Century-long continuous daily observations from some stations are important for the study of long-term trends and extreme climate events in the past. In this paper, three daily data sources – (1)?the Department of Industry Agency of the British Concession in Tianjin covering 1?September?1890–31?December 1931, (2)?the Water Conservancy Commission of North China covering 1?January?1932–31?December?1950 and (3)?monthly journal sheets for Tianjin surface meteorological observation records covering 1?January?1951–31?December?2019 – have been collected from the Tianjin Meteorological Archive. The completed daily maximum and minimum temperature series for Tianjin from 1?January?1887 (1?September 1890 for minimum) to 31?December?2019 has been constructed and assessed for quality control with an early extension from 1890 back to 1887. Several significant breakpoints are detected by the penalized maximal?T?test (PMT) for the daily maximum and minimum time series using multiple reference series around Tianjin from monthly Berkeley Earth (BE), Climatic Research Unit Time-Series version 4.03 (CRU?TS4.03) and Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN) v3 data. Using neighboring daily series the record has been homogenized with quantile matching (QM) adjustments. Based on the homogenized dataset, the warming trend in annual mean temperature in Tianjin averaged from the newly constructed daily maximum and minimum temperature is evaluated as 0.154?±?0.013?°C per decade during the last 130?years. Trends of temperature extremes in Tianjin are all significant at the 5?% level and have much more coincident change than those from the raw data, with amplitudes of??1.454, 1.196,??0.140?and 0.975?d per decade for cold nights (TN10p), warm nights (TN90p), cold days (TX10p) and warm days (TX90p) at the annual scale. The adjusted daily maximum, minimum and mean surface air temperature dataset for Tianjin city presented here is publicly available at?https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.924561?(Si and Li, 2020).
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