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- Average global temperature are depicted with chronologically ordered, concentric coloured rings. (en)
- Warming stripes on the Saxons' Bridge in Leipzig, Germany (en)
- Effect of reference period : One dataset, with averages over three "reference periods" determining blue/red boundaries. The earliest, lowest-temp baseline causes recent temperatures to exceed the red scale; later baselines avoid this clipping. (en)
- A "stacked" warming stripe graphic compares temperature datasets for various layers of Earth's atmosphere and oceans. (en)
- This composite of a conventional line chart superimposed on a warming stripe graphic illustrates year-by-year correlation of data points and coloured stripes. (en)
- Comprehensive "stack" of 196 warming stripes for respective countries grouped by continent. (en)
- A colour field abstract artwork (en)
- Effect of each colour's temperature range: one dataset, but with different temperature range per colour . In the top graphic , recent temperatures exceed the red scale; the bottom graphic avoids this clipping. (en)
- Warming stripes at the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference . (en)
- Demonstrators dressed as warming stripes during an Extinction Rebellion protest in Berlin, Germany . (en)
- A conventional line graph comparing several highly correlated temperature datasets (en)
- This "stack", technically a heat map, organizes temperatures by month and year . (en)
- Effect of choosing a baseline independent of any time period's average value: This stripe graphic of global average sea level change has a baseline that is less than all data values, producing a graphic having shades of only a single colour. (en)
- Logo, US House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis (en)
- Warming stripes on a bus in Reading, Berkshire, U.K. (en)
- This conventional graphic includes date ranges, explanatory legends, and technical terminology that warming stripes avoid. (en)
- Hawkins chose colours from a broader palette originally designed for distinguishing areas in maps. (en)
- Effect of geographic selection: Warming stripes for the Northern and Southern Hemispheres show how different, but same-size, regions compare. Greater recent temperature anomalies in the North display as stripes that are off the red scale. (en)
- Effect of geographic size: Warming stripes for the Globe and for the Caribbean Islands region show that larger year-to-year variations, for geographical and statistical reasons, are to be expected for smaller regions . (en)
- A "stacked" warming stripes graphic comparing essentially the same highly correlated temperature datasets as the line graph (en)
- A warming stripes colour scheme is applied to a conventional bar chart to visually emphasize changes in temperature. Taller bars are more intensely coloured. (en)
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