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All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Annex I, Glossary, pp. 941-954. Cambridge University Press.

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Comments 120151 to 120200:

  1. Skeptical Science Housekeeping: flags, printable versions, icons and links... lots of links
    For some reason, neutral links aren't showing up on the resource pages.
    Response: The reason was because I hadn't programmed it to show neutral links yet. I've just remedied that and while I was in there tinkering with the code, I added a feature I've been wanting myself for a while - a "peer-reviewed" link so while you're in there looking at links for a particular argument, you can select to narrow it down to purely peer-reviewed papers.
  2. HumanityRules at 15:23 PM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    34.Marcus Would "the contrarians" include Phil Jones (of CRU fame) who co-authored two of the papers I linked to in #28? 31.Jeff Freymueller I agree with what you say except I still think you can't ignore the political interference in this subject on both sides of the argument. It's what takes it from an interesting scientific problem to a controversy. Given you recognise the limitations and problems with the science why do you think Mann et al are so defensive about critisism? I'm aware of egos but a drive should be to improve the science and that partly comes through critical analysis.
  3. Skeptical Science talk at University of Qld on May 7
    @MattJ: heh... no, it's purely descriptive, because it's a knoll which is, well, grassy... (i.e. nowhere to hide) There's also a Conifer Knoll on the other side of the uni, which may be well lit these days with the multi-storey car park right next to it, but back in the early 90s it was a pretty dark & spooky place at night, despite being in the middle of a well-lit campus. Unfortunately my calendar for next Friday is already rather full - not sure how I'm going to fit in work, let alone a trip to UQ at lunchtime... :-(
  4. Jeff Freymueller at 14:46 PM on 30 April 2010
    Skeptical Science talk at University of Qld on May 7
    As long as John is not being shot at from the "Grassy Knoll", that will be OK.
  5. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Even if the contrarians could prove-definitively-that the absolute temperature anomaly was higher in the MWP than today, there are still other issues to consider-namely the *rate* of change & the presence or absence of forcings to explain the previous warming events. Take a look at all the MWP reconstructions-even those produced by contrarians-& you see that it was a multi-century event (300-600 years from trough to peak, depending on which graph you look at). By contrast, we're seeing an almost identical magnitude of warming in the 20th century in the space of merely 50 years-a massive difference! The other point is that a look at proxies for Total Solar Irradiance during the MWP show a strong upward trend during that period, wheras the TSI for the last 30 years has been on a slight downward trend. So over the last 60 years we've seen an unprecedented *rate* of warming, without the forcings that characterised past warming events!
  6. Why are there fewer weather stations and what's the effect?
    Seems to me that data collection of this type would be the perfect next step for surfacestations.org. It would be good outreach from NOAA to skeptics and make a fine and logical contribution for critics of the temperature record, obviating post-hoc auditing. Thinking about it, it's a pretty obvious marriage.
  7. Bernard Leikind at 14:19 PM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    I believe that you are missing the word "not" in this sentence. They are showing you that the last decade was warmer than any 50 year period on the graph including the MWP. You need not post my comment, after correcting your sentence. Excellent, clear, informative post.
  8. Jeff Freymueller at 13:40 PM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    #26 chriscanaris, in your comment you seem to be mixing up a couple of very different things. The data may permit a wide range of reconstructions, but that does not mean "anything goes", and does not mean that picking the average or most likely reconstruction is "cherry-picking". Maybe you need to look up the term! In any case, if you look at the reconstructions in scientific papers (and the recent IPCC reports) they come with error bars or shaded error regions, which show you how precise the estimates are. Presenting the best estimate, with a description of how you got it and its error bars, is very, very far from cherry-picking.
