Climate change is deeply impacting mountain areas around the globe, especially in the Himalaya. However, the lack of long-term meteorological observations at high elevations poses significant challenges to understanding and predicting impacts at various scales. This also represents a serious limit for model-based projections of future behavior of crucial elements of the mountain cryosphere such as glaciers. Here, we present the Pyramid Meteorological Network, located in the Himalaya (Nepal) on the southern slopes of Mt. Everest. The network is composed of seven meteorological stations located between 2660 and 7986 m a.s.l., which have collected continuous climatic data during 30 recent years (1994–2023). In this paper, we provide details regarding instrument types and characteristics as well as data quality control and assessment. The obtained data series are available on a newly created geoportal. We leverage these unique records to present new knowledge on the Himalayan climate, also benefiting from the highest observational climatic series in the world (Pyramid station, located above 5000 m a.s.l., close to the Khumbu Glacier). These data will provide fundamental knowledge on climate dynamics in the Himalaya that will inform research at high elevations in the coming years. The dataset is freely accessible from https://geoportal.mountaingenius.org/portal/ (last access: 1 September 2025) (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15211352; Salerno et al., 2024).

What is climate change doing in the Himalaya? Thirty years of the Pyramid Meteorological Network (Nepal)

Melis, Maria Teresa
Funding Acquisition
;
Dessì, Francesco Gabriele
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2025-01-01

Abstract

Climate change is deeply impacting mountain areas around the globe, especially in the Himalaya. However, the lack of long-term meteorological observations at high elevations poses significant challenges to understanding and predicting impacts at various scales. This also represents a serious limit for model-based projections of future behavior of crucial elements of the mountain cryosphere such as glaciers. Here, we present the Pyramid Meteorological Network, located in the Himalaya (Nepal) on the southern slopes of Mt. Everest. The network is composed of seven meteorological stations located between 2660 and 7986 m a.s.l., which have collected continuous climatic data during 30 recent years (1994–2023). In this paper, we provide details regarding instrument types and characteristics as well as data quality control and assessment. The obtained data series are available on a newly created geoportal. We leverage these unique records to present new knowledge on the Himalayan climate, also benefiting from the highest observational climatic series in the world (Pyramid station, located above 5000 m a.s.l., close to the Khumbu Glacier). These data will provide fundamental knowledge on climate dynamics in the Himalaya that will inform research at high elevations in the coming years. The dataset is freely accessible from https://geoportal.mountaingenius.org/portal/ (last access: 1 September 2025) (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15211352; Salerno et al., 2024).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11584/460731
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