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Weather Eye with John Maunder |
Thermometers, have been available to record air temperatures since the early 1600's, and the first known temperatures were those recorded in England at about 1650.
Various people have been credited with the invention of the thermometer and Galileo Galilei seems to be the first in the early 1600's; with Robert Fludd in 1638 being the first to show a scale to the new invention.
The graph below shows the central England surface air temperature series, which is the longest existing meteorological record. Thin lines show the annual values; and the thick lines show the running 11-year average.
The graphs for the annual, summer and winter temperatures have been prepared using the composite monthly meteorological series, originally painstakingly homogenised and published by the late professor Gordon Manley in 1974. The data series is now updated by the UK's Hadley Centre.

Among other things, the graphs show the cold of the 1660-1670 decade, associated with very low sunspot numbers; the 1815-1816, a 'year without a summer”, associated with the Mount Tambora volcano in Indonesia; and the warming trend of the last 20 years.
The graph is one of many from the website: http://www.climate4you.com/
It gives links to many official climate data websites, produced by NASA, NOAA, and The University of East Anglia, etc.

