More Inconvenient Truth on Climategate

Hat Tip to Pajamas Media.

Related post: http://sfcmac.wordpress.com/2009/12/10/while-the-effetes-bitch-about-global-warming-in-copenhagen-winter-has-arrived/

It’s been less than a month since the Climategate files were first disclosed, but they’ve already had a dramatic impact on the debate over climate change.

On the one hand is the dominant so-called consensus — that human emission of greenhouse gases has been the primary cause of an unprecedented warming of Earth’s climate. On the other hand, there has been an underground opposition trying to make itself heard. What the disclosure of the files did was demonstrate that these opposition voices had been suppressed unfairly and unscientifically.

As a result, the raw data that had been withheld is becoming available to outside researchers. This new openness is already having results.

Steve McIntyre of Climate Audit has done a careful analysis of the Climategate emails that affect one particular issue — the “tricks” that were applied to the data in composing the various reports. The particular issue McIntyre is considering is called “the divergence problem.” When we measure temperatures now, of course, we use a thermometer. For historical temperatures, however, reliable thermometers weren’t available until about 1724, with Fahrenheit’s mercury thermometer. And regular records of temperature weren’t done until some years later. (Thomas Jefferson was one of the first people to make regular temperature records.)

To make any kind of estimate of temperatures into the past earlier than about 1850, researchers need to use something that they believe is related to temperature — a proxy.

A common proxy is the size of tree rings in trees that were growing over the appropriate times. Keith Briffa had reconstructed a long series of temperatures using a tree ring proxy, but that record had its own issue. As it got closer to current times, where there were reliable temperature records, it diverged — it drifted away from the actual temperature measurements.

[There] is pressure to present a nice tidy story as regards “apparent unprecedented warming in a thousand years or more in the proxy data.” (Briffa to Pollen, Jones, and Mann)

McIntyre argues this “pressure” resulted in this final figure appearing in the IPCC Third Assessment Report:
ipcc_tar_zero
This figure shows the famous “hockey stick” — a sudden increase in temperatures starting after 1900. What McIntyre had already observed was that this figure had a peculiar feature — the Briffa reconstruction line (green) stopped rather suddenly:
fig2-21-blowup
The green line “gets lost” around 1960 and never reappears. McIntyre noticed this in 2005, and raised the issue in a comment on a later IPCC report. His comment was rejected.
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/climategate-mcintyre-and-the-divergence-problem/.

Link to Steve McIntyre’s analysis here: http://climateaudit.org/2009/12/10/ipcc-and-the-trick/
He describes both the context of the IPCC version of the “trick” and the efforts of the IPCC to pressure its research scientists into fudging the data IAW the “global warming” narrative.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com
Wordpress Social Share Plugin powered by Ultimatelysocial