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Global Air Temps

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by tochatihu, Nov 7, 2014.

  1. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    There are several independent (not all may agree...) compilations of this. I Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature data has not been updated for a year, unless somebody can tell me where to find it.

    But all, over their overlap periods, show pretty much the same thing. So any cooking of books would seem to require a lot of willing conspirators. OK then; an hypothesis calling for some sort of evidence.

    But if somebody wants to claim that air T has been falling since 1998, I'd like to know about the data set being invoked.

    1998 was the largest El nino for quite a while, and those bump up air T. In the past they have been followed by T drops, but not this time. The warmest 5 years have been 2010, 2005, 1998, 2013 and 2003. But different compilations put those 5 in different orders (2010 always comes out on top). 2014 might enter that group, depending on how it finishes. Spots 6 though 10 are also held by post-1998 years.

    Compared to increases (slopes) of earlier decades since 1970, post-1998 slopes have been lower. This is clear in any record I have seen. It is correct to say that global climate models get that wrong. I have suggested before (and not just me) that the major problem is poor representation of oceanic processes. That would have to be improved for models to predict which future decades are going to increase faster and which slower. But I see nothing in the record (any record) that would make stop expecting that each decade will continue to be warmer than the previous. This position is actually supported (in my view) because the big 1998 El Nino was not followed by temperature reductions. However that happened before, it's not happening now. As I said before, any explanation for that (besides infrared heat trapping) would be much welcomed.

    But what to do about the veracity of the T records? Perhaps the Central England Temperature series is above reproach? Sure it's regional (a small region at that) but it shows 1999 and 2002 through 2007 to all be warmer than 1998.

    Just air T, but part of the concordance of evidence we have talked about before. Grounded ice, steric sea-level rise, plant phenology, species distribution patterns. I'd rather talk about 'concordance of evidence' than 'consensus', but the phrase hasn't caught on.

    I'd also like to bring back Murry Salby, as he has fallen of radar since his 'wow' youtube video (discussed even here). His central message was that increasing T causes CO2 increases (by marine exhalation). Temperature increases have been slow since 1998, But CO2 keeps climbing, and faster. This means Salby's hypothesis has been disproved, though I have not seen that discussed. Certainly not at websites that promoted his 'wow'.

    In all other respects, Salby is an excellent atmospheric scientist and I continue to recommend his books etc. on this broader subject.

    Air T will probably get back in the media when we see how 2014 finishes - top 5 or just top 10? I don't bet it will beat 1998. Big El Ninos are hard to beat. But somehow, they have gotten easy to match.
     
  2. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Oh yeah, the other thing you may have heard that the pre-1998 air T increases were strongly influenced by thermometers placed in urban heat islands. UHI certainly exist, but if they lost their collective 'punch' after 1998, I'd like to know why. Another 'skeptic issue' that has gone all quiet on us.
     
  3. Easy Rider 2

    Easy Rider 2 Senior Member

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    It is difficult to the point of being almost impossible to measure small but significant global temperature changes by directly taking temp readings of any single thing.

    Much better evidence exists by observing the indirect effects; glacier melt and plant growth pattern changes and animal migrations.
     
  4. fhaven

    fhaven New Member

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    I don’t think you have Salby’s result right. He showed that CO2 growth rate is proportional to temperature.
    So if temperature becomes constant, then CO2 should grow at a steady rate. Looks like it does;
    see his talk at the British Parliament (via Bishop Hill).


     
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  5. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Thanks fhaven and welcome new member. I have never viewed Salby video in any form; Some aspects of the internet are restricted in some countries.

    What you say makes sense from the point of view of CO2 solubility in water. Couldn't quite be the whole story though, because isothermal water would have lost some of its bicarbonate, thus would degas less through time. I suppose you get around that by mixing in deeper water that had not yet lost its CO2.

    What the atmospheric CO2 record shows, however, is slow acceleration through time whether you are in a 'fast-T' or 'slow-T' decade. So I'm going to stand by (or at least very near :)) my original position.

    The T thing is actually only one refutation of Salby's hypothesis. Others that had been brought up before are changes in the stable 13C isotope in the atmosphere (consistent with a fossil C source) and concomitant reduction in O2 in the atmosphere (in just the proportion that would come from combustion). Very few people make that latter measurement because it is parts per million changes in that (fortunately) abundant O2. but there it is.

    fhaven brings to mind the idea that if, surface ocean water is degassing, carbonate saturation should be decreasing. This is something that chemists can measure with high accuracy, so it is quite testable and would make a great scientific publication. However ocean pH is going down (rather slowly), bucking THAT trend, so don't get your hopes up.

