The Smoking Gun At Darwin Zero

by Willis Eschenbach

People keep saying “Yes, the Climategate scientists behaved badly. But that doesn’t mean the data is bad. That doesn’t mean the earth is not warming.”

Darwin Airport – by Dominic Perrin via Panoramio

Let me start with the second objection first. The earth has generally been warming since the Little Ice Age, around 1650. There is general agreement that the earth has warmed since then. See e.g. Akasofu . Climategate doesn’t affect that.

The second question, the integrity of the data, is different. People say “Yes, they destroyed emails, and hid from Freedom of information Acts, and messed with proxies, and fought to keep other scientists’ papers out of the journals … but that doesn’t affect the data, the data is still good.” Which sounds reasonable.

There are three main global temperature datasets. One is at the CRU, Climate Research Unit of the University of East Anglia, where we’ve been trying to get access to the raw numbers. One is at NOAA/GHCN, the Global Historical Climate Network. The final one is at NASA/GISS, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies. The three groups take raw data, and they “homogenize” it to remove things like when a station was moved to a warmer location and there’s a 2C jump in the temperature. The three global temperature records are usually called CRU, GISS, and GHCN. Both GISS and CRU, however, get almost all of their raw data from GHCN. All three produce very similar global historical temperature records from the raw data.

So I’m still on my multi-year quest to understand the climate data. You never know where this data chase will lead. This time, it has ended me up in Australia. I got to thinking about Professor Wibjorn Karlen’s statement about Australia that I quoted here:

Another example is Australia. NASA [GHCN] only presents 3 stations covering the period 1897-1992. What kind of data is the IPCC Australia diagram based on?

If any trend it is a slight cooling. However, if a shorter period (1949-2005) is used, the temperature has increased substantially. The Australians have many stations and have published more detailed maps of changes and trends.

The folks at CRU told Wibjorn that he was just plain wrong. Here’s what they said is right, the record that Wibjorn was talking about, Fig. 9.12 in the UN IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, showing Northern Australia:

Figure 1. Temperature trends and model results in Northern Australia. Black line is observations (From Fig. 9.12 from the UN IPCC Fourth Annual Report). Covers the area from 110E to 155E, and from 30S to 11S. Based on the CRU land temperature.) Data from the CRU.

One of the things that was revealed in the released CRU emails is that the CRU basically uses the Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN) dataset for its raw data. So I looked at the GHCN dataset. There, I find three stations in North Australia as Wibjorn had said, and nine stations in all of Australia, that cover the period 1900-2000. Here is the average of the GHCN unadjusted data for those three Northern stations, from AIS:

Figure 2. GHCN Raw Data, All 100-yr stations in IPCC area above.

So once again Wibjorn is correct, this looks nothing like the corresponding IPCC temperature record for Australia. But it’s too soon to tell. Professor Karlen is only showing 3 stations. Three is not a lot of stations, but that’s all of the century-long Australian records we have in the IPCC specified region. OK, we’ve seen the longest stations record, so lets throw more records into the mix. Here’s every station in the UN IPCC specified region which contains temperature records that extend up to the year 2000 no matter when they started, which is 30 stations.

Figure 3. GHCN Raw Data, All stations extending to 2000 in IPCC area above.

Still no similarity with IPCC. So I looked at every station in the area. That’s 222 stations. Here’s that result:

Figure 4. GHCN Raw Data, All stations extending to 2000 in IPCC area above.

So you can see why Wibjorn was concerned. This looks nothing like the UN IPCC data, which came from the CRU, which was based on the GHCN data. Why the difference?

The answer is, these graphs all use the raw GHCN data. But the IPCC uses the “adjusted” data. GHCN adjusts the data to remove what it calls “inhomogeneities”. So on a whim I thought I’d take a look at the first station on the list, Darwin Airport, so I could see what an inhomogeneity might look like when it was at home. And I could find out how large the GHCN adjustment for Darwin inhomogeneities was.

