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Broken Hockey Stick! (Global Warming Scam Busted)
Still Waiting for Warming ^ | Oct 29, 2003 | John Daly

Posted on 10/29/2003 10:15:44 AM PST by Dan Evans

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To: palmer
I'm sure you understand that a very slight change in prevailing winds greatly affects large areas of ocean surface temperatures. Smoothing is essential along with even sampling and satellite is the only way to do that. A large part of the surface record for ocean areas is taken on islands which almost invariably have UHI (mostly airports).

That's not what I've read. ERSST is based on COADS, and COADS is based on data from ships of opportunity augmented by buoys in later years when oceanographic buoy deployment became more common. I've NEVER heard of SST being measured at an island airport.

ICOADS: The International Comprehensive Ocean-Atmosphere Data Set Project

http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/Smith-Reynolds-dataset-2004.pdf

Improvements to NOAA’s Historical Merged Land–Ocean Surface Temperature Analysis (1880–2006)

If you go to the link in the previous post ("Global surface temperature anomalies") you'll see that they say they put satellite data in, but this caused problems, but they took it back out. I'm not sure how well satellite data works with SST data, because satellite must only look at the exact top of the ocean radiatively, while even a buoy or a ship is measuring some volume of the surface.

The reason that you sense no resolution to the adjustments argument is that GG has moved on. The statistical methods used for adjustments have satisfied him since there are even numbers of positive and negative trends in a gaussian distribution. That should be expected from a homogenization adjustment (not an adjustment for UHI or other physical error).

Oh well.

As Eschenbach showed (and verified by others, e.g. http://diggingintheclay.blogspot.com/2009/12/reproducing-willis-eschenbachs-wuwt.html, the effect of homogenization is to introduce artificial trends, positive in the case of Darwin (but also negative).

Well, Darwin's one station. What's it do to the rest of Australia?

While the bottom line effect is "only" about a 0.15C to 0.2C rise per century overall (depending on methods), there are drops in 1940-1970 and much faster rises in 1975-2000. The essence of what GG is missing (or hiding) is that the adjustments vary over time to create recent warming compared to the raw data. It is impossible to see that on GG's graph that adds up all adjustments over all time periods. GG repeats that several times in his replies to critics. To quote one "If you adjust down first, then up you do NOT create a total warming trend: you create two trends one cooling and one warming that sum with each other. Why would you consider only the latter? It seems many people got stucked on this. I am going to explain it better in my post in a little while." He never explained it better.

Unfortunate.

This still doesn't go back to my original and probably more important question. What's wrong with the graph in post #73? Because if there's nothing significantly wrong with it, then the bet stands as stated -- and it should be obvious why. (Or more succinctly; if LT and surface trends match so well, then what's wrong with the adjustments?)

Or maybe this one is more clear:

From Before and after

81 posted on 12/29/2009 9:07:14 PM PST by cogitator
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To: cogitator
What's wrong with the graph in post #73

Because the data for the chart in post 73 is wrong. Look at the difference between satellite LT there and satellite LT in post 64. Take the 80's and 90's (until 97) from Spencer's graph in post 64 and see that it fluctuates around zero for the period going as low as -0.5 and a bit above 0.3 In Tamino's graph in post 73 he has picked points (not averaged or smoothed) that lie between -0.3 and a bit under 0.2. In other words he compressed the y axis over the early years.

Then in 1998 all of a sudden he accurately captures the peak at 0.6 But after that he compresses the y axis again from about 0.25 to about 0.38 after 2001 or so. The actual values for that time period are from -0.1 to about 0.6 Then Tamino seems to truncate the x axis to avoid displaying the -0.2 in 2008.

Somehow the chart in post 73 contains y-axis data compressed by some unknown process. As for the chart in your latest post, it is from a different Tamino thread http://tamino.wordpress.com/2008/03/02/whats-up-with-that/ which is a junky post in response to Anthony Watts' even more junky post. Tamino uses graphic spaghetti to merge satellite with GISS by using the same shades of red and adding Watts' two other irrelevant data sets rather them separating them and comparing by pairs.

I've NEVER heard of SST being measured at an island airport.

The surface record uses lots of island airports to fill the grids in ocean areas whereas the satellite record simply measures within the grids whether there are islands there or not and thus more faithfully reflects SST. The result is a gradual warm bias in the surface record but with suppressed SST effects since the airport doesn't feel the full effect of the El Nino SST increase mainly due to island induced rain clouds. The result is exactly what we see, a surface temperature record that relentlessly rises but suppresses the El Nino peaks, compared to a satellite record as shown in post 64.

Well, Darwin's one station. What's it do to the rest of Australia?

