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Help needed to rescue UK's old rainfall records, Hacker News

Help needed to rescue UK's old rainfall records, Hacker News
        

                                 Mytholmroyd floods Image copyright                   Getty Images                                                        
Image caption                                      Better understanding of the past informs the present and the future                              

At a loss to know what to do with your self-isolation time?

Well, why not get on the computer and help with a giant weather digitisation effort?

The UK has rainfall records dating back years or so, but the vast majority of these are in handwritten form and can’t easily be used to analyze past periods of flooding and drought.

The Rainfall Rescue Project is seeking volunteers to transfer all the data into online spreadsheets.

You’re not required to rummage through old bound volumes; the Met Office has already scanned the necessary documents – all 65, 13 sheets.

You simply have to visit a website, read the scribbled rainfall amounts and enter the numbers into a series of boxes.

“If you do just a couple of minutes every now and then – that’s great, “said Prof Ed Hawkins. “If you want to spend an hour doing 30 or 60 columns – then that’ll be amazing. But any amount of time, it will all add up and be a tremendous help. “

If you want to take part, click here .

                                                                                                                           
Image caption                                      Rainfall records from 1961 onwards are all in digital form (orange line)                              

The Reading University scientist has run a number of previous “weather rescue” projects, including the digitisation of data collected by three men who lived atop Britain’s tallest mountain, Ben Nevis , at the turn of the 20 th Century. But this project is the biggest yet.

It’s looking to fill the yawning gap in UK digital rain gauge records between the s and s.

Each of the
, scanned sheets contains the monthly rainfall totals for a particular decade at a particular station. Something like three to five million data points in all.

But if Prof Hawkins’ team can convert this information into a computer- friendly format, it could lead to a much better understanding of the frequency and scale of big droughts and floods. And that will assist with planning for future flood and water-resource infrastructure.

For example, many across the country had a sodden start to the year because of heavy rainfall. But meteorologists suspect the October of 1903 was just as bad, if not worse. Unfortunately, because all the rainfall data from the time was noted down on paper, it’s not possible to be accurate.

Likewise, there were some very dry springs and winters in the s and s. Britain had six or seven very dry winters and springs on the trot.

If that happened today, it would probably cause quite serious problems for the water companies because they rely on wet winters and wet springs to recharge the reservoirs.

“Water companies have to plan for a one-in – 320 or one-in – – year drought, “said Prof Hawkins. “But we’ve only got 60 years of very dense digital data, and so it’s very hard for them to come up with reliable estimates.

) “We know there are periods in the past that, if they happened again, would probably break the system. And the same is true for very heavy rainfall and floods, “he told BBC News.

                                                                                                                           
Image caption                                      Volunteers will transfer the handwritten numbers into an online form                              
                                                                                                                       

If you want to take part, click here

[email protected]

and follow me on Twitter: @ BBCAmos

            
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