First, what is an “inhomogeneity”? I can do no better than quote from GHCN:

Most long-term climate stations have undergone changes that make a time series of their observations inhomogeneous. There are many causes for the discontinuities, including changes in instruments, shelters, the environment around the shelter, the location of the station, the time of observation, and the method used to calculate mean temperature. Often several of these occur at the same time, as is often the case with the introduction of automatic weather stations that is occurring in many parts of the world. Before one can reliably use such climate data for analysis of longterm climate change, adjustments are needed to compensate for the nonclimatic discontinuities.

That makes sense. The raw data will have jumps from station moves and the like. We don’t want to think it’s warming just because the thermometer was moved to a warmer location. Unpleasant as it may seem, we have to adjust for those as best we can.

I always like to start with the rawest data, so I can understand the adjustments. At Darwin there are five separate individual station records that are combined to make up the final Darwin record. These are the individual records of stations in the area, which are numbered from zero to four:

Figure 5. Five individual temperature records for Darwin, plus station count (green line). This raw data is downloaded from GISS, but GISS use the GHCN raw data as the starting point for their analysis.

Darwin does have a few advantages over other stations with multiple records. There is a continuous record from 1941 to the present (Station 1). There is also a continuous record covering a century. finally, the stations are in very close agreement over the entire period of the record. In fact, where there are multiple stations in operation they are so close that you can’t see the records behind Station Zero.

This is an ideal station, because it also illustrates many of the problems with the raw temperature station data.

  • There is no one record that covers the whole period.
  • The shortest record is only nine years long.
  • There are gaps of a month and more in almost all of the records.
  • It looks like there are problems with the data at around 1941.
  • Most of the datasets are missing months.
  • For most of the period there are few nearby stations.
  • There is no one year covered by all five records.
  • The temperature dropped over a six year period, from a high in 1936 to a low in 1941. The station did move in 1941 … but what happened in the previous six years?

In resolving station records, it’s a judgment call. First off, you have to decide if what you are looking at needs any changes at all. In Darwin’s case, it’s a close call. The record seems to be screwed up around 1941, but not in the year of the move.

Also, although the 1941 temperature shift seems large, I see a similar sized shift from 1992 to 1999. Looking at the whole picture, I think I’d vote to leave it as it is, that’s always the best option when you don’t have other evidence. First do no harm.

However, there’s a case to be made for adjusting it, particularly given the 1941 station move. If I decided to adjust Darwin, I’d do it like this:

Figure 6 A possible adjustment for Darwin. Black line shows the total amount of the adjustment, on the right scale, and shows the timing of the change.

I shifted the pre-1941 data down by about 0.6C. We end up with little change end to end in my “adjusted” data (shown in red), it’s neither warming nor cooling. However, it reduces the apparent cooling in the raw data. Post-1941, where the other records overlap, they are very close, so I wouldn’t adjust them in any way. Why should we adjust those, they all show exactly the same thing.

OK, so that’s how I’d homogenize the data if I had to, but I vote against adjusting it at all. It only changes one station record (Darwin Zero), and the rest are left untouched.

Then I went to look at what happens when the GHCN removes the “in-homogeneities” to “adjust” the data. Of the five raw datasets, the GHCN discards two, likely because they are short and duplicate existing longer records. The three remaining records are first “homogenized” and then averaged to give the “GHCN Adjusted” temperature record for Darwin.

To my great surprise, here’s what I found. To explain the full effect, I am showing this with both datasets starting at the same point (rather than ending at the same point as they are often shown).

Figure 7. GHCN homogeneity adjustments to Darwin Airport combined record

YIKES! Before getting homogenized, temperatures in Darwin were falling at 0.7 Celcius per century … but after the homogenization, they were warming at 1.2 Celcius per century. And the adjustment that they made was over two degrees per century … when those guys “adjust”, they don’t mess around. And the adjustment is an odd shape, with the adjustment first going stepwise, then climbing roughly to stop at 2.4C.

Of course, that led me to look at exactly how the GHCN “adjusts” the temperature data. Here’s what they say

GHCN temperature data include two different datasets: the original data and a homogeneity- adjusted dataset. All homogeneity testing was done on annual time series. The homogeneity- adjustment technique used two steps.