  9. Jeff Freymueller at 13:34 PM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    #28, HumanityRules, it is a bit misleading to say the main criticism is that they end the graphs too early. Ending the graphs too early in order to make a misleading or false impression using those graphs seems more like it. What you describe as a "political statement" can be rephrased slightly as a legitimate scientific question: "Is today’s global average temperature, averaged over a few decades, higher than any such time period in the past 2000 years?" Once you specify the averaging time and the total time span, that is a question that has a yes/no answer. Our best estimate of the answer may or may not be yes/no at this time, but the question is objective and not political. Mann made the claim in 1998 that it was, with an averaging time of a decade, and this was the only scientific conclusion of his 1998 paper that has not stood up. He was wrong not because of any error specifically in his work, but because the uncertainty in radiometric dating is more than a decade, so you can't connect records from different parts of the world to a single decade in time. His error was in failing to recognize this uncertainty in time. So the test for "unprecedentedness" has to be done over a longer timescale, like perhaps 50 years, and the total interval might need to be only 1000 or 1500 years rather than 2000 because of limitations in the older data. But in the end this is only one small part of the story, and in the end what matters far more than the size of past temperature changes is the ability to explain them based on fundamental physics.
  10. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    "The issue remains - are our reconstructions valid? If not, no hypotheses can flow from them. If they are, then AGW is a prime suspect and our world faces major decisions with very wide ranging impacts." But hypotheses about AGW DONT come out of paleoclimate. This is the important point. AGW is byproduct of a theory of climate which comes out of physics. In turn, if it is valid, then it should be able to reproduce past climate given past forcing, (obviously within the uncertainties to which you can measure both past global climate and forcings). Its a test of a model, not the progenitor of a model.
  11. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    thingadonta - ultimately, climate sensitivity is not really a "per doubling of CO2," even though it's usually described that way. Instead, climate sensitivity is really a measurement of temperature rise per unit of energy imbalance. In electrical engineering/feedback terms (my profession), climate sensitivity is the gain in the system. By definition, the gain term operates equally on positive feedbacks, negative feedbacks, and inputs. And that means that the climate sensitivity/gain must respond to a change in energy imbalance caused by solar energy input equally to a change in energy imbalance caused by CO2 to a change in energy imbalance caused by volcanic sulfur dioxide to a change in energy imbalance caused by clouds. The mechanisms of each of them may be different, but the mathematical equations require that the gain affect each identically. This is true even if the different aspects of climate operate on different time scales. The only difference is that climate sensitivity/gain becomes a function of time (or frequency), but every forcing that operates over the scale of 1 year must be treated identically just as every forcing that operates over the scale of 10 years must, and so on.
  12. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    gallopingcamel, you have veered off topic. Several commenters have pointed you to other threads on which your comments are relevant.
  13. Skeptical Science talk at University of Qld on May 7
    No chance of a national tour, I take it? You'd be welcome in the other states too - I'm sure there would be somebody who'd like to organize your visit at just about all the Oz universities.
  14. Skeptical Science talk at University of Qld on May 7
    I wonder if "Grassy Knoll" has the same implication for Australians as it does for us United-Stateseans. You might want to have security make sure no one is hiding there just in case! Be that as it may, I hope the talk will be available on the Net afterwards for those of us who find the walk to Brisbane rather too challenging.
  15. HumanityRules at 11:36 AM on 30 April 2010
    A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    "Are you Brisbane based?" I wish, chilly Melbourne. Have a think about recording it and posting it here or Youtube.
  16. HumanityRules at 10:54 AM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Given your main criticism of sceptics is they end their graphs too early I'll point you to a couple of 2010 paleoclimate reconstructions in Greenland ,Indonesia and Multiple SH sites that put the MWP as warm as present day. (The following bit is just my opinion; I have no references for it, hopefully it won’t get removed.) Whether the MWP was warmer, as warm as or cooler than the present period seems to only be of political interest. It allows the following political statement "Today’s temperature is unprecedented in the past 2000 years". I recognise that much of the rightwing opposition to AGW also takes a general anti-science, anti-rationalism stance (so you have to pick your sceptics carefully). But this, for me, is one of the issues where climate science itself seems to have strayed from a purely scientific approach into the area of politics and it’s need for certainty. There is a whole raft of data that questions the ‘hockey stick' theory and other data that supports it. It strikes me as a question that is still firmly under debate. This post seems to focus on sceptics as the villains here, clouding the issue with misleading graphs. I'd like to see some criticism of the IPCC for forcing certainty onto this issue.
