An Australian look at USHCN: 20th century trend is largely if not entirely an artefact arising from the “corrections”

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From environmentalist Jennifer Marohasy’s blog in Australia, please pay her a visit here – Anthony

There has been criticism of the potential for official weather stations in the USA to record artificially high temperatures because of the changing environments in which they exist, for example, new asphalt, new building or new air conditioning outlets.   Meteorologist, Anthony Watts, has documented evidence of the problem and Canadian academic, Ross McKitrick, has attempted to calculate just how artificially elevated temperatures might be as a consequence.

A reader of this blog, Michael Hammer, recently studied the official data from the US official weather stations and in particular how it is adjusted after it has been collected.   Mr Hammer concludes that the temperature rise profile claimed by the US government is largely if not entirely an artefact of the adjustments applied after the raw data is collected from the weather stations.

Does the US Temperature Record Support Global Warming?

By Michael Hammer

IN the US, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) collects, analyses and publishes temperature data for the United States.   As part of the analysis process, NOAA applies several adjustments to the raw data.

If we consider, the above graph, which shows, their plot of the raw data  (dark pink) and the adjusted data (pale pink), it is obvious that the adjustments have little impact on data from early in the 20th century but adjust later temperature readings upwards by an increasing amount.  This means that the adjustments will create an apparent warming trend over the 20th century.  [Click on the above chart for a better larger view, this chart can also be viewed at http://cdiac.ornl.gov/epubs/ndp/ushcn/ndp019.html .]

NOAA state that they adjust the raw data for five factors.  The magnitude of the adjustments are shown in Figure 2.

Figure 2.  Form of individual corrections applied by NOAA. The black line is the adjustment for time of observation.  The red line is for a change in maximum/minimum thermometers used.  The yellow line is for changes in station siting. The pale blue line is for filling in missing data from individual station records. The purple line is for UHI effects (this correction is now removed).  [Click on the chart for a better larger view or visit the same website as for Figure 1.]

It is obvious that the only adjustment which reduces the reported warming is UHI which is a linear correction of 0.1F or about 0.06C per century, Figure 2.  Note also that the latest indications are that even this minimal UHI adjustment has now been removed in the latest round of revisions to the historical record.  To put this in perspective, in my previous article on this site I presented bureau of meteorology data which shows that the UHI impact for Melbourne Australia was 1.5C over the last 40 years equivalent to 3.75C per century and highly non linear.

Compare the treatment of UHI with the adjustments made for measuring stations that have moved out of the city centre, typically to the airport.  These show lower temperatures at their new location and the later readings have been adjusted upwards so as to match the earlier readings.  The airport readings are lower because the station has moved away from the city UHI.  Raising the airport readings, while not adding downwards compensation for UHI, results in an overstatement of the amount of warming. This would seem to be clear evidence of bias.  It would be more accurate to lower the earlier city readings to match the airport readings rather than vice versa.

Note also the similarity between the shape of the time of observation adjustment and the claimed global warming record over the 20th century especially the steep rise since 1970.  This is even more pronounced if one looks at the total adjustment shown in Figure 3 (again from the same site as Figure 1).  As a comparison, a recent version of the claimed 20th century global temperature record downloaded from  www.giss.nasa.gov is shown in Figure 4.

Figure 3.  Magnitude of the total correction applied by NOAA

[Click on the charts for a larger/better view.]

Figure 4.  Temperature anomaly profile from NASA GISS

Since the total corrections for the US look so similar to the claimed temperature anomaly, it begs the questions as to what the raw data looks like without any corrections.  Does it show the claimed rapidly accelerating warming trend claimed by the AGW advocates?  To determine this I took the raw data from the USHCN graph shown in Figure 1 and plotted this using  a 5 year mean (blue trace), matching the smoothing in the NASA GISS profile shown in Figure 4.  The result is shown in Figure 5.  Please note that while the plot is one that I generated, the data comes directly from the raw data from Figure 1 published by NOAA.