The first step was creating a homogeneous reference series for each station (Peterson and Easterling 1994). Building a completely homogeneous reference series using data with unknown inhomogeneities may be impossible, but we used several techniques to minimize any potential inhomogeneities in the reference series.

In creating each year’s first difference reference series, we used the five most highly correlated neighboring stations that had enough data to accurately model the candidate station.

The final technique we used to minimize inhomogeneities in the reference series used the mean of the central three values (of the five neighboring station values) to create the first difference reference series.

Fair enough, that all sounds good. They pick five neighboring stations, and average them. Then they compare the average to the station in question. If it looks wonky compared to the average of the reference five, they check any historical records for changes, and if necessary, they homogenize the poor data mercilessly. I have some problems with what they do to homogenize it, but that’s how they identify the inhomogeneous stations.

OK … but given the scarcity of stations in Australia, I wondered how they would find five “neighboring stations” in 1941 …

So I looked it up. The nearest station that covers the year 1941 is 500 km away from Darwin. Not only is it 500 km away, it is the only station within 750 km of Darwin that covers the 1941 time period. (It’s also a pub, Daly Waters Pub to be exact, but hey, it’s Australia, good on ya.) So there simply aren’t five stations to make a “reference series” out of to check the 1936-1941 drop at Darwin.

Intrigued by the curious shape of the average of the homogenized Darwin records, I then went to see how they had homogenized each of the individual station records. What made up that strange average shown in Fig. 7? I started at zero with the earliest record. Here is Station Zero at Darwin, showing the raw and the homogenized versions.

Figure 8 Darwin Zero Homogeneity Adjustments. Black line shows amount and timing of adjustments.

Yikes again, double yikes! What on earth justifies that adjustment? How can they do that? We have five different records covering Darwin from 1941 on. They all agree almost exactly. Why adjust them at all? They’ve just added a huge artificial totally imaginary trend to the last half of the raw data! Now it looks like the IPCC diagram in Figure 1, all right … but a six degree per century trend? And in the shape of a regular stepped pyramid climbing to heaven? What’s up with that?

Those, dear friends, are the clumsy fingerprints of someone messing with the data Egyptian style … they are indisputable evidence that the “homogenized” data has been changed to fit someone’s preconceptions about whether the earth is warming.

One thing is clear from this. People who say that “Climategate was only about scientists behaving badly, but the data is OK” are wrong. At least one part of the data is bad, too. The Smoking Gun for that statement is at Darwin Zero.

So once again, I’m left with an unsolved mystery. How and why did the GHCN “adjust” Darwin’s historical temperature to show radical warming? Why did they adjust it stepwise? Do Phil Jones and the CRU folks use the “adjusted” or the raw GHCN dataset? My guess is the adjusted one since it shows warming, but of course we still don’t know … because despite all of this, the CRU still hasn’t released the list of data that they actually use, just the station list.

Another odd fact, the GHCN adjusted Station 1 to match Darwin Zero’s strange adjustment, but they left Station 2 (which covers much of the same period, and as per Fig. 5 is in excellent agreement with Station Zero and Station 1) totally untouched. They only homogenized two of the three. Then they averaged them.

That way, you get an average that looks kinda real, I guess, it “hides the decline”.

Oh, and for what it’s worth, care to know the way that GISS deals with this problem? Well, they only use the Darwin data after 1963, a fine way of neatly avoiding the question … and also a fine way to throw away all of the inconveniently colder data prior to 1941. It’s likely a better choice than the GHCN monstrosity, but it’s a hard one to justify.

Now, I want to be clear here. The blatantly bogus GHCN adjustment for this one station does NOT mean that the earth is not warming. It also does NOT mean that the three records (CRU, GISS, and GHCN) are generally wrong either. This may be an isolated incident, we don’t know. But every time the data gets revised and homogenized, the trends keep increasing. Now GISS does their own adjustments. However, as they keep telling us, they get the same answer as GHCN gets … which makes their numbers suspicious as well.

