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Service Description: The average number of hot summer days in the period 1987-2016 was calculated based on the E-OBS dataset , which is agridded data with 0.25° spatial resolution, based on over 10,000 stations across Europe. The value of the nearest-distance grid point to the city centroid was used as the value for that city.
Map Name: Number of hot summer days (Tmax over 35° C) per year (1987-2016 average)
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Description: Number of days per year, where maximum temperature exceeds 35 degrees Celsius (average from the period 1987 - 2016).
Copyright Text: E-OBS dataset is from the EU-FP6 project ENSEMBLES (http://ensembles-eu.metoffice.com), data is provided by the European Climate Assessment and Dataset (ECA&D) project (http://www.ecad.eu). Updated from Haylock, M. R., et al., 2008, ‘A European daily high-resolution gridded dataset of surface temperature and precipitation’, Journal of Geophysical Research 113, p. D20119 (DOI: doi:10.1029/2008JD10201).
Spatial Reference:
102100
(3857)
Single Fused Map Cache: false
Initial Extent:
XMin: -3457750.5206397898
YMin: 5766904.681999402
XMax: 4760756.292324746
YMax: 1.1331043589777833E7
Spatial Reference: 102100
(3857)
Full Extent:
XMin: -2412697.121283252
YMin: 3372915.259233929
XMax: 3715702.8929682076
YMax: 1.0952085097847171E7
Spatial Reference: 102100
(3857)
Units: esriMeters
Supported Image Format Types: PNG32,PNG24,PNG,JPG,DIB,TIFF,EMF,PS,PDF,GIF,SVG,SVGZ,BMP
Document Info:
Title: Number of hot summer days (Tmax > 35 degrees celsius) per year (1987 - 2016 average).
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Comments: The average number of hot summer days in the period 1987-2016 was calculated based on the E-OBS dataset , which is agridded data with 0.25° spatial resolution, based on over 10,000 stations across Europe. The value of the nearest-distance grid point to the city centroid was used as the value for that city.
Subject: High temperatures are dangerous to human health, as and can even be fatal to the elderly, babies or those in poor health, especially if lasting longer than one day. High daytime temperatures may bear particular relevance to the health of workers in outdoor or high-temperature indoor settings. It has also been estimated that as many as 40 % of deaths associated with heat occur on isolated hot days during periods that would not be classified as heatwaves (Baccini et al., 2011; Basagaña et al., 2011) and, consequently, individual hot days may have an impact on the health of sensitive groups.
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Keywords: temperature; heat; thermal comfort; health
AntialiasingMode: None
TextAntialiasingMode: Force
Supports Dynamic Layers: true
MaxRecordCount: 1000
MaxImageHeight: 4096
MaxImageWidth: 4096
Supported Query Formats: JSON, geoJSON, PBF
Supports Query Data Elements: true
Min Scale: 0
Max Scale: 0
Supports Datum Transformation: true
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