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REPORT ON THE UNIDATA EQUIPMENT GRANT TO THE
Arlene Laing and Mark Hafen
On behalf of the
Department of Geography
Tampa, Florida
Students in the Department of Geography at the
In the Spring 2004 semester, the meteorology laboratory was
used for exercises in Climatology (MET 4002C).
Here are two examples:
The first lab was designed to use the Unidata IDV so that
students could see the relationship between changing pressure and precipitation
events over the
Students then used the software’s data probe to
measure mean sea level pressure and precipitation at a given location
(latitude/longitude), near
The second lab did not use the Unidata IDV, but did require use of the laboratory computers. The goal of the laboratory exercise was for students to use statistical data to identify long-term trends related to temperature at the Vostock station, 78E 27' S, 106E 52' E, in the central ice plateau of East Antarctica, and to correlate these with evidence of global climate change. The data were obtained from the website http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/met/gjma/. Gnumeric software was used to create worksheets, compute simple statistical data (measures of central tendency, minima, and maxima), and to create graphs of the data for the students to interpret.
In
addition to having an impact on undergraduate education, the laboratory also
serves as a resource for graduate students.
For example, in Fall 2004 graduate students in a special Hazards course,
to study the impact of Hurricane Charley, are able to use the data collected in
the meteorology laboratory. The use of
the computers in non-synoptic meteorology course is achieving one of the goals
of the