Stand 20. Juni 2022 (hier klicken)
Müller-Plath, G., Lüdecke, H.-J., Lüning, S., 2022. Long‑distance air pressure differences correlate with European rain, Nature Scientific Reports, 12:10191, open unter https://rdcu.be/cPQzt, Supplement (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J., Müller-Plath, G., Wallace, M.G., Lüning, S., 2021. Decadal and multidecadal natural variability of African rainfall, Journal of Hydrology: Regional studies 34, 100795. open unter https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581821000240
Lüdecke, H.-J., Cina, R., Dammschneider, H.-J., Lüning, S., 2020. Decadal and multidecadal natural variability in European temperature, Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics 205, 105294.
Laurenz, L., Lüdecke, H.-J. , Lüning, S., 2019. Influence of solar activity changes on European rainfall, Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics 185, 29-42, (hier) sowie Supplement.
Lüdecke, H.-J., Weiss, C.O., 2018. PPTX-Poster-Template-A0-1 auf der Konferenz der Europäischen Geophysikalischen Union in Wien (2018) in der Session CL0.00 „Past Climate“, von 9:00h bis 20:30 h am 9. 5.2018 unter Anwesenheit einer der beiden Autoren (Prof. Weiss) gezeigt und erläutert.
Lüdecke, H.-J., Weiss, C.O., 2017. Harmonic analysis of worldwide temperature proxies for 2000 years, The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, 11, p. 44-53, (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J. , Weiss, C.O., 2016. Simple model for the antropogenically forced CO2 cycle, tested on measured quantities, Journal of Geography, Environment and Earth Science International, 8(4), 1-12, (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J. , Weiss, C.O., Zhao, X., Feng, X., 2016. Centennial cycles observed in temperature data from Antarctica to central Europe, Polarforschung (Alfred Wegener Institut Bremerhaven), 85 (2), 179-181, (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J., Hempelmann, A. Weiss, C.O., 2015. Paleoclimate forcing by the solar de Vries / Suess cycle, Climate of the Past Discussion (European Geosciences Union), 11, 279-305, (hier).
Weber, W., Lüdecke, H.-J., Weiss, C.O., 2015. A simple model of the anthropogenically forced CO2 cycle, Earth System Dynamics Discussion (European Geosciences Union), 6, 1-20, (hier).
Glatzle, A., 2015. Reconsidering livestock’s role in climate change, Journal of Fisheries and Livestock Production, 3:2.
Glatzle, A., 2014. Questioning key conclusions of FAO publications ‘Livestock’s Long Shadow’ (2006) appearing again in ‘Tackling Climate Change Through Livestock’ (2013), Pastoralism, Policy and Practice, 4:1, (hier).
Glatzle, A., 2014. Severe methodological deficiencies associated with claims of domestic livestock driving climate change, Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering B 2, p. 586-601, (hier).
Limburg, M., 2014. New systematic errors in anomalies of global mean temperature time-series, Energy & Environment, 25, No. 1.
Glatzle, A., (2014). Planet at risk from grazing animals?, Tropical Grasslands – Forrajes Tropicales, Vol. 2, p. 60-62, (hier)
Lüdecke, H.-J., Hempelmann, A., Weiss, C.O., 2013. Multi-periodic climate dynamics: spectral analysis of long-term instrumental and proxy temperature records, Climate of the Past (European Geosciences Union), 9, 447-452, (hier).
Link, R., Lüdecke, H.-J., 2011. A new basic 1-dimension 1-layer model obtains excellent agreement with the observed Earth temperature, International Journal of Modern Physics C, Vol. 22, No. 5, p. 449, (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J., 2011. Long-term instrumental and reconstructed temperature records contradict anthropogenic global warming, Energy & Environment 22, No, 6, (hier).
Lüdecke, H.-J., Link, R., Ewert, F.-K., 2011. How natural is the recent centennial warming? An Analysis of 2249 Surface Temperature Records, International Journal of Modern Physics C, Vol. 22, No. 10, (hier).
Die EIKE-Autoren sind: Prof. Dr. Friedrich-Karl Ewert, Dr. Albrecht Glatzle, Dr. Rainer Link, Dipl.-Ing. Michael Limburg, Prof. Dr. Horst-Joachim Lüdecke, Prof. Dr. Gisela Müller-Plath und Prof. Dr. Carl Otto Weiss. Alle weiteren Autoren sind extern.
Alle hier aufgeführten Arbeiten sind begutachtet und können in Google Scholar fast immer als HTML angesehen oder sogar als pdf heruntergeladen werden. Hierzu Autoren und Titel der Arbeit, jeweils mit Kommas getrennt, im Google-Scholar-Suchfenster eingeben und bei weiterem Bedarf unter „alle Versionen“ suchen.