    Look what you done here, derailed me from my own topic with carbon chemistry, one of my most favorite things. You sly dog.
     
  6. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    It was the IPCC that gave a range of temperatures from the last 15 years period may have been cooling
    http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar5/syr/SYR_AR5_SPM.pdf

    In there confidence interval for the 15 year period temperature models disagree, and there could have been a little cooling, or a little warming, or maybe nothing. Statistically I'd have to say no significant warming or cooling. If you buy the explanation, ENSO, which I do, then you have to figure out how ocean oscilations will affect temperature in the future to predict how much warming we will get.

    Now you can take that no statistical change and draw different lines and say we are cooling. IMHO that would be bad statistics, but there are lots of bad statistics in public policy. Now 1998 is an unfortuanate date to pick, as an end point, and you could blame the skeptics of cheery picking it, but really the IPCC picked it in the third assessment as part of the statistical graphting that made the temperature record seem so spiky.
     
    #6 austingreen, Nov 11, 2014
    Last edited: Nov 11, 2014
  7. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    While 1998 was a strong El nino in terms of atmospheric pressure (difference between Darwin and Tahiti if memory serves) it was really strong in the air-T bump. This raises the possibility that it had an infrared absorption boost. Put that together with the bump in 1998 wildfires (especially tropical) and it is not a year to ignore.

    But what does one do with it? For me, using it to enhance a T trend (using it as a last year) or to diminish same (using it as a start year) are both inappropriate. perhaps equally so.

    But no longer do we seem to be in a situation where annual Ts go down after strong El Ninos. In other words something is going on. One is obliged to wonder what that might be.
     
  8. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Yep it was an outlier when the IPCC published 3. Instead of handling it like an outlier the summer acted as if it was part of a trend, which statiistically you can't tell in climate until at least 15 years in the future. Oh damn, we are here and it was indeed an outlier.

    There are easy statistical methods for handling outliers, but IPCC does not seem to want to use them. Many papers though individually include them. The most common is to remove them from the averages, bur discuss them.


    Absolutely, a wonder full set of questions starting with

    1) How do ghg and temperature affect ENSO and other oscillations
    2) How do ENSO and other oscillations change temperature.
     
  9. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    With stationary data, 3 standard deviations from the mean often defines 'outliers', but not all statisticians agree. More fundamentally an outlier refers to measurement errors. ENSO however is a real thing, inherently part of the climate record.

    For data presenting trends,you detrend before the outlier test. And then confront the issues above.

    I can't see a reason to exclude 1998 or any other year. It is not 3 SD out.
     
  10. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Speaking of variability, this was just published in PNAS:

    “Ocean surface temperature variability: Large model–data differences at decadal and longer periods”
    Thomas Laepple and Peter Huybers

    Using various paleoproxies for sea-surface temperature over the past 7000 years, they found higher variability than in previous analyses. And much higher variability than models suggest.

    Some will tell you that research counter to global warming orthodoxy is suppressed from journals, and that it is a sick time for science. Seems not to be the case though. Perhaps we can think up a DaVinci quote to drive that home? :)
     
  11. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    the data and model define outliers. Here I was refering to IPCC models. 1998 clearly is an outlier to the models.
    1.3.5.17. Detection of Outliers
    Here the outliers probably define something interesting that is missing from the models and not bad data. The 5th assessment theorizes this is ENSO. I am not sure, but clearly all ocean ocilations should be considered as possible reasons as well as changes in ocean temperatures.

    My problem is in the modeling. If you model without considering outliers, you likely will badly predict future tempeatures. We see the models presented in IPCC 3 badly predicted temperatures, so the results fit the theory. If we continue to model in the same way as in IPCC 3, there will continue to be systemic errors in climate prediction.

    It should have been called out as an outlier and modeled differently in the predictive models. 3 standard deviations is not a majic number in statistics, but certainly if something were 3 sigma off of a model something is very off from that model.

    I would throw it out or at a minimum smooth the deviation away, if you are mainly handling S log (ghgY/ghg X) where S is the sensitivity ghgY is concentration in Year Y, and ghX is concentration in reference year X. If the model is more complex than perhaps it should be included.
     
    #11 austingreen, Nov 13, 2014
    Last edited: Nov 13, 2014
  12. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    The article I mentioned @10. in authors' media interviews they say that climate models underestimate paleoT variability by a factor of 50. 50!
     
