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Previously on "Maldives sea level not risen for 30-40 years"
Dr Curry is indeed a distinguished atmospheric scientist, however paleoclimate is outside her speciality; in that exchange she made several statements that are simply and demonstrably untrue.
Dr Curry's remarks refer to a paper now over a decade old, none of the issues raised is remotely relevant today.
See this exchange between Judith and the award-winning Gavin Schmidt of NASA, where she champions Andrew Montford's absurd book and raises some of the same 'issues'. Not her finest hour.
Is she senile too? By the way it's Professor Curry who has a chair in climate science, and testifies in the House of Representatives on climate change vs plain old Dr Gavin Schmidt.
Last edited by BlasterBates; 20 October 2011, 15:00.
The papers garnered together by 'CO2 Science' seem to be mainly single-proxy studies from single locations.
Trouble with that is that the variance at any individual point can be as much as 2-3C, more than enough to mask the long term trend, if there is one.
What you need to do in the context of quantifying a global change is to compile a multi-proxy reconstruction - the larger number of (reliable) proxies, the better. You can then average and weight the results to come up with a curve that represents a large area.
This is what Mann et al 2008 did, the paper analyses 1209 different proxies and finds
...recent warmth is unprecedented in the record.
The thick red line stands out like a sore thumb and obscures my view of the other lines which don't go up as quickly, which could be construed by someone less charitable than myself as an attempt to decieve the reader.
The papers garnered together by 'CO2 Science' seem to be mainly single-proxy studies from single locations.
Trouble with that is that the variance at any individual point can be as much as 2-3C, more than enough to mask the long term trend, if there is one.
What you need to do in the context of quantifying a global change is to compile a multi-proxy reconstruction - the larger number of (reliable) proxies, the better. You can then average and weight the results to come up with a curve that represents a large area.
This is what Mann et al 2008 did, the paper analyses 1209 different proxies and finds
There is no question that the diagrams and accompanying text in the IPCC TAR, AR4 and WMO 1999 are misleading. I was misled. Upon considering the material presented in these reports, it did not occur to me that recent paleo data was not consistent with the historical record. The one statement in AR4 (put in after McIntyre’s insistence as a reviewer) that mentions the divergence problem is weak tea.
It is obvious that there has been deletion of adverse data in figures shown IPCC AR3 and AR4, and the 1999 WMO document. Not only is this misleading, but it is dishonest (I agree with Muller on this one). The authors defend themselves by stating that there has been no attempt to hide the divergence problem in the literature, and that the relevant paper was referenced. I infer then that there is something in the IPCC process or the authors’ interpretation of the IPCC process (i.e. don’t dilute the message) that corrupted the scientists into deleting the adverse data in these diagrams.
McIntyre’s analysis is sufficiently well documented that it is difficult to imagine that his analysis is incorrect in any significant way. If his analysis is incorrect, it should be refuted. I would like to know what the heck Mann, Briffa, Jones et al. were thinking when they did this and why they did this, and how they can defend this, although the emails provide pretty strong clues. Does the IPCC regard this as acceptable? I sure don’t.
Can anyone defend “hide the decline”? I would much prefer to be wrong in my interpretation, but I fear that I am not.
Now who is moving the goalposts? Medieval warmth in Greenland is not news, as I've pointed out. At the same time the Pacific and the Antarctic seem to have been cooler. But widespread, global warming, in the sense of temperatures rising on every continent, is a new thing.
With your newfound expertise, you should now be aware that using a borehole proxy to corroborate an ice core is not legitimate. Going back to medieval times the resolution of the borehole is measured in centuries, so the idea that it can pinpoint the Greenland MWP is nonsense.
...and how do you explain why this glacier in Chile both advanced and receded over the last one thousand years. A thousand years ago it was roughly where it is today.
OK I was mistaken on the scientific technique used in the bore hole, but their graph as Easterbrook's shows the same basic conclusion that temperatures are signifcantly lower now than they were a 1000 years ago. Now we won't resolve who's lying from that paper, suffice to say though Easterbrook's basic thesis, is corroborated in this paper, so it is in any case immaterial to the debate. The question why would he lie when he could simply have cited this paper instead?
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