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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The tree ring data was hand picked to get the desired result
I’ve asked before and I’ll ask again:
Given that these studies are being used to promote restrictive tax and energy policies in many nations, at what point does this type of activity rise to the level of:
[snip]
Vacationing in Duluth yesterday, kids riding around without shirts, celebrating one of the warmest and driest Septembers ever, rather like the August we didn’t have.
Going home and today, angry skies, cold, stiff winds with punishing rain, rather like Novembers of recent decades.
AGW is about to fall off everyone’s table.
Those who control the purse strings control the arts (and sciences). Michaelangelo, Leonardo, and Alfred would starve today and produce nothing of value.
Looks like the Guardian is falling behind in its snipping, but the ad-hom squad is now on the job over there. Gotta wonder if maybe the AGW trogs are organized…. sheesh, now I’m starting to sound like Bill Clinton: “… a vast AGW conspiracy…”
let’s see….
Bishop Hill chronicles shenanigans at the IPCC and in the peer-reviewed literature in his Caspar and the Jesus Paper;
Jeff Id and his crew of merry wreckers at the Air Vent find Dr. Eric Steig’s analysis of Antarctic Warming… a tad over-stated;
Anthony hasn’t released his surface station report yet, but if I had to make a prognistication….
Arctic sea ice is staging a startling three year recovery, but we are told by everyone, including the President of the United States, that the Arctic is melting;
SM gets his hands on some early Phil Jones data and suddenly the whole data set vanishes and Hadley is putting out that the original data is lost and only the “value-added” version remeains;
And now this….
And it goes on and on and on…. when do we finally quit attributing this nonsense to incompetence?
I’m sure Gavin will scrutinize for the truth as was done here.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2004/12/false-claims-by-mcintyre-and-mckitrick-regarding-the-mann-et-al-1998reconstruction/
False Claims by McIntyre and McKitrick regarding the Mann et al. (1998) reconstruction
December 2004
A number of spurious criticisms regarding the Mann et al (1998) proxy-based temperature reconstruction have been made by two individuals McIntyre and McKitrick ( McIntyre works in the mining industry, while McKitrick is an economist). MM claim that the main features of the Mann et al (1998–henceforth MBH98) reconstruction, including the “hockey stick” shape of the reconstruction, are artifacts of a) the centering convention used by MBH98 in their Principal Components Analysis (PCA) of the North American International Tree Ring Data Bank (’ITRDB’) data, b) the use of 4 infilled missing annual values (AD 1400-1403) in one tree-ring series (the ‘St. Anne’ Northern Treeline series), and c) the infilling of missing values in some proxy data between 1972 and 1980. Each of these claims are demonstrated to be false below.
I agree with Mark Wagner. This smells very much like [snip]
I would be surprised if this makes much of a dent in the news. You may see a efw stories, but it won’t get much play.
Now, it will be interesting to see how RealClimate responds. I can guess what the gist will be:
Paper not published
Graphs are done wrong
They are not qualified Climate Scientists
Paper not published….
Robert Phelan hits nail on head:
When does this cross the line form mere Manniac incompetence to Manniac cynical bad faith?
Robert E. Phelan (07:30:34) :
………………………..
“And it goes on and on and on…. when do we finally quit attributing this nonsense to incompetence?”
Right now!
Question: What caused the increase in global average temperatures of the late 20th century ?
Answer:’ Man made models caused the increase in average global temperatures in the late 20th century.
This appears to be the RC thread where they put all the tree rings on the table.
How bad does this look now?
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2004/12/how-do-we-know-that-recent-cosub2sub-increases-are-due-to-human-activities-updated/
“How do we know that recent CO2 increases are due to human activities?
— 22 December 2004
Another, quite independent way that we know that fossil fuel burning and land clearing specifically are responsible for the increase in CO2 in the last 150 years is through the measurement of carbon isotopes.
One of the methods used is to measure the 13C/12C in tree rings, and use this to infer those same ratios in atmospheric CO2. This works because during photosynthesis, trees take up carbon from the atmosphere and lay this carbon down as plant organic material in the form of rings, providing a snapshot of the atmospheric composition of that time.
Sequences of annual tree rings going back thousands of years have now been analyzed for their 13C/12C ratios. Because the age of each ring is precisely known** we can make a graph of the atmospheric 13C/12C ratio vs. time. What is found is at no time in the last 10,000 years are the 13C/12C ratios in the atmosphere as low as they are today. Furthermore, the 13C/12C ratios begin to decline dramatically just as the CO2 starts to increase — around 1850 AD. This is exactly what we expect if the increased CO2 is in fact due to fossil fuel burning.”
