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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Climatologist

Climatologist \Cli`ma*tol"o*gist\, n. One versed in, or who studies, climatology.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
climatologist

1844, from climatology + -ist.

Wiktionary
climatologist

n. A person who studies, professes or practices climatology.

Usage examples of "climatologist".

Climatologists and ecologists were off with Ato Teng, surveying for possible resettlement sites.

The Technology and Artifacts people dreaded losing their urban context, but the astrogeologists and climatologists welcomed the prospect of a long detour into the deserts and mountains.

When he didn't get an answer, he shot a glance at Suzrain Hirsute, the climatologist at the other workstation.

Iris Angharads had been a climatologist working on the Islands, Amir Azad a Linker and Administrator.

She would have to keep up with their work, inform them of what the climatologists were doing, and function as a link between the two groups.

From the data they gathered, Iris and the other climatologists could, with the aid of the cyberminds, create their models and from them make their forecasts and predictions.

She and the other climatologists had already calculated how the increased speed of rotation that would result might affect the air patterns and the weather below, but even if their models turned out to be accurate, more study would be needed to determine good sites for the domed settlements.

A few Habber climatologists are supposed to show us some of their computer models.

There were forty-five of them, physicists, cosmologists, planetologists, climatologists, and a dozen other kinds of specialists.

They were astrophysicists, exobiologists, climatologists, people who could carry their weight during a mission.

Abel Kinder, one of the climatologists on board, had told him that even in normal times there was probably an ice bridge to the cap.

For more than seventy years, from around 1640 to 1710, very few sunspots were observed on the sun's face--and the Earth was plunged into what the climatologists call the "Little Ice Age.

On Mars, the solar climatologists liked to say, the sun engaged directly with the ground, and you had to hide from flares that wouldn't even be noticed on Earth.

If the theory were true, and some climatologists were willing to admit it might be, ending the era of fossil fuels could coincidentally cause an ice age in and of itself.

Thus, the difficulties historians face in establishing cause-and-effect relations in the history of human societies are broadly similar to the difficulties facing astronomers, climatologists, ecologists, evolutionary biologists, geologists, and paleontologists.