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  1. Warren Morton Washington (born August 28, 1936) is an American atmospheric scientist, a former chair of the National Science Board, and currently a Distinguished Scholar at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado.

  2. Warren M. Washington is an internationally recognized expert on atmospheric science and climate research. He specializes in computer modeling of Earth's climate. Currently, he is a senior scientist and Chief Scientist of the DOE/UCAR Cooperative Agreement at NCAR in the Climate Change Research Section in the center’s Climate and Global ...

  3. Warren M. Washington is an internationally recognized expert on atmospheric science and climate research. He specializes in computer modeling of Earth's climate. Currently, he is a senior scientist a in the the Climate Change Research Section in the center's Climate and Global Dynamics Division.

    Title
    Source
    Date
    Geophysical Research Letters
    2016-03-16
    Nature Climate Change
    2016-03-01
    Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
    2016-02-05
    Journal of Climate
    2014-07-15
  4. Articles 1–20. ‪National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)‬ - ‪‪Cited by 31,026‬‬ - ‪climate modeling‬ - ‪climate change‬ - ‪science policy‬.

  5. A groundbreaking climate scientist, Warren M. Washington has played a major role in the scientific understanding of global warming and has made important contributions to modeling the world’s weather patterns.

  6. 20 de abr. de 2006 · While serving in the position of senior scientist at NCAR in 1975, Washington developed one of the first atmospheric computer models of the earth’s climate; soon after, he became the head of the organization’s Climate Change Research Section in the Climate and Global Dynamics Division.

  7. Warren M. Washington. National Medal of Science (NMS) recipient in 2009 “for his development and use of global climate models to understand climate and explain the role of human activities and natural processes in the Earth’s climate system and for his work to support a diverse science and engineering workforce.”