UPDATE: The Climate Audit server is getting hit with heavy traffic and is slow. If anyone has referenced graphs in blog posts or news articles lease see the mirrored URL list for the graphs at the end of this article and please consider replacement in your posting. I’ve also got a mirrored article of the Climate Audit post from Steve McIntyre. -Anthony
UPDATE2: Related articles
Update: A zoomed look at the broken hockey stick
A look at treemometers and tree ring growth
===
We’ve always suspected that Mann’s tree ring proxies aren’t all they are cracked up to be. The graph below is stunning in it’s message and I’m pleased to present it to WUWT readers. I’m sure the Team is already working up ways to say “it doesn’t matter”.
The QOTW this week centers around this graph:
The quote of the week is:
I hardly know where to begin in terms of commentary on this difference.
– Steve McIntyre, Climate Audit in Yamal: A “Divergence” Problem
The graph above shows what happens to the “Hockey Stick” after additional tree ring data, recently released (after a long and protracted fight over data access) is added to the analysis of Hadley’s archived tree ring data in Yamal, Russia.
All of the sudden, it isn’t the “hottest period in 2000 years” anymore.
Steve writes:
The next graphic compares the RCS chronologies from the two slightly different data sets: red – the RCS chronology calculated from the CRU archive (with the 12 picked cores); black – the RCS chronology calculated using the Schweingruber Yamal sample of living trees instead of the 12 picked trees used in the CRU archive. The difference is breathtaking.
I’ll say. Ding Dong the stick is dead.
This comparison to CRU archive data illustrates the most extreme example of scientific cherry-picking ever seen. As Steve writes in comments at CA:
Also keep in mind the implausibly small size of the current portion of the Yamal archive. It would be one thing if they had only sampled 10 trees and this is what they got. But they selected 10 trees out of a larger population. Because the selection yields such different results from a nearby population sample, there is a compelling prima facie argument that they’ve made biased picks. This is rebuttable. I would welcome hearing the argument on the other side. I’ve notified one dendro of the issue and requested him to assist in the interpretation of the new data (but am not very hopeful that he will speak up.)
See the complete report on this new development in the sordid story of tree ring proxies used for climate interpretation at Climate Audit. And while you are there, please give Steve a hit on the tip jar. With this revelation, he’s earned it.
The next time somebody tells you that tree rings prove we are living in the “hottest period in 2000 years” show them this graph and point them to this Climate Audit article.
Here’s a “cliff’s notes” summary written by Steve’s partner in publication, Ross McKitrick:
Here’s a re-cap of this saga that should make clear the stunning importance of what Steve has found. One point of terminology: a tree ring record from a site is called a chronology, and is made up of tree ring records from individual trees at that site. Multiple tree ring series are combined using standard statistical algorithms that involve detrending and averaging (these methods are not at issue in this thread). A good chronology–good enough for research that is–should have at least 10 trees in it, and typically has much more.
.
1. In a 1995 Nature paper by Briffa, Schweingruber et al., they reported that 1032 was the coldest year of the millennium – right in the middle of the Medieval Warm Period. But the reconstruction depended on 3 short tree ring cores from the Polar Urals whose dating was very problematic. http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=877.
2. In the 1990s, Schweingruber obtained new Polar Urals data with more securely-dated cores for the MWP. Neither Briffa nor Schweingruber published a new Polar Urals chronology using this data. An updated chronology with this data would have yielded a very different picture, namely a warm medieval era and no anomalous 20th century. Rather than using the updated Polar Urals series, Briffa calculated a new chronology from Yamal – one which had an enormous hockey stick shape. After its publication, in virtually every study, Hockey Team members dropped Polar Urals altogether and substituted Briffa’s Yamal series in its place.
http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=528. PS: The exception to this pattern was Esper et al (Science) 2002, which used the combined Polar Urals data. But Esper refused to provide his data. Steve got it in 2006 after extensive quasi-litigation with Science (over 30 email requests and demands).
