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Climate Classification System
Instrumentation - paper sample
The Köppen Climate Classification System
was created by Wladimir Peter Köppen.
Wladimir Köppen was a German
meteorologist, climatologist and botanist. He elaborated the
Köppen climate classification system, which is still commonly
used today to group climates into similar types (albeit with
modifications).
Although Köppen's parents were German, he himself was born
in Russia and attended a school in Crimea. While being at the
school, it was the first time that Köppen was attracted by the
environment and especially by the relationship between plants
and the climate they grow in. Later, he studied at the
universities of Heidelberg and Leipzig in Germany where he
graduated in 1870. His student dissertation dealt with the
effects of temperature on plant growth.
Between 1872 and 1873 Köppen was employed in the Russian
meteorological service. In 1875, he moved back to Germany and
became the chief of the new the Division of marine meteorology
at the German naval observatory (Deutsche Seewarte) based in
Hamburg. There he was responsible for establishing a weather
forecasting service for the northwestern part of Germany and
the adjacent sea areas. After four years of service, he was
able to move on to his primary interest - the fundamental
research - and left the meteorological office.
Köppen began a systematic study of the climate and also
experimented with balloons to obtain data from upper air. In
1884, he published the first version of his map of climatic
zones in which the seasonal temperature ranges were plotted.
This work led to the development of the Köppen climate
classification system around 1900, which he kept improving for
the rest of his life. The full version of his system appeared
first in 1918 and, after several modifications, the final
version was published in 1936.
Apart from the description of various climate types, he was
acquainted with paleoclimatology as well. In 1924 he and his
son-in-law Alfred Wegener published a paper called Die
Klimate der Geologischen Vorzeit (The climates of the
geological past) giving a crucial support to the Milankovic
theory on ice ages.
Towards the end of his life, Köppen cooperated with the
German climatologist Rudolf Geiger to produce a five-volume
work, Handbuch der Klimatologie (Handbook of
climatology). This was never completed, but several parts,
three of them by Köppen, were published. After Köppen's death
in 1940, Geiger continued to work on the modifications to the
climate classification system. |