And CRU? Who knows what they use? We’re still waiting on that one, no data yet …

What this does show is that there is at least one temperature station where the trend has been artificially increased to give a false warming where the raw data shows cooling. In addition, the average raw data for Northern Australia is quite different from the adjusted, so there must be a number of … mmm … let me say “interesting” adjustments in Northern Australia other than just Darwin.

And with the Latin saying “Falsus in unum, falsus in omis” (false in one, false in all) as our guide, until all of the station “adjustments” are examined, adjustments of CRU, GHCN, and GISS alike, we can’t trust anyone using homogenized numbers.

Regards to all, keep fighting the good fight,

w.

FURTHER READING:

My previous post on this subject.

The late and much missed John Daly, irrepressible as always.

More on Darwin history, it wasn’t Stevenson Screens.

NOTE: Figures 7 and 8 updated to fix a typo in the titles. 8:30PM PST 12/8 – Anthony

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December 12, 2009 3:38 am

Ripper (21:00:43) :
Thanks, that’s really helpful. Just noting that these are for Darwin, not Mildura. I’ll note too that, while it looks like a lot, generally each adjustment is entered twice, once for min, once for max. There are thus five ongoing adjustment years. I’ve added the code expansion to these adjustments to the min:
14015 1021 1991 0 -0.3 -0.3 dm detect move
14015 1021 1987 0 -0.3 -0.6 dm* detect move documentation unclear
14015 1021 1964 0 -0.6 -1.2 orm* objective test time change move documentation unclear
14015 1021 1942 0 -1.0 -2.2 oda objective test detect composite move
14015 1021 1894 0 +0.3 -1.9 fds median detect stevenson screen supplied
Here are the max adjustments, eliminating isolated years. It’s odd that in three cases the years are different from the min changes, and the reasons are different. Note that the nett change back to 1942 was zero.
14015 1001 1982 0 -0.5 -0.5 or
14015 1001 1967 0 +0.5 +0.0 or
14015 1001 1942 0 -0.6 -0.6 da
14015 1001 1907 0 -0.3 -0.9 rd
14015 1001 1894 0 -1.0 -1.9 rds
So responding to tallbloke (08:28:56) : , yes, Blair was right – the post 1942 adjustments are small.
It would be nice if these changes lined up well with Willis’ Fig 8, but they don’t.

December 12, 2009 3:53 am

gg (00:09:11) :
Congratulations. You seem to have done the calculation here that should have been done long ago. Not just one station, but all the stations plotted as a distribution of trend change induced by the adjustment. And if I’m reading it right, it’s symmetric. Adjustments are just as likely to be up as down, if you look at the whole set.

Brian D Finch
December 12, 2009 3:54 am

Derek D (18:57:49)
Emperor Joseph: ‘Too many notes, Herr Mozart.’
Mozart: ‘Yes, your Majesty. Which ones would you like me to leave out?’

carrot eater
December 12, 2009 3:59 am

wobble (22:20:46) :
“I’ve already acknowledged many times that Willis shouldn’t have included accusation in his post.”
Yes, you have, and I applaud you for it.
“My last point was that the Economist blogger would have written his post even without the accusations ”
I’m wrong if I disagree. That’s great. It’s a combination of the email release and the title ‘smoking gun’/the accusations. The email thing has put a lot more attention on sites like WUWT; it’s the flavor of the moment. Combine that with a promise of a smoking gun, and this post got attention in much wider circles than it normally would have. With no climategate and no claim of smoking gun, the Economist doesn’t bother with this. I can’t think of the last time anybody at the Economist took the time to specifically look at a WUWT post like this; it just doesn’t happen.

December 12, 2009 4:42 am

gg,
A good effort andmuch appreciated, however I don’t know that it goes far enough to draw the conclusion you did. Would you not need to look at the time distribution of the adjustments over say ten year intervals to look for bias where in time the adjustments were made. For example if you had a data set of just one station and made an adjustment in the first year of -10 C and and adjustment in the last year of +10 C (forget the scale of the adj. – just to illustrate), then this would have a significant impact as it would bias early years to cold and later years to hot and produce a warming trend (or at least reduce an existing cooling trend). Overall of course there would be no bias as overall the adjustments cancel out. I would be interested in seeing your code and method tweeked a little to look for bias in early years in say ten year periods v. latter years.

