Bibliography

A compilation of urban climate related references compiled from tens of international journals, WMO and classical texts from Luke Howard, Albert Kratzer and Tony Chandler

IAUC Bibliography

The IAUC bibliography initiative was launched in October 2003, simultaneously with the release of the first IAUC Newsletter. At that time, the role of the Bibliography Committee, chaired by Dr. Jennifer Salmond, was to

make regular contributions to the newsletter about recent publications in urban climatology in journals throughout the world, as well as establish a digital archive of relevant publications

This effort is continued to date by the Bibliography Committee, that compiles references from more than 90 international journals quarterly, which are subsequently published in the IAUC Newsletter. The full searchable bibliography record is also available here, and contains records from 1996 to present.

We are always seeking researchers at all career stages, particularly early-career professionals, to join our committee and actively contribute to the IAUC community. If you are interested in joining or would like to acquire further details, please do not hesitate to contact the chair of the Bibliography Committee via iauc-bibliography@urban-climate.org.


WMO and other Urban Bibliographies & technical reports

Note that all of the below, and many more, urban climate related resources can be found on the e-Library page of the World Meteorological Organisation.

  • Chandler, T.J. 1970, Selected Bibliography on Urban Climate WMO-No. 276 (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 1974, Review of Urban Climatology, 1968-1973, Technical note WMO-No. 383 (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 1979, Review of Urban Climatology, 1973-1976, Technical note WMO-No. 539 (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 1983, Bibliography of Urban Climate 1977-1980, WMO, WCP 45 (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 1990, Bibliography of Urban Climate, 1981-1988, WMO/TD 397, WCAP 15 (pdf)
  • Adebayo, Y.R. 1992, Urban Climatology in Africa, WMO/TD No. 509; WCASP 19 (pdf)
  • Jáuregui, E. 1993, Bibliography of Urban Climate in Tropica/Subtropical Areas, 1981-1991; WMO/TD No. 552, WCASP 25 (pdf)
  •  Jáuregui, E. 1996, Bibliography of Urban Climatology for the Period 1992-1996 Including a Special Section on Urban Climate in Tropical/Subtropical Areas, WMO/TD No. 759,  WCASP 36 (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 2006. Initial Guidance to Obtain Representative Meteorological Observations at Urban Sites. IOM Report No.81, WMO/TD. No. 1250. Geneva. (pdf)
  • Oke, T.R. 2007. Siting and Exposure of Meteorological Instruments at Urban Sites. In: Borrego, C., Norman, AL. (eds) Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application XVII. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-68854-1_66 (draft pdf)
  • WMO, 2019, Guidance on Integrated Urban Hydrometeorological, Climate and Environmental Services. Volume I: Concept and Methodology. WMO-No. 1234 (pdf)
  • WMO, 2021, Guidance on Integrated Urban Hydrometeorological, Climate and Environment Services – Volume II: Demonstration Cities. WMO-No. 1234 (pdf)
  • WMO, 2023, Guidance on Measuring, Modelling and Monitoring the Canopy Layer Urban Heat Island (CL‑UHI). WMO-No. 1292 (pdf)


Classical texts

  • Luke Howard (1833) The Climate of London – Volume 1 (pdf)

The first study of the urban effect on air temperature.

Although Luke Howard is best known for his work on clouds he was also the first to recognise the effect that urban areas have on local climate. Much of his studies on climate, including his description, analysis and observations, are contained in this book, which can reasonably claim to be the first textbook on climatology. The impact of London upon its climate is discovered by Howard when he compares his temperature records against those made by the Royal Society at Somerset House. He concludes that the temperature of the city is not to be considered as that of the climate; it partakes too much of an artificial warmth, induced by its structure, by a crowded population, and the consumption of great quantities of fuel in fires (p.2). His is the first analysis of two related, but distinct issues:

1) the urban ‘contamination’ of meteorological records and,
2) the magnitude and cause of the urban effect.