3. Subsequently, countless studies appeared from the Team that not only used the Yamal data in place of the Polar Urals, but where Yamal had a critical impact on the relative ranking of the 20th century versus the medieval era.
http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=3099
4. Meanwhile Briffa repeatedly refused to release the Yamal measurement data used inhis calculation despite multiple uses of this series at journals that claimed to require data archiving. E.g. http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=542
5. Then one day Briffa et al. published a paper in 2008 using the Yamal series, again without archiving it. However they published in a Phil Tran Royal Soc journal which has strict data sharing rules. Steve got on the case. http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=3266
6. A short time ago, with the help of the journal editors, the data was pried loose and appeared at the CRU web site. http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=7142
7. It turns out that the late 20th century in the Yamal series has only 10 tree ring chronologies after 1990 (5 after 1995), making it too thin a sample to use (according to conventional rules). But the real problem wasn’t that there were only 5-10 late 20th century cores- there must have been a lot more. They were only using a subset of 10 cores as of 1990, but there was no reason to use a small subset. (Had these been randomly selected, this would be a thin sample, but perhaps passable. But it appears that they weren’t randomly selected.)
http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=7142
8. Faced with a sample in the Taymir chronology that likely had 3-4 times as many series as the Yamal chronology, Briffa added in data from other researchers’ samples taken at the Avam site, some 400 km away. He also used data from the Schweingruber sampling program circa 1990, also taken about 400 km from Taymir. Regardless of the merits or otherwise of pooling samples from such disparate locations, this establishes a precedent where Briffa added a Schweingruber site to provide additional samples. This, incidentally, ramped up the hockey-stickness of the (now Avam-) Taymir chronology.
http://www.climateaudit.org/?p=7158
9. Steve thus looked for data from other samples at or near the Yamal site that could have been used to increase the sample size in the Briffa Yamal chronology. He quickly discovered a large set of 34 Schweingruber samples from living trees. Using these instead of the 12 trees in the Briffa (CRU) group that extend to the present yields Figure 2, showing a complete divergence in the 20th century. Thus the Schweingruber data completely contradicts the CRU series. Bear in mind the close collaboration of Schweingruber and Briffa all this time, and their habit of using one another’s data as needed.
10. Combining the CRU and Schweingruber data yields the green line in the 3rd figure above. While it doesn’t go down at the end, neither does it go up, and it yields a medieval era warmer than the present, on the standard interpretation. Thus the key ingredient in a lot of the studies that have been invoked to support the Hockey Stick, namely the Briffa Yamal series (red line above) depends on the influence of a thin subsample of post-1990 chronologies and the exclusion of the (much larger) collection of readily-available Schweingruber data for the same area.
MIRROR URL’s FOR MAIN GRAPHICS IN THE CLIMATE AUDIT POST:
If anyone has referenced the Yamal graphs at CA in blog posts, please use these URL’s so that they get loaded from WordPress high traffic server.
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/count_comparison1.gif
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/rcs_chronologies_rev2.gif
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/rcs_merged_rev2.gif
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Repeated Grauniad CIF link yo this item lasted 22 mins.
They’re speeding up!
“Facts are sacred” unless they risk undermining the “consensus”.
Meanwhile, Goreacle quotes:
“it’s winter again in the Arctic”.
“As winter ice closes in on remote Arctic communities”.
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/701930
…-
Ice hockey, anyone.? Bring your own stick.
The ice worms are nesting again*.
*http://www.lyricsdownload.com/unknown-when-the-ice-worms-nest-again-lyrics.html
“it’s standard practice to reject data that is ‘obviously wrong'” said a commenter on Steve’s site. And yet just last week I spent an hour telling a research student that when we have six sets of data that agree tolerably well, and a seventh that doesn’t, we include the seventh in the paper too. We can, if we tell the readers, exclude it from the subsequent analysis, but we can’t exclude the data from the paper. That isn’t so much a matter of scientific practice, more a simple matter of morals. So many climate scientologists seem to be crooks that others who are merely incompetent, or guilty of bad judgement, are going to be tarred with the same brush. And I don’t suppose that only their branch of pseudo-science is infected with this – only yesterday a friend told me of a recent discussion with a physicist about a headline-grabbing colleague of his who had issued apocalyptic predictions that were mutually contradictory. The physicist smirked and said that you have to grab the public’s attention somehow.
Dave Wendt (23:38:09) : Try this link, Dave:
Third re-post lasted about 5 mins – then was removed, without even leaving the usual greyed-out trace.
Kafka-esque!
Clearly Steve & Anthony’s news has made a big impression with the Grauniad’s mods – even if the poor saps who read the rag never get to see it.
Regard the Guardian, anyone who is an AGW dissenter should know that CiF stands for “Censorship is Frequent”. Here is a recent George Monbiot article that is typical of frequent Guardian censorship.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/georgemonbiot/2009/sep/16/global-temperature-cooling
Anyhow, the warmists are now suffering from AGW droop. Not even prescription drugs can cure that.
