|
Official sources:
1. Rapporteur on Climate Extremes, Commission for Climatology, World Meteorological Organization. World Weather/Climate Extremes Archive, Committee Record Assessment. Available from http://wmo.asu.edu/committee-record-assessment.
2. World Meteorological Organization, 1994. WMO-No. 168, 5th ed., Guide to Hydrological Practices, Data Acquisition and Processing, Analysis, Forecasting and Other Applications. Available from http://www-cluster.bom.gov.au/hydro/wr/wmo/guide_to_hydrological_practices/WMOENG.pdf.
3. National Climatic Data Center. Climates of the World. Available from http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/pub/data/special/max24hr.pdf and http://lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/severeweather/rainfall.html.
4. Krause P.F. and K. L. Flood, 1997. US Army Corps of Engineers, TEC-0099, Weather and Climate Extremes. Available from http://www.tec.army.mil/publications/climate_ex.html.
Unofficial sources:
5. Cerveny, R.S., J. Lawrimore, R. Edwards, and C. Landsea, 2007. Extreme Weather Records. Compilation, Adjudication, and Publication, BAMS. Available from http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/cerveny-et-al-2007.pdf.
6. The Ohio Weather Library. OWL – Weather Records. Rainfall Records. Available from http://weatherrecords.owlinc.org/RainfallRecords1.html.
7. Burt, C.C., 2007. Extreme Weather, A Guide & Record Book, revised and updated ed. Available from http://extremeweatherguide.com/records.asp.
|