There is a 'difference between variability of climate and extreme weather events' only if your interpretation of the word "event" means a short term happening, such as a storm. In the context of climate, a season (summer, winter etc) or a series of seasons can be an 'event'. Think of an 'extinction event' - this could be as long as several million years. In the quote below -
The main goal is the analysis of trends or changes of high frequent interannual and interseasonal variability. In other words, it is features like extremely hot summers, very cold winters, excessively dry or wet seasons which the study aims at.
...... your season (seasonal) or series of seasons can mean 'event'. And this is how I and no doubt, Four, interpreted/used the word.
I have done a little research on the word 'event' and it does seem to be a difficult word in terms of duration. But there is no doubt that 'events' can be of long duration.
Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White
Thanks for acknowledging your error..... not.
Maybe we need to agree the definition of certain words, whether it be 'event' or 'frequent' (verb)....
I think you are really going to struggle to stretch the meaning of 'extreme weather event' to encompass an entire season. I do appreciate you are trying desperately to underpin your position, but your entire edifice has a non-existent foundation if you have to try to justify 'event' like this.
An extreme weather event does not in any normal conversational sense cover seasonal variability - which, once again lest you have forgotten, is what the paper was about. Repeat: seasonal climate variability not extreme weather events.
The final part of your post highlighted in bold is exactly right - which means we are not talking about weather events.
Originally Posted by: polarwind