  17. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    "There appears to be plenty of evidence for some places being warmer than today in the MWP, and whilst most studies say that globally it wasn’t warmer it seems that scientists still want more data to be sure (and if it was warmer, that might suggest higher climate sensitivity). " I don't think that most pro AGW advocates really understand the skeptic position on the MWP and climate sensitivity. The skeptic position about the MWP goes somthing like this: The climate can be very sensitive to solar variation/clouds/1500 solar cycles etc to produce someything like a strong MWP, but NOT be sensitive, or act in a linear fashion, to any changes in C02. Skeptics don't see why one has to raise all variables when one raises overall climate sensitivity, or that they operate in tandem when one or the other changes. Depending on the way various climate factors interact, some climate variables (eg water vapour/clouds, c02, solar cycles) can act in a non-linear fashion-ie when one goes up the other goes down. There can be negative feedbacks. Evidence for this is eg provided in the relationship between C02 and temperature in the 20th century, and also in the early 21st. Volcanoes also act in this matter, small eruptions produce overall cooling, very extended events produce overall warming. Another common position of skeptics is that the earth buffers various climate variations/forcings, by eg absorbing radiation imbalances in the deep oceans, by microbiological changes in soils, by lesser and greater amounts of cloud cover-especially in the tropics, and so on. There is no need for climate to act in a linear fashion to all these sort of changes, and yet all the IPCC models assume such. So there is no basis in arguing that if the MWP was strong, this necassarily means climate sensitiviy is high with respect to C02, which is the common argument on this website.
  18. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Alexandre @ 12 Oh, and let's not forget the underlying skeptic argument here: "If the MWP was warmer for whatever reason, then the CWP is due to the same reason" Actually, this is not central to a skeptical argument. McIntyre for example eschews any position on AGW. SNRatio @ 18 puts it well" Therefore, you can produce a wide range of "reconstructions", and the main problem is, that because you always use some theories when reconstructing, you are always doing some kind of cherry-picking. The issue remains - are our reconstructions valid? If not, no hypotheses can flow from them. If they are, then AGW is a prime suspect and our world faces major decisions with very wide ranging impacts.
  19. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    "Vermeer 2009 is fine as a piece of speculation but it has little relevance to the real world." Sorry, which part of Vermeer is NOT based on real world data? What Vermeer cant do is predict what emissions we will actually produce, but as far as I can see from your postings, you are quite happy that we follow along the more unpleasant business-as-usual scenarios that is used. Since the models that predict have shown excellent predictive power so far why do you think they will suddenly stop working.
  20. HumanityRules at 10:01 AM on 30 April 2010
    A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    John you were going to post the details of the UQ talk.
    Response: Sheesh, I'm still going through all the emails that came in overnight! :-) Will post within the hour.

    Are you Brisbane based? I'm picturing you devising a whopper of a question to ask me.
  21. Marcel Bökstedt at 09:57 AM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    I feel ignorant about this, as about so many other subjects. I've got three questions for those who know more. I do understand that the "other side" of the discussion cares a lot about the possibility that there was a period sometimes during the middle ages when the climate was warmer than today. The facts seem to be against this (see the argument on MWP), but there are certainly also some evidence contradicting this and suggesting a medieval global warm period. (Arkadiusz Semczyszak lists some of those). Now, suppose for the sake if the argument that this assumption is actually true, and that there was a medieval global warm period. This would make some people instantly happy, for the simple reason that it would invalidate the hockey stick. But we should look beyond the hockey stick. What is the theory about the medieval warm period over on the "other side"? One possibility is that they assume that it was caused by some particular forcing. If they do, they should explain why the same forcing is at work now. Except for AGW there seems to be only one possible alternative candidate for this contemporary forcing, some version of the solar theory. One should expect some arguments about similar but stronger solar forcing in the middle ages. (Q1) Has anyone tried to carry this out? But if the argument is that some period in the middle ages was warmer than today, the most likely theoretical underpinning would be that the climate has a huge internal variation, and that the medieval warm period, the little ice age and the present warming are all caused by this internal variation. I don't know how we can be sure that there is no internal, unforced variation which could be responsible for climate changes on the scale of centuries. (Q2) Is there a way to do rule out such internal variation? If the "other side" honestly belives in this scenario, those people should now be working hard on characterizing and describing this internal variation. Which variables (besides temperature) change, how do they influence each other etc. (Q3) Is anyone aware of such work?
