Estimating spatial and temporal patterns of urban anthropogenic heat fluxes for UK cities: the case of Manchester

2009 ◽  
Vol 98 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 19-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Smith ◽  
Sarah Lindley ◽  
Geoff Levermore
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabella Capel-Timms ◽  
Stefán Thor Smith ◽  
Ting Sun ◽  
Sue Grimmond

Abstract. Thermal emissions or anthropogenic heat fluxes (QF) from human activities impact the local and larger scales urban climate. DASH considers both urban form and function in simulating QF by use of an agent-based structure that includes behavioural characteristics of city populations. This allows social practices to drive the calculation of QF as occupants move, varying by day type, demographic, location, activity, socio-economic factors and in response to environmental conditions. The spatial resolution depends on data availability. DASH has simple transport and building energy models to allow simulation of dynamic vehicle use, occupancy and heating/cooling demand, with subsequent release of energy to the outdoor environment through the building fabric. Building stock variations are captured using archetypes. Evaluation of DASH in Greater London for various periods in 2015 uses a top-down inventory model (GQF) and national energy consumption statistics. DASH reproduces the expected spatial and temporal patterns of QF but the annual average is smaller than published energy data. Overall the model generally performs well, including for domestic appliance energy use against top down model results. DASH could be coupled to an urban land surface model and/or used offline for developing coefficients for simpler/faster models.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruth Coffey ◽  
◽  
Hannah Sprinkle ◽  
Eric Sherry ◽  
Brian Sturgis ◽  
...  

Radiocarbon ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
R Garba ◽  
P Demján ◽  
I Svetlik ◽  
D Dreslerová

ABSTRACT Triliths are megalithic monuments scattered across the coastal plains of southern and southeastern Arabia. They consist of aligned standing stones with a parallel row of large hearths and form a space, the meaning of which is undoubtedly significant but nonetheless still unknown. This paper presents a new radiocarbon (14C) dataset acquired during the two field seasons 2018–2019 of the TSMO (Trilith Stone Monuments of Oman) project which investigated the spatial and temporal patterns of the triliths. The excavation and sampling of trilith hearths across Oman yielded a dataset of 30 new 14C dates, extending the use of trilith monuments to as early as the Iron Age III period (600–300 BC). The earlier dates are linked to two-phase trilith sites in south-central Oman. The three 14C pairs collected from the two-phase trilith sites indicated gaps between the trilith construction phases from 35 to 475 years (2 σ). The preliminary spatio-temporal analysis shows the geographical expansion of populations using trilith monuments during the 5th to 1st century BC and a later pull back in the 1st and 2nd century AD. The new 14C dataset for trilith sites will help towards a better understanding of Iron Age communities in southeastern Arabia.


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