Figure 5  Plot of raw temperature data versus time (from fig 1) 5 point smoothing. Vertical axis degrees Fahrenheit.  Red line is a linear trend line. Green line is a 2nd order (parabolic) trend line.

Clearly the shape of this graph bears no similarity at all to the graph shown in Figure 4.  The graph does not even remotely correlate to the shape of the CO2 versus time graph.  The warming was greatest in the 1930’s before CO2 started to rise rapidly.  The rate of rise in 1920, the early 1930’s and the early 1950’s is significantly greater than anything in the last 30 years.  Despite the rapid rise in CO2 since 1960, the 1970’s to early 1980’s was the time of the global cooling scare and looking at the graph in Figure 5 one can see why (almost 2F cooling over 50 years).

A linear least squares trend line, created using the Excel trend line function (Red trace)  shows a small temperature rise of 0.09C per century which is far less than the rise claimed by AGW supporters and clearly of no concern.  However, the data shown in figure 5 bears little if any resemblance to a linear function.  One can always fit a linear trend line to any data but that does not mean the fitted line has any significance.  For example, if instead I fit a second order trend line (a parabolic) the result is extremely different.  That suggests a temperature peak around 1950 with an underlying cooling trend since.  Which trend line is the more significant one?  If there was really a strong underlying linear rise over the time period it should have shown up in the 2nd order trend line as well.  This suggests that it is questionable whether any relevant underlying trend can be determined from the data.

It would appear that the temperature rise profile claimed by the adjusted data is largely if not entirely an artefact arising from the adjustments applied (as shown in Figure 3), not from the experimental data record.  In fact, the raw data does not in any way support the AGW theory.

Based on this data, the US temperature data does not correlate with carbon dioxide levels.  The warming over the last 3 decades is completely unremarkable and if present at all is significantly less than occurred in the 1930’s.  It is questionable whether any long term temperature rise over the 20th century can be inferred from the data but if there is any it is far less than claimed by the AGW proponents.

The corrected data from NOAA has been used as evidence of anthropogenic global warming yet it would appear that the rising trend over the 20th century is largely if not entirely an artefact arising from the “corrections” applied to the experimental data, at least in the US, and is not visible in the uncorrected experimental data record.

This is an extremely serious issue.  It is completely unacceptable, and scientifically meaningless, to claim experimental confirmation of a theory when the confirmation arises from the “corrections” to the raw data rather than from the raw data itself.  This is even more the case if the organisation carrying out the corrections has published material indicating that it supports the theory under discussion.  In any other branch of science that would be treated with profound scepticism if not indeed rejected outright.  I believe the same standards should be applied in this case.

*********************

Notes and Links

Interestingly, there was an earlier version of the NASA GISS data shown in Figure 4 which was originally published at http://www.giss.nasa.gov/data/update/gistemp/graphs/FigD.txt While this site has now been taken down the data was apparently archived by John Daly and available at his website http://www.john-daly.com/usatemps.006.  The data is presented in tabular form rather than graphical form but appears to be either identical or extremely similar to that shown in my Figure 5.

Other contributions from Michael Hammer can be read here: http://jennifermarohasy.com/blog/author/michael-hammer/

[scroll down, click on the title for the full article]

Ross McKitrick, Ph.D. – Quantifying the Influence of Anthropogenic Surface Processes on Gridded Global Climate Data

http://www.heartland.org/events/NewYork08/newyork2008-video.html

Anthony Watts – http://wattsupwiththat.com/

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Mick
June 28, 2009 3:45 pm

Question: who are the gate-keepers?
I reluctant to except a global conspiracy, but in my theory the sixties-seventies hippies just grownup, got into powerful position (media, management etc)
and now they can fulfill they dream to enforce a hippie ideology, social engineering, nanny state etc.
Just a thought…

