History and description
This data package contains daily climate data collected at a
weather station located at USDA Jornada Experimental Range (JER)
Headquarters. This weather station is a National Weather Service
(NWS) instrument and is part of the NOAA Global Historical Climate
Network (GHCN). Daily climate observations have been collected by
USDA JER staff and sent to the local National Weather Service
office since 1914, first manually, and now automatically. These
observations include minimum and maximum air temperature and daily
accumulated precipitation made using standard U.S. climatological
service instrumentation and recording procedures. The data sent to
the local NWS office are subsequently quality controlled and
assured and made available on NOAA servers.
Data here have been transcribed directly from the original data
sheets stored at JER headquarters. These data have undergone
quality control and assurance procedures different than those in
place at NOAA (see below), and the data therefore differ from what
is available directly from NOAA servers. Most differences are in
the precipitation observations, and these are documented in the
history text file (see "Additional documents" below).
Transcription of the original data sheets ceased in 2006 because
direct data entry to NOAA began at that time, and this dataset
therefore does not continue past that time.
All data from this station that have undergone NOAA QA/QC
procedures are available by accessing the Jornada Experimental
Range, NM US GHCN station through the National Climatic Data
Center portal
(https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datasets/GHCND/stations/GHCND:USC00294426/detail).
There is another, automated NOAA weather station at JER
Headquarters that began service in 2007 and has data available at
the same portal
(https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datasets/GHCND/stations/GHCND:USW00003074/detail).
Data evaluation by USDA and LTER staff
Local USDA JER and Jornada Basin LTER staff have noted that daily
precipitation totals and temperatures at this station are total
precip and min/max temps AT THE TIME OF MEASUREMENT BY THE
OBSERVER. In a review of years 1914-1947 daily records, observer
time fell between 1530 and 1900 with most observer times being
between 1700 and 1800. Observer times changed to the morning
between 0700 and 0900 at an unknown date after this and currently
continue to be made in the morning. This local review also
revealed discrepancies between official data at NOAA and the local
datasheets that are most likely the result of incorrect data
entry. These discrepancies are described in detail in the attached
additional history document (see "Additional documents"
below).
Additionally, it appears that some data sheets may have never been
sent to, or posted by, the NOAA system. There are currently 985
daily observations in this dataset that do not appear in the
datasets that can be downloaded from NOAA. Over the 90+ year
record in this dataset, there is therefore a discrepancy of 49.22
inches of precipitation. There are figures illustrating these and
other discrepancies in the two datasets.
This data package remains to document those discrepancies, but is
now considered complete and will not be updated in the future.
Additional documents
The attached text file "NOAA_JERHQ_ws_daily_his.txt"
describes the procedures for identifying discrepancies between
NOAA data and the data located at JER headquarters and the
subsequent changes made in the included data file.
The summary figures "local_vs_noaa_daily_diff.png" and
"local_vs_noaa_cumulative_daily.png" plot the
discrepancies between the local JER data and NOAA server data from
the most recent data request.
Related datasets
Pan evaporation data from the same location (also NWS) was
collected from January 1956 through August 1979 and is found on
EDI in package knb-lter-jrn.210379003.
Monthly summaries of temperature and precipitation based on these
daily data are found in EDI package knb-lter-jrn.210379002.