. Jansen. Berlin: Springer, 2002.
9. Briffa, K.R., P.D. Jones, F.H. Schweingruber, and T.J. Osborn. “Influence of volcanic eruptions on Northern Hemisphere summer temperature over the past 600 years.” Nature 393 (4 June 1998): 450-455.
10. Buckland, P.C., T. Amorosi, L.K. Barlow, A.J. Dugmore, P.A. Mayewski, T.H. McGovern, A.E.J. Ogilvie, J.P. Sadler, and P. Skidmore. “Bioarchaeological and climatological evidence for the fate of Norse farmers in medieval Greenland.” Antiquity 70 (1996): 88-96.
11. Catchpole, A.J.W. and Irene Hanuta. “Severe Summer Ice in Hudson Strait and Hudson Bay Following Major Volcanic Eruptions, 1751 to 1889 A.D.” Climatic Change 14 (1989): 61-79.
12. Camuffo, Dario. “Freezing of the Venetian Lagoon since the 9th century AD in comparison to the climate of Western Europe and England.” Climatic Change 10 (1987): 43-66.
13. Chenoweth, Michael. The Eighteenth Century Climate of Jamaica: Derived from the Journals of Thomas Thistlewood, 1750-1786. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 2003.
14. Coates, Ken and William Morrison. “Winter and the Shaping of Northern History: Reflections from the Canadian North.” In Northern Visions: New Perspectives on the North in Canadian History, eds Kerry Abel and Ken S. Coates, 23-35. Peterborough: Broadview Press, 2001.
15. Coates, Peter A. Nature: Western Attitudes Since Ancient Times. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
16. Cruikshank, Julie. Do Glaciers Listen? Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters, and Social Imagination. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2005.
17. Cruikshank, Julie. “Glaciers and Climate Change: Perspectives from Oral Tradition,” Arctic 54 (December 2001): 377-393.
18. Davis, Mike. Late Victorian holocausts: El Niño famines and the making of the third world. London; New York: Verso 2001.
19. Dresbeck, LeRoy. “Techne, Labor et Natura: Ideas and Active Life in the Medieval Winter,” Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, new series 2 (1979): 51-80.
20. Fagan, Brian. The Little Ice Age: How Climate Made History, 1300-1850. New York: Basic Books, 2000.
21. Fagan, Brian. Floods, Famines, and Emperors: El Niño and the Fate of Civilizations. New York: Basic Books, 1999.
22. Fingard, Judith. “The Winter’s Tale: Contours of Pre-Industrial Poverty in British America, 1815-1860.” Canadian Historical Association Historical Papers (1974): 65-94.
23. Fischer, Hubertus, ed. The climate in historical times: towards a synthesis of Holocene proxy data and climate models. Berlin: Springer, 2004.
24. Fleming, James Rodger. Historical Perspectives on Climate Change. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. 
25. Fossett, Renée. In Order to Live Untroubled: Inuit of the Central Arctic 1550-1940. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2001.
26. Frenzel, B. ed., European climate reconstructed from documentary data: methods and results. Special issue of the European Science Foundation Project on European Palaeoclimate and Man 2, Palaeoclimate Research 7. See esp. Bradzil, R., pp. 75-86 and Munzar, J., pp. 51-56.
27. Fritts, Harold C. Reconstructing Large-scale Climatic Patterns from Tree-Ring Data. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1991.
28. Glaser, R. Klimageschichte Mitteleuropas. 1000 Jahre Wetter, Klima, Katastrophen. Darmstadt: Primus Verlag, 2001.
29. Golinski, Jan. “Barometers of Change: Meteorological Instruments as Machines of Enlightenment.” In The Sciences in Enlightened Europe, ed. William Clark, Jan Golinski, Simon Schaffer, pp. 69-93 Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999.
30. Golinski, Jan. British Weather and the Climate of Enlightenment. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.
31. Golinski, Jan. “Time, Talk, and the Weather in Eighteenth-Century Britain. In Weather, Climate, Culture, eds. Sarah Strauss and Benjamin S. Orlove, 17-38. Oxford; New York: Berg, 2003.
32. Grattan John and Mark Brayshay. “An Amazing and Portentous Summer: Environmental and Social Responses in Britain to the 1783 Eruption of an Iceland Volcano.” The Geographical Journal 161 (1995): 125-134.
33. Grove, Jean. The Little Ice Age. London: Routledge, 2003.
34. Grove, Jean. “The Century Time-Scale.” In T.S. Driver and G.P. Chapman, eds. Time-Scales and Environmental Change (New York: Routledge, 1996): 39-87.
35. Grove, Jean M. and Annalisa Conterio, “The Climate of Crete in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.” Climatic Change 30 (1995): 223-247.
36. Harington, C.R. ed. The Year Without a Summer? World Climate in 1816. Ottawa: Canadian Museum of Nature, 1992.
37. Hass, H. Christian. “Northern Europe Climate Variations during Late Holocene: evidence from marine Skagerrak.” Paleogeography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology 123 (1996): 121-145.
38. Henshaw, Anne. “Climate and Culture in the North: The Interface of Archaeology, Paleoenvironmental Science, and Oral History.” In Weather, Climate, Culture, eds. Sarah Strauss and Benjamin S. Orlove, 217-232. Oxford; New York: Berg, 2003.
39. Hoyt, Douglas V. and Kenneth H. Schatten. “A Discussion of Plausible Solar Irradiance Variations, 1700-1992.” Journal of Geophysical Research 98.A11 (November 1993): 18 895-18 906.