mkurbo
June 28, 2009 3:48 pm

Off subject, but have you all reviewed some of the online blogs having to do with the censored EPA Report issue ? OMG – it’s a full on personal attack of Alan Carlin ! It’s as if every natural cycle denier in the world is going after his credentials and aspects of the report (which no doubt were due to the short prep time).
I’ve felt for awhile that have been approaching a “tipping” point in perception of AGW, but this Climate Bill vote and some of the collateral effects of its backers to rush it into law are bringing the debate to a head. Personally I think people have reached the “enough is enough” point with what going on in Washington, but when a bill this significant is pushed on them – they have a right to understand the scientific assumptions behind it are wrong.
The United Nations (therefore the IPCC) polls very negatively with Americans. If they really understood the connection between the IPCC, AGW ideology agenda, and long term affects that will result from this bill – it would not pass the Senate.
How do we connect the dots for the public ?

Editor
June 28, 2009 3:51 pm

Excellent work. Too bad we couldn’t get this to more congressidiots before this past week’s vote.

Craigo
June 28, 2009 3:51 pm

How does Figure 5 tie in to the causes and effects of the “dustbowl” drought of the 1930’s? Surely it would be a marker of extremes like “ice skating on the Thames”?

June 28, 2009 3:53 pm

To complement Mike Hammer’s results, here’s a link to my March 2, 2009 post about SST anomalies of U.S. Coastal Waters.
http://bobtisdale.blogspot.com/2009/03/sst-anomalies-of-us-coastal-waters.html
The Northern Gulf of Mexico and the Western North Pacific datasets showed higher SST anomalies in the 1930s and 1940s than during the more recent period of elevated SST anomalies. For the Eastern North Pacific, the peak in the late 1990s was slightly higher than the peaks in the 1940s and 1950s.

PaulH
June 28, 2009 3:56 pm

All of this is looking more and more Enron-esque with each passing day. How much longer can they cook the books before it all comes crashing down?

June 28, 2009 3:57 pm

Michael Hammer’s paper confuses two different things. The USHCN adjustments were applied to CONUS (lower 48) data, and relate to local US measurement procedures. They were not applied to global data, and in no way “explain” the global warming trend.
REPLY: There’s a similar set of adjustments applied to the Global Historical Climatological Network (GHCN). USHCN is better documented than GHCN, and this make an easier target for analysis. Both data sets are adjusted. – Anthony

crosspatch
June 28, 2009 4:01 pm

I find the notion of adjusting rural temperatures up to eliminate UHI … uhm “interesting”. While that does certainly reduce the UHI difference between urban and rural locations, it isn’t any reflection of reality.
To then use that adjusted data as “proof” of general warming is not dishonest, it seems to be to be quite despicable.

Antonio San
June 28, 2009 4:21 pm

With Copenhagen coming up and the type of legislations Europe and the US are preparing, I am very concerned that the records -temperature etc…- will be re-written, that there will be a tentation to re-write history according to the Gorespel of AGW and CO2 so all traces of unbiased data will be erased. Already they claim that thermometers reading before the 1950s should be corrected so the late XX century warming keeps growing… Revisionism? If anyone was attempting the same manipulation of WW2 history, they’d be thrown in jail and have legal troubles… Not so here since governments are directing their scientists and pouring money into the official revisionism.

June 28, 2009 4:35 pm

Anthony,
Of course GHCN results are adjusted, but to what effect? Anyway, Michael is talking about Hadcrut3, of which land GHCN is a minor component. And yes, SST are adjusted too, but in quite different ways. This post in no way establishes that global warming measurements correspond to any adjustment that has been made to them.
REPLY: Feel free to go on thinking that. – Anthony

Curiousgeorge
June 28, 2009 4:42 pm

Regarding the upcoming Copenhagen meeting, permit an old retired guy to ask what (if any ) preparations people are making in the event that it meets the expectations of the AQW crowd, or conversely, collapses and makes all the anti-crowd happy. Any legal, political, or other challenges in work? Or are the losers just going to pout and throw hissy fits?

ohioholic
June 28, 2009 4:46 pm

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/12/31/60minutes/main4694713.shtml
Totally unrelated to this thread, but this scares the pants off me. The applications are….. unthinkable. (No pun intended)

June 28, 2009 4:56 pm

It has always baffled me why the urban heat island affected surface record should have a positive adjustment attached to it while the 1930s should be negative.
At least scientifically it has baffled me.
While James Hansen is in charge of it, I’m not surprised by anything.