The black line, Schweingruber, is a rake. A rake to put away all the mistakes made by the hockey stick.
Quote of the week? But it’s only Monday. I’m sure something even more cretinous will come along before the weekend.
Foxgoose:
“I posted a polite, non-controversial item with a link to this site, and the original CA article, on a Guardian CIF discussion today – it was taken down within 45 minutes.”
They deleted a post I made some time ago when I suggested that if they were really serious about carbon emissions, and if they wanted to send a message about how urgent this is, they might do well to consider how much emissions they are making in trucking newspapers thousands of miles each day.
But perhaps it was when I added that they ought to close themselves down that the moderator took exception. However, at least one reader saw it because they gave a thumbs-up!
Telegraph! Telephone! Tell-a friend! Has anyone told Foxnews? They love being out front and ahead of the MSM.
It doesn´t matter how much actual data WUWT shows, they will keep on preaching the end of the world because of “global warming”, they are doing it right now, through the media, in all countries all over the world. It is the biggest marketing campaign ever.
I counted 5 posts on
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/sep/28/met-office-study-global-warming?commentpage=3
linking to here or climateaudit. Looks like the moderators have their hands full!
I suspect Christopher Booker might be relied upon to get this story out to a wider public in his excellent Sunday Telegraph (UK) column. But, correct me if I’m wrong, folks, but I thought the hockey stick had already been trashed by the USA’s chief statistician.
Energy Secretarty Chu has said that the AGW sceptics have made up data. And he probably believes that. How can the actual situation be conveyed to people like him who refuse to believe scientific facts which undermine what they strongly believe?
The problem is that so much of this ‘evidence’ turns out, on closer inspection, to be speculation based on very few foundations. Tree ring proxies being one of those few.
Much of the IPCC work is just speculation based on those few foundations. What would be the likely effects of a 5C rise on US agricultural production? If there is no 5C rise then any answers become, like Science Fiction, purest speculation with a scientific look and feel. What would be the effect of a lottery win on my life. Who knows? Pure speculation. Even more so if I don’t participate in the lottery.
It doesn’t matter how many papers, conferences, lectures and newspaper articles (or ‘consensus’ science) came out of the miasma theory of disease. The basic foundation was wrong.
(back OT) It could be just me but the ‘secrecy’ surrounding this and other aspects of climate science seems to be storing up problems for the future. In most other areas of science there is a ‘chain’ to be followed. How we got here from there. Providing I have the requisite background I can follow the discoveries and reasoning, in many cases over hundreds of years. Experiments can be reproduced, mathematics scrutinised and I can even re-examine the ‘dead ends’, perhaps something was missed. Could a future researcher do any of this with the ‘proprietary’ world of Team climate science?
Ninderthana (02:27:40) :I whole heartily agree that you must be careful in using tree-ring chronologies as temperature proxies temperature but it is just stupidity to claim that all of the temperature data based on tree-ring chronologies are wrong!
No one has made such a claim. Read the post again. It doesnt say all temperature data based on tree-ring chronologies are wrong. What the study shows is – the Schweingruber data completely contradicts the CRU series, and Combining the CRU and Schweingruber data yields .. a medieval era warmer than the present.
So this appears to combine the best of both worlds: cherry picking, while completely ignoring contradicting data.
Brilliant….
Yes, that sound you hear is Sir Issac Newton spinning in his grave….
This is really interesting, and potentially very important. I look forward to seeing this research in print in a good scientific journal after peer review.
“The problem is that so much of this ‘evidence’ turns out, on closer inspection, to be speculation based on very few foundations. Tree ring proxies being one of those few. ”
I agree. It’s like evidence of alien abductions or psychic phenomena. There’s lots and lots of evidence, but none of it stands up to scrutiny. And that’s in situations where the proponents allow their evidence to be scrutinized.
What a melodrama!
Who are the playwrights–the pranksters on Olympus?
So, the “Team” will now be forced to keep their “sticks” on the ice? 😉 The spin should be, um, interesting.
Why do they so strongly need to undertake this data selection in order to prove global warming?
Can’t a scientist just present all the data objectively and say “there it is”. Shouldn’t that be the purpose of their profession?
For the most part, the objective data is going to show some warming anyway (maybe it will also show some other cycles as well) but there is no need to exagerate and sacrific one’s integrity in such a way.
There were two groups of trees in the woods
Which saw drought and occasionally, floods
One group grew real well, as the ring widths now tell
But the other has come up with the goods
Any violin maker can now produce modern versions of Stradivarius violins!