  22. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    gallopingcamel (#74) "That NSF paper you cited recommends holding CO2 concentrations to 450 ppm, something I could cheerfully accept if it can be done without destroying wealth on a large scale." Well, that's a whole other question. We could debate whether certain forecasts of wealth-destruction are "alarmist," but I don't think that's appropriate here. As far as the topic at hand goes, I'm glad we agree that human beings are capable of influencing sea level.
  23. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    A quick and lazy google search didn't bring me anything good on Medieval sea levels. It seems if it was anomalously warm for such a long period, there should have been a rise. But this figure, at least, doesn't show much evidence of a high point at the right time. Anyone else have something better?
  24. Where is global warming going?
    KR Sorry I didn't catch you at "Is CO2 a pollutant?" ......G&T display an appalling lack of understanding of the physics of thermodynamics, particularly radiative equilibrium..... Strangely enough Kevin Trenberth is recently finding his sums don’t work out within radiative balance. However he should relax, there is no such law in physics. A much more realistic picture was given recently by Richard Lindzen. “Evidence Suggests Man-Made Warming Greatly Exaggerated” In the article Lindzen pointed out that radiative equilibrium is seldom observed. People everyday experience temperature changes of 20 degrees or so and yet the IPCC gets alarmed at a rise of less than a degree in the past century. This prompted me to do a simple calculation based on the planet having no radiative balance whatsoever. This illustrates the sheer thermal inertia of the bulk of the planet. I have used a very simple model of the Earth made of uniform material with reasonable conductivity If the Earth absorbed all the Suns radiation that landed on it and absolutely no heat ever escaped. How long would it take for the temperature to rise by 1 degree centigrade. Formula used Pxt =cm(temperature rise) P=1367W/m2x(crosssectional area of Earth) t =time in seconds C = specific heat capacity = 1000 (you can tweak this number if you like) m = Mass of Earth =6×10power24 When calculated it turns out to be 1080 years.
  25. gallopingcamel at 08:57 AM on 30 April 2010
    A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    Phila (#61), That NSF paper you cited recommends holding CO2 concentrations to 450 ppm, something I could cheerfully accept if it can be done without destroying wealth on a large scale. Scaddenp (#73), Vermeer 2009 is fine as a piece of speculation but it has little relevance to the real world. For Vermeer's sea level rise of 1,790 mm by 2100 you would need a 6.1 degree Celsius rise in temperature as well.
  26. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    By the way, the study referred to by Oxford Kevin is the second link given in #7 of this thread, in which Arkadiusz claims the paper shows "Here MWP was about 0.4°C warmer than the Current Warm Period." The study's lead author, on the other hand, says "Our figure does not lead one to conclude that past sea surface temperatures were warmer than today as is suggested on these websites."
  27. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    I have recently blogged on how co2science has misrepresented a recent study of proxy data from the Indo Pacific Warm Pool. You can read about it and its implications for the medieval warm period: Misrepresentation of Climate Scientists
  28. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    The MWP may be of interest to many, but the real interest should the temperatures reached during the interglacial periods, and what forcings or feedbacks turned the planets warming phase into a cooling phase.
  29. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    "if the rate of sea level rise is going to increase by a factor of more than six during the 21st century, something dramatic needs to happen very soon." Well for the actual calculations, see fig 3, Graph from Vermeer 2009