June 28, 2009 5:00 pm

Green (15:35:49) :
“Everyone thought Exxon had the formula to convert coal to oil well the real secret was the so called scientists fixed the data to get the answer their supporter politicians and activists needed.”
Where do you get your information?
Exxon and others do have technology to convert coal to gas, and from there to liquid fuels, however we generally refer to this as Coal-to-Liquids or CTL. It is not a secret technology, and the “answer” you refer to was not fixed. The result in the early 1980s was that crude oil must be $38 to $40 per barrel for the CTL process to break even. Knowing this, OPEC set a world price for benchmark crude oil at $36 per barrel. Not much of a secret.
Knowing this will shed some light on why OPEC strives to maintain crude oil price under $80 per barrel.

David S
June 28, 2009 5:04 pm

This proves anthropogenic global warming (i.e man-made adjusting of the data).
On a more serious note though I think the 64 thousand dollar question is whether the adjustments are legitimate.

rbateman
June 28, 2009 5:27 pm

From the Wong-Fielding meeting on Global Warming:
“For the last two decades the alarmist scientists have been safe in the knowledge that the
valid criticisms of their theories and models are just a little bit more complex than the
politicians and most of the public are willing to hear. On the other hand, the alarmists
have lots of time and media space to get across the complexities of their message. But
finally, after the usual warming cycle apparently ran its course by 2002, the public and
politicians are noticing that temperatures are not rising as the alarmists said they
would—and the public and politicians understand temperatures!”

rbateman
June 28, 2009 5:37 pm

crosspatch (16:01:05) :
They do have control of the datasets, and the opportunity.
Which leaves only motive.
I can only tell you that in times past (30 yrs ago) you could look up much older records than you can today. I can also attest to seeing reported new record highs where the older ones have been ‘wiped clean’ by dumping anything before 1950.
There is monkeymotion aplenty to be found.

Jean-François Avon
June 28, 2009 5:40 pm

Considering that a majority of stations are producing errors > 2C, and assuming that when the first versions (Stevenson screens, unwired, and whitewashed), the instrumental error was probably very small, due to the paint and much less urban warming effect, should the raw data show an actual increase nevertheless?
If the data shows no increase, wouldn’t that be indicative of an actual overall global cooling compared to, say, an era when urban sprawling did not affect most stations?

noaaprogrammer
June 28, 2009 5:50 pm

PaulH wrote: “All of this is looking more and more Enron-esque with each passing day. How much longer can they cook the books before it all comes crashing down?”
Benford’s Law on the distribution of leading digits is sometimes used to catch those who “cook” financial records. However with data such as temperature that has a restricted range, can Benford’s Law be adjusted to take this into account?
See “Applications and Limitations” section in:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benford's_law
There is also a distribution on the second leading digits which may not be as sensitive to data with restricted ranges.
(See “Generalization to digits beyond the first” section in the above.)

June 28, 2009 5:52 pm

Anthony: Thanks for providing the link to the older GISTEMP data archived at John Daly’s website. I used it for a trend comparison of GISTEMP Contiguous U.S. Surface Temperature Anomalies, before and after the post-1999 adjustments.
http://bobtisdale.blogspot.com/2009/06/contiguous-us-gistemp-linear-trends.html
Before the post-1999 GISS adjustments to the Contiguous U.S. GISTEMP data, the linear trend for the period of 1880 to 1999 was 0.035 deg C/decade. After the adjustments, the linear trend rose to 0.044 deg C/decade.