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  13. fhaven

    fhaven New Member

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    FYI, others have come to the same conclusion:

    THE HOCKEY SCHTICK: New blockbuster paper finds man-made CO2 is not the driver of global warming

    Swedish scientist replicates Dr. Murry Salby’s work, finding man-made CO2 does not drive climate change | Climate Depot


     
    #13 fhaven, Nov 14, 2014
    Last edited: Nov 14, 2014
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  14. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Skimmed the article, I'll ad quotes from publicly available.
    Alfred Wegener Institute Detail
    First I wouldn't blame the modelers here. The consensus view has been that the majority (over half) of temperature variation is due to ghg (carbon dioxide, methane, sulfur dioxide, nitrous oxides, particulates bothl ight and dark). The majority of models will go there as it follows what the modelers believe the science to be.

    Certainly data gets vary sparse older than 1400 years ago, so models rarely go back further than this for testing, and most tests are only of the temperature record period.

    So the problem with the models is A) assumption of majority ghg (although this may still be correct some should be made with 0 or negative feeedback on ghg, B) Bad data to model on, C) no good theories to model ocean ocsilations to ocean heating and sst.

    Models seem to assume that sensitivity to ghg is constant, but this is only likely true for bounded time periods. Sensitivity may be different when ghg leads temperature than when it lags it, and it is likely to be different before and after tipping points. Therefore I would not use these models to go back past a tipping point (was there one when the mwp switched to lia?, if so only train with the last 500 years), if not whatever caused the end of the mwp needs to be modeled.
     
  15. GregP507

    GregP507 Senior Member

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    It's not denial to question what you are told, but the basis for questioning this assertion are many. Assertions based on other assertions are suspect to begin with, but additionally, past statistical weather information has been manipulated and even destroyed, thereby making it all the more imperative to be asking questions.
     
  16. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Although we have emails from phil jones that he intended to destroy some backing information at the CRU, we have 3 other sources of temperature reconstructions from instrument data NASA GISS, NOAA NCDC, and Berekely B.E.S.T.. All of these are in broad agreement, all are us, 2 from the US government, 1 from a state university with public and private grants, even koch brothers money used to do the reconstructions. Do you have any evidence that any of the US based reconstructions manipulated or destroyed data?

    It is the CRU data from 1998 which is the highest. If you use that data, a decline of temperature of 0.05 per decaded for the last 15 years is within the margin of measurement error. The other three have lower reconstruction for 1998 so have a slightly higher temperature now than in 1998. Most skepticism is on the predictive models which have done a poor job lately.
     
  17. GregP507

    GregP507 Senior Member

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    That last line is a poor generalization of climate skepticism, but more importantly, the quality of an assertion is not diminished by the intensity of the skepticism applied to it, but rather the degree to which it has held up to it.

    Anyone who considers themselves a scientist (myself included) should be ashamed by the notion that those who challenge a scientific assertion, are themselves out of order in some way, and deserving of a pejorative label like "denier."
     
  18. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Greg,
    no problem with you being skeptical, my problem is skepticism because of you haven't looked into the science and are just repeating hearsay. So please look at NASA GISS, NOAA NCDC, and Berekely B.E.S.T. and tell us if you still distrust the temperature record and why. Certainly if your conspiracy theory is they are faking it, why would we have had little to no significant warming since 1998?

    I think I have been called denier on this board many times, and it terms out on most of them the IPCC has reversed itself or at least is more open to a skeptical interpretation. The temperature record though is pretty golden in the last 50 years, and we have a good idea of how big potential errors are before then from 1880. B.E.S.T. even researched most of Watt's objections to the records at the other places (urban heat island, methods of calculating sparser past data, etc). The data sets and methods are public there.

    My big ovjection is to the religionist. Those that claim anything in the IPCC's bible is true forever, or the oposite - people like Inhofe. Inhofe says climate change is a hoax because his bible says man can't do anything to change the climate. That is assinine.
     
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  19. GregP507

    GregP507 Senior Member

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    Religionist, politicist, activist; none of these words square with "scientist." When science is contaminated by these attitudes, it's not science at all, its quite the opposite.
     
  20. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Our good friend Austin is suggesting that finding and posting original papers with new data is well respected here. Postings from an advocacy site are less useful because they often omit counter data and the poster of this 'interpreted' seldom carries any critique back.

    Many of us here are interested in facts and data. Bring some from the original papers and Austin, I, and others will treat the post and poster with respect. But reposting advocacy summaries really doesn't work . . . or trying to make it political . . . that is ineffective.

    Bob Wilson
     
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