  30. Are we too stupid?
    Jacob: Consider the fig tree/fig wasp symbiosis. I think you do not understand my question. It is so simple: how do you imahgine tit-for-tat working among states? You answer with a fig-tree example. How come? Jacob:The tax would of course be used to further sustainable energy sources - immediate payoff in terms of environment and security. In terms of environment no gainsat all. Energy security could be a gain but it is almost accidental - there are cheaper and more efficient ways to achieve energy security. So, all is left is a sort of collective good feeleing - hardly enough to justify the cost. Jacob:You still have doubts, in spite of my reference to the fact that clever taxation ... There is a STATE above the californian companies. So, your example does not answer my question. Jacob: So I ask, do you have any interest in maintaining status quo? I asked you a simple question and got no acceptable answer. Why do you think that i should need any other motivation? Jacob: what is the best way to get states, individuals, companies etc. to cooperate about mitigating climate change... That is a good question, one that you did not answer either. I am not modest - I did not see any acceptaböe solution and I think you have none either, otherwise you would answer my concrete questions ;)
  31. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    SNRatio #18 I´m not sure about the possibility of a "wide range of reconstructions" (as in a wide range of different results). All the reconstructions are very coherent with one another. This consistence suggests it´s not as arbitrary as you seem to imply. You think there wouldn´t be people and funding available to issue a paper showing the current warming has nothing special? Yes, the burden of proof is now with the skeptics, after all there are already a handful of published studies largely supporting the "hockey stick´s" findings. Having said that, past surface temperature does not really deserve all the attention it´s got. But we don´t have a "total planetary heat content proxy", so we have to do the best we can with what we´vc got... PS: cold NH winter is not inconsistent with a warm planet in the same period. Check this and this.
  32. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Mark, We skeptics usually add vikings to the IPCC diagram. This was done perfectly here: http://friendsofginandtonic.org/page4/page9/page9.html Please add at least a Robin Hood.
  33. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    @ #48 Chris oops. I used 10^-12 instead on 10^-9 in going from m^3 to km^3. Sorry. One nice feature of using river flows and lakes is that one can localize it. I couldn't find river flow data for any rivers in Australia, but for Lake Eyre(largest in Australia, I believe), I get 9500 km^2 (surface area) * .004 km(max depth) [both from Wikipedia] = 38 km^3 So the annual ice loss from Greenland (286 km^3) is about 7.5 times Lake Eyre. Another interesting comparison is with precipation. If we say the average annual precip for Australia is 500 mm (http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/change/rain.shtml) and the area of Australia is about 7.6 * 10^6 km, then 5.0*10^-4 * 7.6*10^6 = 3800 km^3 of water falls on all of Australia annually on average. So the annual Greenland ice loss of 286 km^3 is equivalent to just less than a month's rain over all of Australia (3800/12 = 316.7)... If my arithmetic is correct.
  34. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    #61 gallopingcamel "This would be close to the concentration that will cause most plants to die but what would be the effect on sea levels?" Going forward from this point, and considering no other effect than sea levels? I'd assume that seas would continue to rise, but without reaching the level or the rate of change that one would expect if CO2 remained at or above the current ppm. When I first addressed your comments, I understood you to be claiming that there's no evidence that human actions can influence the amount or rate of sea level rise. If your actual claim is that humans can't adjust sea levels precisely, whenever it pleases them to do so, then that's another debate entirely and quite frankly, I don't think it's a particularly relevant one. Regardless, I'm sorry if I misunderstood your argument. The important question, it seems to me, is whether limiting GHG emissions can reasonably be expected to limit the amount and rate of sea level rise (along with other serious problems). In other words, would we end up with higher sea levels and a faster rate of change at 600 ppm than at 385 ppm? That certainly seems to be what the science is telling us (see, for instance, Decline in Greenhouse Gas Emissions Would Reduce Sea-Level Rise, Save Arctic Sea Ice). The claim that "natural effects are overwhelming the 'Anthropogenic' influence" has been addressed in other threads (e.g., Climate's changed before; It's just a natural cycle; and Sea level rise is exaggerated).
