Abstract

People have long been interested in the history of weather, particularly extremes, and chronologies of past events drawing on information from written records have been compiled and published throughout history. In recent years, concern over current and future weather and climate has triggered a new level of interest in past weather events and their impacts. This interest, alongside the development of digital humanities research methods, has resulted in a rapid growth in the number of online databases relating to historic weather and climate around the world. This paper documents the design, creation and content of one such database, TEMPEST, an online repository for extreme weather history in the UK. TEMPEST has been created as the major output of the AHRC funded project ‘Spaces of Experience and Horizons of Expectation: The Implications of Extreme Weather in the UK, Past, Present and Future’ (2013‐2017). Unlike the majority of existing databases that rely on published materials, TEMPEST's records are drawn from primary research into original documentary sources held in archives around the UK. The c. 18,000 records that TEMPEST currently contains offer personalised and geo‐referenced insights into the relationship between society and extreme weather in the UK spanning a period of over 400 years. In this paper we outline potential applications for TEMPEST and suggest directions for future research and resources in historical weather. We also consider broader issues for the digital humanities relating to the storage, archiving, ownership, and usage of data and the need to ensure connectivity between complementary datasets.

Highlights

  • General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the Aberystwyth Research Portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights

  • Unlike the majority of existing databases that rely on published materials, TEMPEST’s records are drawn from primary research into original documentary sources held in archives around the UK

  • In this paper we document the design, creation and content of our research database, TEMPEST (Tracking Extremes of Meteorological Phenomena Experienced in Space and Time), an online repository for narrative sources on historical extreme weather events in the UK, as well as considering key issues for the digital humanities

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Summary

Aberystwyth University

Dealing with the deluge of historical weather data: the example of the TEMPEST database. Lucy; Endfield, Georgina H ; Davies, Sarah; Macdonald, Neil ; Naylor, Simon; Royer, Marie-Jeanne; Bowen, James; Tyler-Jones, Richard; Jones, Cerys. H., Davies, S., Macdonald, N., Naylor, S., Royer, M-J., Bowen, J., Tyler-Jones, R., & Jones, C.

Document License CC BY
Open Access
Weather and the digital humanities
Historical weather in the UK
Online weather databases
Findings
Dealing with the deluge of historical weather data
Full Text
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