S Patterson
December 12, 2009 5:18 am

It always amazes me how the “skeptics” like Eschenbach will allow for the possibility of warming or the possibility that data sets or their hockey stick homogenization might be correct. Don’t they realize that real climate “scientists” do not tolerate dissent? Clearly Mr. Eschenbach has not been formally trained in the new scientific method. ; )

bill
December 12, 2009 5:36 am

Willis apologies if you have urgent problems but comments would be appreciated on the 2 step functions in the data I noted here.
bill (17:38:01) :11/12
bill (17:11:19)
These are only steps that produce a visible discontinuity in the data. any slow changes or small steps would not have been seen have not been included (obviously!).
Also comments on
http://www.gilestro.tk/2009/lots-of-smoke-hardly-any-gun-do-climatologists-falsify-data/ would seem to be necessary otherwise your whole premise of Fraud is debunked.
REPLY: Willis is in the south Pacific right now with his job, his Internet connections are spotty, repeating your demands for personal attention to your issues won’t help – Anthony

B. Williams
December 12, 2009 6:12 am

whoever turns out to be right, the whole global warming debate is just a distraction from the fact that we’re going to run out of fossil fuel anyway, so why not find something better for that reason alone, and let the globe do what it will?

gg
December 12, 2009 6:50 am

@TheSkyIsFalling
I don’t think there is no need to do what you propose. By dividing the dataset in decades, you may be able to find whether the adjustment was biased by time but still it would not have an effect on the final result because as long as the distribution is normal and peaking zero there is no way you can change the overall output.
In fact, If I where to do what you suggest the only informative thing I would expect to see that most of the 0 adjustments are concentrated in the most recent time, after we gradually switched to digital readings. I suppose in former time readings were much more prone to errors and that must be when most adjustments needed to be made.

carrot eater
December 12, 2009 7:16 am

TheSkyIsFalling (04:42:27) : and gg:
If I understand what gg did, there’s no need to do what you suggest. He didn’t give a distribution of adjustments, but a distribution of trend changes. So if there were an adjustment that lowered the temp in early years and an adjustment that raised the temp in later years, that would *not* cancel out in his analysis – it would show up as having an increased trend after adjustment, just as you want it.
This analysis on the CRU adjustments seems to be consistent with the analysis of GHCN adjustments I cited above – that if you look at a big enough set of stations, the overall change due to adjustments is minor. If you look at individual stations, you’ll be able to find a few with huge adjustments. But this was already known, so it continues to appear that Willis has not found anything particularly noteworthy here.
gg: I’ll again note the Peterson article I cited which stated that adjustments in a given area and time won’t necessarily be random. If everybody in a given country switches to a Stevenson screen in a given period, or if everybody changes from old thermometers to thermocouples, then you’ll have non-random adjustments.

Bruce Cobb
December 12, 2009 7:45 am

B. Williams (06:12:16) :
whoever turns out to be right, the whole global warming debate is just a distraction from the fact that we’re going to run out of fossil fuel anyway, so why not find something better for that reason alone, and let the globe do what it will?
That is what’s called a red herring, a favorite ploy of Alarmists. But, yes, if you want, it is the Alarmists – you know, the ones making all the claims about how we’re destroying the planet with our evil C02, who are distracting mankind from the real problems or challenges. Finding new, better (and cost effective) ways of providing energy is just one of those challenges. Forcing man to switch to other, far more expensive, and less reliable forms of energy at this point, based on nothing but baseless fears is just plain stupid, and will only set mankind back. And that, in a nutshell is what the debate is all about.