The 1st edition of CLIMATE was published in two volumes, the first of which appeared in 1818. The second, much expanded, edition was published in 1833 and comprised three volumes. (The latter edition is the basis of this publication.) The first volume is particularly significant as it contains Howard’s descriptions and analysis of meteorological elements (e.g. temperature, pressure, etc.) that make up climate. However, this work is only possible because of the wealth of data he and his family collected over a twenty-five year period, 1806 to 1830. These daily data are compiled in tabular form in the second and third volumes and are supplemented by his notes and other information gathered from a variety of sources.

In this edition, all the figures have been redrawn and the text reformatted. This text was republished by the IAUC and a high quality boxed version of the three volumes forms the LUKE HOWARD PRIZE.

  • Albert Kratzer – The Climate of Cities (1956) (pdf)

The English-language translation. Republished with the permission of the American Meteorological Society.

Albert Kratzer (1905-1975), a Benedict Monk from Bavaria, Germany, submitted his PhD thesis on urban climatology in 1937 at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Germany. This thesis formed the first edition of Das Stadtklima (The Climate of Cities), which provides an extensive review of urban climate studies at that time. The second edition of Das Stadtklima was published in 1956. In the foreword he expresses his wish for the book and the field of inquiry:

I would like to express the hope that the book will be received as well as its predecessor, in Europe and in the America as well. I also hope that it will fulfill its purpose everywhere and will prove not only a useful tool in the hands of city planners and builders but also a lucid and instructive work on their climate for all interested city-dwellers. May it also provide inducement to further studies and particularly to the monographs which have still to be written in the field.

The book remains a unique source of information and is representative of the German school of landscape climatology. As an illustration, Andreas Matzarakis (University of Freiburg) identifies Figure 51 in the book, which shows the local wind systems in the region of Freiburg. This is a topic that continues to be of scientific interest. Many of the issues raised in this discussion of local wind systems are still unresolved while others are only now amenable to study through technological and methodological advances.

The document published here is the English language translation of the 1956 edition, published by the American Meteorological Society (AMS) and is republished here with the permission of the AMS. It is hoped to republish the original German language publication once permission can be obtained. The version here is rather crude owing to the quality of printing. However, it is intended to republish a higher quality version in the near future.

  • Tony Chandler – The Climate of London (1965) (pdf)

This is a remarkable comprehensive study based on an intensive measurement campaign carried out in London. The work represents a high point of descriptive urban climatology. Republished with the permission of Random House

This is a monumental work that took up the study of London’s climate where Howard’s left off. Chandler established an urban network of stations that was supplemented by observations made via mobile traverses. Together these comprised the London Climatological Survey that, at the time, represented the most spatially intensive climatological study of its kind. The Survey had two elements: ‘The first element of this involved a mobile recording station, housed first in a second-hand car, later in a new Land Rover, that Chandler drove along traverses through London monitoring temperature and humidity at various hours of the day and night. The second element involved more than 60 schools, teacher training colleges and private individuals maintaining climatological recording stations. The Survey soon attracted the attention of academics and town planners around the world. London’s ‘heat island’ and pattern of air pollution, which Chandler delineated, were discussed widely in the media. In 1964 he submitted his doctoral thesis, ‘Studies of the climate of London’, from which The Climate of London (1965) soon emerged.’ (Source: Clout HD and Atkinson BW 2009: Obituary. The Geographical Journal, Vol. 175 p82–83 doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4959.2008.00311.x)

In his concluding paragraph, Chandler summarised his work and its motivation: Londoners live in a profoundly man-made climate. A few of the changes wrought by the widespread substitution of houses and factories for fields and woods, and surfaced roads for cart-tracks, might be considered favourable. Such are the higher autumn, winter and spring night-time temperatures must reduce heating costs and lengthen the frost-free period, but these advantages must be outweighed by increased pollution and decreased sunshine. It is to be hoped that enlightened planning might do something in future years to reduce further unconscious deterioration of London’s urban climate.

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