Foxgoose:
Yes – what is going on with CIF? I too, posted a comment this morning, only to find it had been “removed by a moderator” within the hour. My comment was mildly ironic, but otherwise completely harmless, I would have thought – it contained no offensive language or references to any other poster. It was, however, critical of the Met Office’s latest report, the subject of the Guardian’s article.
Up until now I’ve always been impressed with the light touch of CIF moderators. But as Maurizio Morabito has pointed out in his “Unbearable Nakedness Of CLIMATE CHANGE” blog (http://omniclimate.wordpress.com/), there seems to have been a change of policy recently at the Guardian, with CIF moderators becoming much more intolerant.
Pity, but I guess the poor dears must think they’re fighting a losing battle with us sceptics.
Time for an updated remake of the great global-warming swindle?
Because this evidence is not of scientific conclusions merely being wrong. But of the entire scientific process being fundamentally abused to create deliberately dishonest results.
This is where Mann et al cross the line from the merely mistaken, into the realms of the con-artist, the swindler and the wilfully deceitful.
Don B (06:10:16) :
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?
______________________________
When he was accepting the $5-600 million grant from BP at Lawrence Berkeley Labs, Chu’s comments regarding AGW were far different from what they are now. Strangely, although I can’t say I have Googled extensively, links to those press releases do not appear to be readily available.
@ur momisugly geoffchambers (03:36:18)
Geoff – my apologies. I’ve just read the “The Union of Soviet Climate Change Writers” article again, at “the Unbearable Nakedness Of CLIMATE CHANGE” blog, and I see you wrote it. Didn’t notice the first time I read it, I’m afraid.
Well I’m starting a lively exchange over at http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/sep/28/met-office-study-global-warming?commentpage=3 but I have to toddle off to bed now.
I recommend getting in there, it sounds like fun!
ralph (02:59:09) : You wrote:
“Again, what is the problem here? Trees covering this era abound the continents by the billion. What was so special about the ones used?”
This is just a guess but is not global warming supposed to show up first and foremost in the high latitudes? It would be easier and cheaper to study trees on university campuses – hardly one’s idea of exciting field work – but not many universities are in the “rapidly warming” Arctic.
Further, one can’t study and report climate change where there isn’t any – specifically where most people live. Thus, by going to where no one lives, “worse than expected” warming can be reported and you won’t have locals reporting to the contrary.
“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?”
Steven Chu isn’t interested in facts. He’s a “watermelon environmentalist”. Green on the outside, Red on the inside.
Dave Wendt (03:21:43) : tree foliage maintaining temp
I wonder if some foliage does this and some not so well? I know some plants generate warmth and grow through snow, others do not. Maybe that study you mention can be extended to explain when or what type of plant moderates its temperature versus those that do not.
Carbon isotopes? So we are to believe that man-made CO2 produces different isotopes of carbon (and CO2) than natural sources. Burning oil in various forms and natural gas is different than burning trees (as in forest fires). What of arson? If some nutcase starts a forest fire, is that different from a lightning strike?
And, given that man-made CO2 is about 3% of the total CO2 production, can that really make the C13/C12 ratio “decline dramatically “. Even if true, we didn’t start a dramatic consumption of fossil fuel until after WWII. Yet CO2 increase has been reasonably linear since 1850, assuming that data has not been “adjusted”.
Me finds all this a wee bit hard to believe.
Off the thread a bit, but came across a review of a British Medical Journal, Lancet, regarding use of population control to reduce global warming. The Catholic Online review “Population Control to Combat Climate Change?”
http://www.catholic.org/politics/story.php?id=34507
called the current climate change “a theory” and speculated if the billions poured into it was worth it.
Add to the list: Calling 212 scientists to account:
http://climaterealists.com/index.php?id=4091&linkbox=true
In a word…BAD.
You think we haven’t seen Gavin’s spin before? Or the rest of the Team’s spin when they’re caught with their data in a knot?
That 2004 post does nothing to defend the blatant cherry picking that’s been exposed by Steve McIntyre in use of the Yamal series.
Blogger at “Violating the Principles of Open Access” points out failure of open-access data rules at PLoS in a study published at PLoS: “Empirical Study of Data Sharing by Authors Publishing in PLoS Journals”.
Researchers tested researchers’ following of the requirements for data access. There are obvious failures to follow the rules, although I suspect the small sample size makes it hard to produce many statistics.
Steve McIntyre the coroner does aver,
That he thoroughly examined her.
And she’s not only merely dead,
she’s really most sincerely dead.