{"count":89,"next":null,"previous":null,"results":[{"ob_id":28706,"priority":1,"role":"principal_investigator","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6672,"uuid":"b6c783922d1ce68c4293d90caede5bb9","short_code":"proj"}},{"ob_id":41164,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7256,"uuid":"0d5e8df3d851c34c6a58ab4ef56d2d40","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":41347,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7235,"uuid":"195c3239267d6d0303503ba1d65388e9","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":41464,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7258,"uuid":"1f4d0ad926de753b05152dc8612770f1","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":41492,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7224,"uuid":"44ea207df48e328fa56f754fc4fa97ca","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42087,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7286,"uuid":"5a8142f01bb8033c9488d170bd6729ad","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42454,"priority":8,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":3917,"uuid":"6990c4c8e1f0a971e8b8c2046b004f31","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":42513,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7284,"uuid":"6aee33775fb3bcf1c50cc759c39eba26","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42736,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7240,"uuid":"81525ab37b974741ac23a34972a6b9a2","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42761,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7270,"uuid":"822945dded6d459a074f54fe87a4d37c","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42816,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7246,"uuid":"887611b657a5b12710ff0e83b13d21d6","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":42859,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7268,"uuid":"8c9d889c3ed3e25d780fa266cb4c761a","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43037,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7282,"uuid":"9bc3aec2ad89c10894e9fe371a2816b0","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43060,"priority":18,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7290,"uuid":"9c0a54ee862d8be14d5459c23c74452d","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43121,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7260,"uuid":"a1fbda35936325138d8106c509c1e6eb","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43443,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7250,"uuid":"b744566ee024db41400643434677e525","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43494,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7288,"uuid":"ba69e6d39f9ae1cc901d59fb963c40d4","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43554,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7274,"uuid":"bd444327e97de526d7ae8349f572b3b5","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43577,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7278,"uuid":"bd48bd85823d92f2b8354a0c348374fc","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43791,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7254,"uuid":"ccfdfcea8eb5af3727258f7d0fc88a62","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":43814,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7262,"uuid":"cd09b6d26bd926bd7e08f577c89eab7f","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44212,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7272,"uuid":"e5295816fa65b19a2a812e9ad28dff8c","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44282,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7252,"uuid":"ec32380a9bb1f770fb3b7786f97bbccb","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44323,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7266,"uuid":"edc46623b2077443438a242b57dd15fc","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44349,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7276,"uuid":"eec8e67bc8d3e10d48f678a58222a86a","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44401,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7238,"uuid":"f12bd8d2d7401e2f5f0e30ab34a32ce0","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44470,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7242,"uuid":"f6d91241e36829ba1751b9b5911c5533","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":44813,"priority":17,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7280,"uuid":"ffde21cba00054610b75b5d77e11e176","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46249,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6681,"uuid":"4a6d071383976a5fb24b5b42e28cf28f","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46250,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6679,"uuid":"ac4ecbd554d0dd52a9b575d9666dc42d","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46251,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6677,"uuid":"2949a8a25b375c9e323c53f6b6cb2a3a","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46252,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6674,"uuid":"ac3e6be017970639a9278e64d3fd5508","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46253,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6670,"uuid":"c9dd2107e0b7e8c7b6aca7c34980f679","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":46254,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6669,"uuid":"3f8944800cc48e1cbc29a5ee12d8542d","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":46255,"priority":5,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":5004,"uuid":"0ce9f24ff8719cced7f407694466c2ed","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":46256,"priority":26,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":7223,"uuid":"51a90cd5a54a1bd84b18d8b7a839a2df","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":50390,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":13151,"uuid":"5dca9487dc614711a3a933e44a933ad3","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":53202,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":6069,"uuid":"fda780a7697f384010674ebb1d5e4f23","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":76284,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":20046,"uuid":"492c792f417c452db1a5946b9c3bc5fe","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":79110,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":20361,"uuid":"3df7562727314bab963282e6a0284f24","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":79232,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":20372,"uuid":"edf8febfdaad48abb2cbaf7d7e846a86","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":101073,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":20363,"uuid":"f45823cb32374e38adb5c6486744ac44","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":101074,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":20374,"uuid":"8b6b52b3a34c4964b35f918555e10ec1","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":102205,"priority":1,"role":"principal_investigator","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":24960,"uuid":"45cfa402911848f9a8f39962e4dc0cf1","short_code":"proj"}},{"ob_id":102686,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":25063,"uuid":"c311c7948e8a47b299f8f9c7ae6cb9af","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":102700,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":25064,"uuid":"237c618d8b2e49cf8e61d01780f11650","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":102711,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":25065,"uuid":"d4e823f0172947c5ae6e6b265656c273","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":102722,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":25066,"uuid":"58a8802721c94c66ae45c3baa4d814d0","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":105618,"priority":1,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":25414,"uuid":"9c43b65c191b44cba2abb5f5c8821f20","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":112795,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":26860,"uuid":"b177c691ce9143729e16faadbdebced8","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":112838,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":26866,"uuid":"7ad889f2cc1647efba7e6a356098e4f3","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":112850,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":26869,"uuid":"799fd91ff24247e295b406af14d