December 12, 2009 8:36 am

JUNK SCIENCE’s self-chosen disability
Deterministic systems, ideological symbols of abdication
by man from his natural role as earth’s Choicemaker,
inevitably degenerate into collectivism; the negation of
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of diversity, blurring alternatives, and limiting the
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a passive and circular regression.
Tampering with man’s selective nature endangers his
survival for it would render him impotent and obsolete
by denying the tools of variety, individuality,
perception, criteria, selectivity, and progress.
Coercive attempts produce revulsion, for such acts
are contrary to an indeterminate nature and nature’s
indeterminate off-spring, man the Choicemaker.
Until the oppressors discover that wisdom only just
begins with a respectful acknowledgment of The Creator,
The Creation, and The Choicemaker, they will be ever
learning but never coming to a knowledge of the truth.
The rejection of Creator-initiated standards relegates
the mind of man to its own primitive, empirical, and
delimited devices. It is thus that the human intellect
cannot ascend and function at any level higher than the
criteria by which it perceives and measures values.
Additionally, such rejection of transcendent criteria
self-denies man the vision and foresight essential to
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criteria. Evidenced by those who do not perceive
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winds of the carnal-ego; i.e., moods, feelings, desires,
appetites, etc., the mind becomes subordinate: a mere
device for excuse-making and rationalizing self-justifica-
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The carnal-ego rejects criteria and self-discipline for such
instruments are tools of the mind and the attitude. The
appetites of the flesh have no need of standards for at the
point of contention standards are perceived as alien, re-
strictive, and inhibiting. Yet, the very survival of our
physical nature itself depends upon a maintained sover-
eignty of the mind and of the spirit.
It remained, therefore, to the initiative of a personal
and living Creator to traverse the human horizon and
fill the vast void of human ignorance with an intelli-
gent and definitive faith. Man is thus afforded the
prime tool of the intellect – a Transcendent Standard
by which he may measure values in experience, anticipate
results, and make enlightened and visionary choices.
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As long as some choose to abdicate their personal reality
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“No one is smarter than their criteria.”
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semper fidelis
– from “2010 AD: The Season of Generation-Choicemaker”
DEDICATION
Sir Isaac Newton
The greatest scientist in human history a Bible-Believing Christian, an
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Daniel 9:25-26 Habakkuk 2:2-3 selah
“What is man…?” Earth’s Choicemaker Psalm 25:12

wobble
December 12, 2009 9:29 am

gg (00:09:11) :
“”I have calculated the bias of adjustment for the *entire* CRU dataset. You find the result here. In short: there is no bias and no smoking gun.””
That’s great work, but many of us have now realized that we need to look for a pivoting of the biases – not just the overall bias.
For example. It’s possible to adjust pre-1960 data down and post-1960 data up by the same amount. Doing so shows a warming trend yet yields a zero bias.

wobble
December 12, 2009 9:31 am

carrot eater (03:59:51) :
OK, good point. The smoking gun promise was also counter-productive.

wobble
December 12, 2009 9:34 am

B. Williams (06:12:16) :
“”we’re going to run out of fossil fuel anyway, so why not find something better for that reason alone””
Concur that we need to start shifting our sources of energy. However, let’s not be constrained by assuming that CO2 is a pollutant.

JohnV
December 12, 2009 12:25 pm

wobble:
That’s a good point about the “pivoting of the biases”. You should read Giorgio’s study — he looked at the impact of the biases on the *trend*. To use your words, he looked at the “pivoting of the biases”.

December 12, 2009 12:43 pm

dd/carrot eater,
Thanks that seems clear now to me and I agree with the conclusion.

MikeF
December 12, 2009 12:45 pm

gg:
I have calculated the bias of adjustment for the *entire* CRU dataset. You find the result here. In short: there is no bias and no smoking gun.
Nick Stokes (03:53:25) :
gg (00:09:11) :
Congratulations. You seem to have done the calculation here that should have been done long ago. Not just one station, but all the stations plotted as a distribution of trend change induced by the adjustment. And if I’m reading it right, it’s symmetric. Adjustments are just as likely to be up as down, if you look at the whole set.