  35. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    I'm a bit skeptical towards all sorts of proxies, as long as we don't know the full picture. Just look at this NH winter: Close to record-breaking many places, but still high UAH measurements. And rather small changes in key parameters, like the NAO for Europe, can produce large and significant local effects, often without NH or global averages being affected at all. Therefore, you can produce a wide range of "reconstructions", and the main problem is, that because you always use some theories when reconstructing, you are always doing some kind of cherry-picking. Also, when comparing things like vegetation or wildlife, we must take ecological succession time lags into account. Because of all those uncertainties, I think that using expressions like "unprecedented warming" is just asking for trouble. Unprecedented forcing, yes, but I can't see why we should be so sure about the warming. And just face it: The hockey stick is probably one of the worst things that has happened to climate politics. Some simplifications are useful, that one is not. It's much easier (and wiser) to lay the burden of proof on the "skeptics": Show that _global_ mean temperature in any century of the past was, say, 0.6 deg above last 15 year average. If you discard or weigh down some data, explain why. That would be a way to show that the MWP really was a warm period, contrary to the present. Why require the MWP to be so much warmer than now, they would probably ask. Because now we are experiencing a rather large radiation imbalance. If we were in a similar situation then, forcing conditions must have changed drastically in order to produce the LIA only a couple of centuries afterwards. With ca 0.15 degC warming/decade, it will just take a few decades for us to leave MWP territory altogether.
  36. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Jesús Rosino, in principle, you're right. But you need to be carefull. Immagine that 1000 years ago the temperature varied slowly exactly as shown in the figure. You could easily find the "right" degree of smoothing to "prove" that the temperature was higher than today. Anyway, we luckly have decadally (or even better) resolved proxies going back 1000 years and more. Noisy data, though, so one still needs to smooth them somewhat to make graphs; but we can exclude the possibility of large short term temperature swings. Here, for example, you'll find northern emisphere 40 years smoothed data, including instrumental period.
  37. Tracking the energy from global warming
    Ken Lambert at 23:04 PM on 29 April, 2010 Ken, your post illustrates pretty much my point about "geting into the "arguing fruitlessly" stage, which is often an indication that the data under discussion is inconclusive". That's exactly the case here. I've taken the raw Jason data from here and done a linear regression from 2002-(nearly) 2010. The slope is 2.3 mm.yr-1. No doubt you'll get a different answer by regressing the data between 2003 and 2010. It would be different again if we did 2004-2010...etc. These are very short time periods. The linear regression is biased "flattish" by the interesting period between 2006-2008 when the slope of sea level rise apparently decreased quite a bit. Short anomalies in very short time series have large effects on the regressed average change. That's why we don't make fundamental interpetations from analysis of very short time series. It's apparent from visual inspection (see sea level time series in my post 76 above) that sea levels have more or less "caught up" with the longer term trend. This is also apparent if one inspects the seasonally-adjusted data on the Univ. of Colorado sea level site. Clearly something interesting may have happened during 2006-2008. The period we're discussing corresponds to the slightly anomalous and extended down-turn in the solar cycle. So we aren't surprised if thermal energy into the ocean (and thus the thermal component of sea level rise) may have been a bit smaller than the long term trend for the last 6-7 years... At some point we need to be clear about what we're arguing over. I'm simply pointing out that the sea level rise over the last several years (e.g. since 2002) is incompatible with Peter's assertion that an energy balance analysis of a few years of data ""bring(s) havoc to standard greenhouse theory".
  38. Tracking the energy from global warming
    Ken Lambert, i looked at the data shown in chris #76 and could not see the jump, a quite huge one following your claim. Could you please clarify how did you detect it?
  39. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    There is an updated version of the Lamb graph that use a 50 years gaussian smooth: Jones et al. 2009
  40. Why are there fewer weather stations and what's the effect?
    A question that skeptics often ask, and which I can't quite answer, is - why can't a small team be supplied to collect the huge amount of weather data available online. Example is La Paz, which is not included in recent GHCN, but which has an online weather portal with mean/max/min temps, precipitation etc.
    Gavin Schmidt has suggested that efforts to do such things would be excellent "citizen science" contributions to climate science efforts. As opposed to, oh, running around photographing weather stations.
  41. Jesús Rosino at 01:25 AM on 30 April 2010
    Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    "They are showing you that the last decade was warmer than any 50 year period on the graph including the MWP"
    Well, but (for the sake of argument, because the graph is probably obsolete) such a comparison might be tricky, might not? Given that this graph doesn't provide us with the decadal averages prior to 1920 and given that the last 50-year average is similar to that in the MWP, it would be conceivable that, similarly, a single decade had reached similar values in the MWP, wouldn't it? (let's say, for example, with temparature rising from 1100 to 1200 similarly to the 20th Century, and falling in a similar way from 1200 to 1300).