Darwin was apparently adjusted using data from neighboring islands (not Australia). The other northern Australian stations don't show warming (see http://joannenova.com.au/2009/12/smoking-guns-across-australia-wheres-the-warming/#more-5172 for example), but GHCN does show warming overall. In this case adjustments via data homogenization have a warm bias over a large area, not just that one site although it does appear to be a worst case (Willis says he chose it because it was the first one on the list).

The bottom line in all of this is that we are trying to compare apples to apples, or 98 El Nino measured most accurately by satellite to the upcoming El Nino. Not to data that is both adjusted with a warm bias and polluted with both UHIE and cooling effects.

82 posted on 12/29/2009 10:20:23 PM PST by palmer (Cooperating with Obama = helping him extend the depression and implement socialism.)
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To: palmer
Sorry for the delay.

Because the data for the chart in post 73 is wrong. Look at the difference between satellite LT there and satellite LT in post 64. Take the 80's and 90's (until 97) from Spencer's graph in post 64 and see that it fluctuates around zero for the period going as low as -0.5 and a bit above 0.3 In Tamino's graph in post 73 he has picked points (not averaged or smoothed) that lie between -0.3 and a bit under 0.2. In other words he compressed the y axis over the early years.

Here's what he says: "It occured to me that I could make the comparision between NASA GISS surface temperature analysis and satellite measurements easier, by plotting the two data sets on separate y-axes. Of course, one must be careful that the two y-axes are the same size even though they’re offset to a different zero point. By doing so, we can cancel out most of the difference in zero-point between the two data sets. Rather than being very fussy in an attempt to cancel out the zero-point offset exactly, I’ve settled for an approximate offset to cancel out most of the zero-point offset."

The point is, the peaks and valleys are similar. If LT is good and the surface record is bad, then why are the trends in the same direction?

The surface record uses lots of island airports to fill the grids in ocean areas whereas the satellite record simply measures within the grids whether there are islands there or not and thus more faithfully reflects SST. The result is a gradual warm bias in the surface record but with suppressed SST effects since the airport doesn't feel the full effect of the El Nino SST increase mainly due to island induced rain clouds. The result is exactly what we see, a surface temperature record that relentlessly rises but suppresses the El Nino peaks, compared to a satellite record as shown in post 64.

Can you substantiate what you say above? I truly thought (and still think) that the ocean portion of the global ocean-atmosphere surface record is from COADS/ICOADS. Link to ICOADS They say "ships, buoys, and other platforms". OK, admittedly that's not too specific, but it doesn't mention airports. I'm asking for clarification, not to argue.

Darwin was apparently adjusted using data from neighboring islands (not Australia). The other northern Australian stations don't show warming'

I agree. Take a look at this:

http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/__data/assets/image/0004/51079/cc_figure_4.jpg

Hardly any warming around Darwin. Actual cooling in a region to the southwest. Meanwhile, where the Murray-Darling river system is drying up, a lot more warming. Forgive me if I'm not a lot worried about tropical wet/dry Darwin.

The bottom line in all of this is that we are trying to compare apples to apples, or 98 El Nino measured most accurately by satellite to the upcoming El Nino. Not to data that is both adjusted with a warm bias and polluted with both UHIE and cooling effects.

Still, the bet is what it is. The models still seem to indicate that El Nino conditions will persist through June, which if that happens means above-normal temperatures through August (despite what anybody thinks about the current NH chill). 2010 might set the new record, at both the surface and in the LT. Wouldn't that be interesting?

It will even be interesting if 2010 doesn't beat 1998. Boy do I wish I had a time-machine right now.

83 posted on 01/09/2010 9:10:41 PM PST by cogitator
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To: cogitator
Of course, one must be careful that the two y-axes are the same size even though they’re offset to a different zero point.

Size? What garbage. The two y-axes are either original scaling or Tamino scaling. In this case, Tamino scaling and flat out incorrect.

I truly thought (and still think) that the ocean portion of the global ocean-atmosphere surface record is from COADS/ICOADS. Link to ICOADS They say "ships, buoys, and other platforms".

Yes, it is. But the surface grid rectangles use island measurements if those are available. The difference between that and satellite is the satellite doesn't know or care if there is a tiny speck of an island with a thermometer on it, it samples each grid point uniformly. That's the big difference for ocean warmth and the reason why the satellite picks it up and the surface record reads a cooler at the peak e.g. 1998. On the continents it's somewhat opposite, the satellite doesn't measure urban centers so it reads cooler.

I don't think El Nino will help you out this time around. The bottom line is that the AO, NAO and southerly-suppressed southern jet are keeping eastern NA and Europe cold while western NA and the middle of the Atlantic have stagnant warm weather. It's essentially a blocking pattern and not conducive to sharing the wealth (El Nino warmth).

84 posted on 01/10/2010 8:58:26 AM PST by palmer (Cooperating with Obama = helping him extend the depression and implement socialism.)
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