40. Koslowski, Gerhard and Rudiger Glaser. “Reconstruction of the Ice Winter Severity Since 1701 in the Western Baltic.” Climatic Change 31 (1995): 79-98.
41. Ladurie, E. LeRoy. Times of Feast, Times of Famine. A History of Climate Since the Year 1000. New York, 1971.
42. McEvoy, Arthur F. The fisherman’s problem: ecology and law in the California fisheries, 1850-1980. Cambridge, CB ; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986. (El Niño)
43. McLeman, R. and B. Smit. “Migration as an Adaptation to Climate Change.” Climatic Change 76 (2006): 31-53.
44. Middleton, W.E. Knowles. A History of the Thermometer and its Use in Meteorology. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1966.
45. Miller, Clark A. and Edwards, Paul N., ed. Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance. Cambridge, Mass.: M. I. T. Press, 2001.
46. Moodie, D. Wayne, A.J.W. Catchpole, Kerry Abel. “Northern Athapaskan Oral Traditions and the White River Volcano.” Ethnohistory 39,2 (Spring 1992): 148-171.
47. Nordli, P.Ø. “Reconstruction of nineteenth century summer temperatures in Norway by proxy data from farmers’ diaries.” Climatic Change 48 (January 2001): 201-18.
48. Overpeck, J., K. Hughen, D. Hardy, R. Bradley, R. Case, M. Douglas, B. Finney, K. Gajewski, G. Jacoby, A. Jennings, S. Lamoureux, A. Lasca, G. MacDonald, J. Moore, M. Retelle, S. Smith, A. Wolfe, G. Zielinski. “Arctic Environmental Change of the Last Four Centuries.” Science 278, 5341 (Nov. 14, 1997): 1251-1256.
49. Piper, L. “Backward Seasons and Remarkable Cold: the Weather over Long Reach, New Brunswick, 1812-1821.” Acadiensis 34.1 (Autumn 2004): 31-55.
50. Pfister, C., G. Schwarz-Zanetti, and M. Wegmann. “Winter Severity in Europe: the Fourteenth Century.” Climatic Change 34 (1996): 91-108.
51. Pfister, Christian, Rudolf Brázdil, and Rüdiger Glaser, eds. Climatic variability in sixteenth-century Europe and its social dimension. Boston: Kluwer, 1999.
52. Pfister, Christian, Rudolf Brádzil, Rüdiger Glaser, Mariano Barriendos, Dario Camuffo, Mathias Deutch, Petr Dobrovolný, Silvia Enzi, Emanuela Guidoboni, Oldřich Kotyza, Stefan Militzer, Lajos Rácz and Fernando S. Rodrigo. “Documentary evidence on climate in sixteenth-century Europe.” Climatic Change 43.1 (September 1999): 55-110.
53. Post, J.D. The Last Great Subsistence Crisis in the Western World. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1977.
54. Przybylak, Rajmund and Zsuzsanna Vizi. “Air Temperature Changes in the Canadian Arctic from the Early Instrumental Period to Modern Times.” International Journal of Climatology 25 (2005): 1507-1522.
55. Ruddiman, William F. Plows, Plagues, and Petroleum: How Humans Took Control of Climate. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.
56. St. George, Scott and Dave Sauchyn. “Paleoenvironmental Perspectives on Drought in Western Canada.” Canadian Water Resources Journal 31.4 (2006).
57. Sanger, C.W. “We are now in a splendid position for whales: Environmental factors affecting 19th century whaling in Baffin Bay.” The Mariner’s Mirror 80.2 (1994): 1159-1177.
58. Seaver, Kirsten A. The Frozen Echo: Greenland and the Exploration of North America, ca. AD 1000-1500. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996.
59. Smith, Jesse and Julia Uppenbrink, eds. “Earth’s Variable Climatic Past.” Special Issue of Science 292 (27 April 2001): 657-693.
60. Stehr, Nico and Storch, Hans von, ed. Eduard Brückner: The Sources and Consequences of Climate Change and Climate Variability in Historical Times. Norwell, Mass.: Kluwer Acad., 2000.
61. Stommel, Henry and Elizabeth Stommel. Volcano Weather: the story of 1816, the year without a summer. Newport: Seven Seas Press, 1983.
62. Sutherland, Patricia D. ed. The Franklin Era in Canadian Arctic History 1845-59. Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper No. 131. Ottawa: National Museum of Man, 1985.
63. Taylor, Alan. “‘The Hungry Year’: 1789 on the Northern Border of Revolutionary America.” In Dreadful Visitations: Confronting Natural Catastrophe in the Age of Enlightenment. Ed. Alessa Johns. New York: Routledge, 1999.
64. Thomas, Morley. The beginnings of Canadian meteorology. Toronto: ECW Press, 1991.
65. Thomas, Morley. Metmen in wartime: meteorology in Canada 1939-1945. Toronto: ECW Press, 2001.
66. Woollett, James M., Anne S. Henshaw, and Cameron P. Wake. “Palaeoecological Implications of Archaeological Seal Bone Assemblages: Case Studies from Labrador and Baffin Island.” Arctic 53.4 (December 2000): 395-413.
67. Zeller, Suzanne. Inventing Canada: Early Victorian Science and the Idea of a Transcontinental Nation. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1987.
68. Zielinski, G.A., P.A. Mayewski, L.D. Meeker, S. Whitlow, M.S. Twickler, D.A. Morrison, D.A. Meese, A.J. Gow and R.B. Alley. “Record of Volcanism since 7000 B.C. from the GISP2 Greenland Ice Core and Implications for the Volcano-Climate System.” Science 264 (1994): 948-55.

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