  42. Philippe Chantreau at 01:18 AM on 30 April 2010
    Why are there fewer weather stations and what's the effect?
    Do you actually mean "More importantly, removal of the dropped stations does not cause a spurious warming trend."? Yes. That's what is shown by all the data analyses to which the post points.
  43. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    Oops sorry, I got the people mixed up in my last comment. Argus wasn't refering to Gallopingcamel, but to Berényi Péter.
  44. Tracking the energy from global warming
    John, I did the math for you to convert 30 Sv in the new unit of measure you like, namely EST (Empire State Building). The EST turns our to be about 10^5 m3, so 30 Sv correspond to 300 ETS per second. Considering that it took 3 years to build one ETS, the new current flowing from Antarctica is almost 10^8 times as powerful as the USA. :)
    Response: Thanks for converting the water flow to a unit I understand :-) 300 Empire State Buildings per second is pretty impressive!
  45. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    Not that any of this is correct anyway, but... Argus, you are misquoting figures, the two commentators (Gallopingcamel and CBDunkerson) have quoted different figures. Gallopingcamel has refered to global sea levels which is linked to global ice melting, the inputs to that include thousands of glaciers, the Greenland ice sheet and Antartica. CBDunkerson has refered to just Greenland ice, which is a fraction of the input to global sea level rises and a fraction of the 3.2mm or so quoted by Gallopingcamel. If you are going to add anything. I suggest you actually pay attention to what your fellow skeptics write!
  46. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    #6 Arjan: I've tried to cover that, the most recent 50 year average is not above the Lamb MWP 50yr average. In order for the 50 year average to _not_ go above Lamb's MWP peak then HadCET will have to cool more quickly over the next 20 years than it has warmed for the past 20. Possible, but seems unlikely unless something special happens (perhaps a collapse in solar activity which may be linked to cool European winters). I thought of including that in the post, but I didn't want to make it any longer!
  47. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Arkadiusz, I could not read Oppo et al, but am interested that they use coral growth rates as a proxy. I found the Grudd paper very interesting. One cannot draw too long a bow from it, as it's focus is only on the region of Fennoscandia. Grudd's method of combining tree growth ring width and maximum ring density raises interesting questions about the appropriate use of tree ring data as a proxy for temperature. I would be particularly interested to know if Grudd has applied this analysis to the same tree datasets used by Manne et al. I am still getting through von Gunten! I note it is a very recent paper and stands out as one of the uncommon studies set in the southern hemisphere. There are two general points I would make: First, paleoclimate always involves proxies for temperature. Given that there are so many kinds of proxy, be it tree rings, ice cores, sediment analysis or whatever else, a general position can only be formed by synthesising a diverse selection. Therefore no individual study trumps the others. Second, as new studies circulate and new proxy methods are developed, we may well find the majority of studies indicate a medieval warm period comparable to the current period. Personally, I wouldn't be too fussed. I'm not terribly attached to the "hockey stick". It is a supplementary analysis, not a critical one - Alexandre's point. The hockey stick happens to be memorable and therefore was placed in a spotlight during the political vetting of the IPCC report.
  48. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    Oh, and let's not forget the underlying skeptic argument here: "If the MWP was warmer for whatever reason, then the CWP is due to the same reason" That's like arguing "John was responsible for 1957's murders, therefore he killed those people yesterday". There are forcings responsible for the MWP as well as the Little Ice Age. The climate does not change out of sheer bad mood. It would be necessary to show that the forcings active in the MWP are active now as well. Even if Lamb's graph proved to be accurate for global temperatures, and even if temperatures "now" were those indicated by the infamous Global Warming Swindle, CO2 would not stop obstructing longwave radiation because of that.
  49. Common graphical tricks and the Medieval Warm Period
    The core issue is the validity of methodologies based on a temperature reconstruction derived from multiple and variously selected proxies statistically homogenised and spliced onto a modern instrumental record. Perhaps you could invite a guest post from Steve McIntyre - that would warm things up :).
  50. A visual depiction of how much ice Greenland is losing
    I think you should make all the gigaton blocks the same size visually. Your 1 gigaton looks the same size as half the second image.

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