I am an engineer. In my line of work, if you have a data set that behaves strangely you need to explain very carefully why and prove that this behavior is correct.
This is what I see as a problem that Willis had found in your dataset:

Here is a good quality temperature data that shows no warming trend from Darwin, Australia. In fact, there are lots of good stations in Australia that show no warming trend at all.
Despite that, after processing those stations show significant warming trend.

Here is what I see as your prove that this is not a problem:

There is nothing wrong with that because warming adjustments to this data are counterbalanced by symmetrical adjustments in opposite direction elsewhere.

This is not an explanation at all. You are essentially telling us that there is nothing wrong with the algorithm that introduces bias to known good data because it also introduces opposite bias to (presumably ) bad data. Trust us. It all comes out good at the end
What you just did is showed that even if your processing assumes that 2=3 it’s OK because somewhere else it assumes that 3=2
You might have get away with this sort of few months ago. Not anymore though. What I personally want to see is processing algorithm that does NOT change good data at all. This will be my first “sanity check” of your output. If it passes, then we can look deeper into the issues.
I hope that enough people see it the same way.

Todd
December 12, 2009 3:07 pm

The homogenization method is incorrectly and incompletely explained by the author. I am still waiting for someone to come forward with accurate descriptions of all the steps. This is a science blog? ***sigh***
Blind lead the blind
There’s a teacher in a school room
Somewhere on the edge of town
Telling innocent little children what we used to be
They look and listen without a question
They see the pictures passed around
Making facts out of a theory and they all believe
As the lost lead the way
Another heart is led astray
These are the days when the blind lead the blind
And there’s one narrow way out of here
So pray that the light of the world will keep your eyes clear
‘Cause it’s a dangerous place here where the blind lead the blind

Geoff Sherrington
December 12, 2009 3:40 pm

For those who might be interested, I’m about half way through a compilation of all available data sources on Darwin temperatures. It is impartial, non-judgemental and qualified as needed. If you would like to see how the figures speak for themselves, please feel free to email me. I am deeply appreciative of the work of colleagues before me like Willis Eschenbach, Warwick Hughes, David Stockwell, Steve McIntyre, to name a few, and to the hard yards put in by the Bureau of Meteorology in Australia. It just happens that I have visited Darwin many, many times since 1960 and have some local knowledge. If you have any “early” data from Darwin, collected (say) pre 1993, I’d be delighted to receive a file. sherro1 at optusnet dot com dot au.

Manny
December 12, 2009 4:14 pm

Willis Eschenbach caught lying about temperature trends
http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2009/12/willis_eschenbach_caught_lying.php
I wonder if Mr. Eschenbach would mind responding to this charge. It appears to my layman’s eye that the alleged deception perpetrated by Eschenbach was that he did not adjust the raw data at the Darwin Airport station – which seems like a spurious claim of course.
REPLY: see the main page of WUWT Top and Center – Anthony

Graham
December 12, 2009 4:40 pm

From my experience in South Australia, the Darwin case above is not unique.
Our local bureau has been spinning to us ever increasing numbers of “hottest day”, “hottest month” etc. for years now, when I and others who have experienced past heat waves know these proclamations to be totally untrue.
I have made enquiries to their office seeking the original raw data, particularly from the old location, so that I could do my own number-crunching, but have been repeatedly refused.

Dale Emde, Pacifica,Calif
December 12, 2009 7:50 pm

It’s interesting that with all this brainpower submitted by readers, there is never a reference as to why Gore and his backers are insisting on this lie. My take which most of you must know is that the “global elite”, this will be the billionaires that infest the world who are intent on increasing their control and power, are really pushing now to cement their control by bringing the US to its knees as quickly as possible, destroy the dollar, destroy the middle class, destroy our borders and have one big happy family which will be under the control of the UN and all of its inventions. 1984 IS fast approaching quickly!

RoHa
December 12, 2009 8:53 pm

Good letter to the Eco. They’ll probably cut it to pieces before they publish it.
Now all this stuff needs to be put together into a new post for the site, rather than allowed to fester in the comments.

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