High-resolution studies of rainfall on Norfolk Island Part II: Interpolation of rainfall data

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Abstract

Four spatial interpolation methods are compared using rainfall data from a network of thirteen rain gauges on Norfolk Island (area 35 km2). The purpose is to obtain spatially continuous rainfall estimates across the island, from point measurements and for different integration times, by the most effective means. The more computationally demanding method of kriging provided no significant improvement over any of the much simpler inverse-distance, Thiessen, or areal-mean methods. In order to assimilate some of the characteristics of spatially varying rainfall, and based on the comparisons performed, the inversedistance method is recommended for interpolations using spatially dense networks.

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Dirks, K. N., Hay, J. E., Stow, C. D., & Harris, D. (1998). High-resolution studies of rainfall on Norfolk Island Part II: Interpolation of rainfall data. Journal of Hydrology, 208(3–4), 187–193. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-1694(98)00155-3

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