Steven Hill
June 28, 2009 6:04 pm

It’s obvious that by showing these numbers you are in danger of affecting the new rollerball government takover. They know where you live.

Konrad
June 28, 2009 6:44 pm

When I first saw this at Jennifer’s blog the my first thought was that it was statistically improbable that all adjustments would be positive. As I look at figure 2 more closely I can see the plots for individual adjustments don’t square with information about surface station history.
Firstly the red plot for thermometer type looks to be the right shape, but is upside down. There should be a negative adjustment for enclosure paint changes around 1979, followed by an gradual adjustment later in the decade for MMTS introduction. Anthony might be able to answer as to the likely direction of MMTS adjustment.
Secondly the pale blue plot for data infilling looks statistically improbable. The infilling appears wholly positive. Surely this plot should appear as noise centered on the X axis?
The yellow plot for station siting excluding UHI appears to be upside down. The general increase in man made structures around surface station could be expected to create a warm bias in station microclimate. An indication of increased siting issues due to the introduction of MMTS on short cables also appears to be missing in this plot.
The purple plot for UHI appears to be the correct orientation, but should show a marked increase in magnitude around the 1990s for rural station dropout.
As to the TOB adjustments, well I don’t know how or why these are made. I would be fascinated to read why time of observation errors are not random in sign or magnitude. Why is it considered that time of observation issues have introduced a negative bias needing such a large correction that is increasing over time?

bill
June 28, 2009 7:00 pm

A strange blog entry as it simply quotes stuff from the referenced page with few invalid statements added.
Bill Illis (14:32:11) quotes a recent paper from the American Meteorological Society
where removal of the UHI effect is explained. As are all the other adjustments with suitable references.
http://ams.allenpress.com/archive/1520-0477/preprint/2009/pdf/10.1175_2008BAMS2613.1.pdf
and this tatement is just plain WRONG
Since the total corrections for the US look so similar to the claimed temperature anomaly
Here is the visual overlay of adjustment and temperature. :
http://img198.imageshack.us/img198/4931/uhcnadjust.jpg
The only similarity is that both curves are flat in places And rise in others BUT not at the same time in both plots!!!!
So what it comes down to is do we believe a blog or the American Meteorological Society.
Tricky!
REPLY: “A strange blog entry as it simply quotes stuff from the referenced page with few invalid statements added.” I’ve added nothing, your statement is in error. The post is the same here as it appears on Marohasy’s blog here:
http://jennifermarohasy.com/blog/2009/06/how-the-us-temperature-record-is-adjusted/
– Anthony

Geoff Sherrington
June 28, 2009 7:15 pm

When you look at the GISS treatment of Australian temperature data, you find that most Australian data have been homogenised at home more than once before being sent to various repositories that end up at GISS. Now, GISS does some similar adjustments a second time, on top of the former. It’s not so simple though, because GISS does not seem to know what has been done to the Australian data before they get it, or after, or which version they are starting with. I’m half way through a long study of this effect, so these comments are preliminary but I suspect inarguable. I have asked Micheal Hammer if he wants to collaborate because he’s working globally on data of mixed origin and I’m working in detail on subsets with discrete data from as many sources as I can get. Even within Australia there are different versions at some stations. These can be unannounced until you study their differences.
If you need a simple example, see
Station Name Lat Lon ID Pop. Years
(*) Echuca 36.1 S 144.8 E 501948610000 rural area 1881 – 1992
(*) Echuca 36.1 S 144.8 E 501948610001 rural area 1881 – 1981
at http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/findstation.py?datatype=gistemp&data_set=0&name=Echuca
Remember that 100 years ago people were using the data for farming and transport and planning bridge heights for floods and a few tenths of a degree was neither here nor there. It’s a bit optimistic to reconstruct the Earth, the Universe and Everything from them today.

ohioholic
June 28, 2009 7:33 pm

Geoff Sherrington (19:15:04) :
Why, 42 of course.

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