32914","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":114948,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":27492,"uuid":"d6768285fdc8408bbb9b02bb0f317774","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":114959,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":27493,"uuid":"10d3e3640f004c578403419aac167d82","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":115004,"priority":2,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":27513,"uuid":"3587430e588b491e8a795664466a27d1","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":130792,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":30262,"uuid":"58d87204bd974f04b14141eb275f4a1e","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":130804,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":30263,"uuid":"89e1e34ec3554dc98594a5732622bce9","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":132065,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":30290,"uuid":"3e9f387293294f3b8a850524fcfc0c9c","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":132117,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":30533,"uuid":"d38d5949dfb1438185894321095583f4","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":132125,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":13522,"uuid":"251474c7b09449d8b9e7aeaf1461858f","short_code":"coll"}},{"ob_id":142031,"priority":5,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32021,"uuid":"901f576dacae4e049630ab879d6fb476","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":142048,"priority":11,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32020,"uuid":"b9698c5ecf754b1d981728c37d3a9f02","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":144114,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32371,"uuid":"82b0164a4d06467ab450ff67006729c1","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":144146,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32373,"uuid":"8e90b16ddd2a484897ab9737c46d6204","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":146271,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32769,"uuid":"0cea2aebf58b406784162a768bdfe0fb","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":146466,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":32803,"uuid":"7a5529a8758041eb83b9c32f8461e50d","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":146478,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  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He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":37093,"uuid":"10ff77c6b52143d987ab1f4a46834f5c","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":178155,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":37289,"uuid":"062942e96a6e4567b2bc47045be910a7","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":178189,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":37291,"uuid":"563cb665bc6e43f99b355a9bb8134317","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":181568,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":38103,"uuid":"e0b4e1e56c1c4460b796073a31366980","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":182013,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":38216,"uuid":"99120ddac5004caa85358f5250e2eece","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":195856,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":40166,"uuid":"8956cf9e31334914ab4991796f0f645a","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":196411,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":40300,"uuid":"5fda109ab71947b6b7724077bf7eb753","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":196633,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":40346,"uuid":"def64ef885684e199f03a4c50bc2f8dc","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":197654,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":40621,"uuid":"c3c1526fba8f4a5382d2f9fb86966d82","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":203492,"priority":9,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":41766,"uuid":"1de7b50d827b4b4f966bd4e3ec5516ea","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":203519,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":41768,"uuid":"c844fc58615a422aa2e7d2fc8bd8cccf","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":204673,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":43100,"uuid":"715abce1604a42f396f81db83aeb2a4b","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":204719,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":43120,"uuid":"3b7f475a30a642e9af5323cef748bb00","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":210835,"priority":3,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":44088,"uuid":"9cf07e92afaa405da4f40b6733f362d3","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":211555,"priority":5,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":44239,"uuid":"f06f0b7bd1404ffda0d3142f4cd166fb","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":211913,"priority":7,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  He is principally known for the time series of hemispheric and global surface temperatures, which he updates on a monthly basis.  He has over 400 research papers over the last 35 years.  He has over 27,500 citations and an H-index of 82 on the ResearcherID system.\r\n\r\nHe has been a fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society since 1992 and was on the Editorial Committee of the International Journal of Climatology until 1995.  He is currently on the editorial board of Climatic Change.  He is an elected member of Academic Europaea since 1998.\r\n\r\nHe was jointly awarded the Hugh Robert Mill Medal in 1995 by the Royal Meteorological Society for work on UK Rainfall Variability, and in 1997 the Outstanding Scientific Paper Award by the Environmental Research Laboratories / NOAA for being a coauthor on the paper \"A search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere,\" by Ben Santer et al. in Nature, 382, 39-46 (1996).  More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":44293,"uuid":"e0ca70c643264ea0a68d04008499b87d","short_code":"ob"}},{"ob_id":211942,"priority":8,"role":"author","party":{"ob_id":953,"firstName":"Philip D.","lastName":"Jones","partyType":"individual","description":"Phil D Jones is Research Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.  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More recently He was awarded the first Hans Oesschger Medal from the European Geophysical Society (now the European Geosciences Union) in 2002 and the International Journal of Climatology prize of the Royal Meteorological Society for papers published in the last five years, also in 2002.  He is recognised as one of the top 0.5% of highly-cited researchers in the Geosciences field by the ISI (the institute in the US that maintains the Web of Science, where publications and citations are monitored.  He was made (2006) a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and was awarded a Reviewer's Award by the American Geophysical Union (AGU) the same year.  In 2009 He has also been made a fellow by the AGU.  In 2012 he was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University Rovira I Virgili (Tarragona, Spain).\r\n\r\nApart from papers on instrumental temperatures, his other main fields are climate change, detection and attribution of climate, proxy climate reconstructions, climate extremes, climate impacts, weather generators, drought and long precipitation and riverflow reconstructions for the British Isles.\r\n\r\nCareer History\r\nBA in Environmental Sciences, University of Lancaster (1973)\r\nMSc in Engineering Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1974)\r\nPhD in Hydrology, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (1977)\r\nSenior Research Associate, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1976-1994)\r\nReader, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1994-1998)\r\nProfessor, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich (1998-date) ","deliveryPoint":"HIDDEN","administrativeArea":"HIDDEN","city":"HIDDEN","country":"HIDDEN","postalCode":"HIDDEN","electronicEmailAddress":"HIDDEN","phone":"HIDDEN","onlineResource":"https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/p-jones","responsiblepartyinfo_url":"https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/rpis/?party_id=953"},"relatedTo":{"ob_id":44295,"uuid":"d3c7c95a586649d78bd20b4ae8eb3caf","short_code":"ob"}}]}