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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sibeen
December 14, 2009 12:51 am

Perhaps relevant.
“Subject: Darwin temperature record
Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2000 12:51:29 +0930
From: “legalnet”
To: “John Daly”
Dear John,
Further to my emails of earlier today, I have now heard back from Darwin Bureau of Meteorology. The facts are as follows.
As previously advised, the main temperature station moved to the radar station at the newly built Darwin airport in January 1941. The temperature station had previously been at the Darwin Post Office in the middle of the CBD, on the cliff above the port. Thus, there is a likely factor of removal of a slight urban heat island effect from 1941 onwards. However, the main factor appears to be a change in screening. The new station located at Darwin airport from January 1941 used a standard Stevenson screen. However, the previous station at Darwin PO did not have a Stevenson screen. Instead, the instrument was mounted on a horizontal enclosure without a back or sides. The postmaster had to move it during the day so that the direct tropical sun didn’t strike it! Obviously, if he forgot or was too busy, the temperature readings were a hell of a lot hotter than it really was! I am sure that this factor accounts for almost the whole of the observed sudden cooling in 1939-41.
The record after 1941 is accurate, but the record before then has a significant warming bias. The Bureau’s senior meterologist Ian Butterworth has written an internally published paper on all the factors affecting the historical Darwin temperature record, and they are going to fax it to me. I could send a copy to you if you are interested.
Regards Ken Parish

bradley13
December 14, 2009 1:22 am

The main defense of the Darwin data seems to be the sensor replacement in 1941. Fine, let’s make this a non-issue: look only at the post-1941 data. The adjustments are no less egregious.
You know what bugs me the most about this? It’s the FOI requests.
In a different field I’ve written computer models, run statistical analyses on the results, and published peer-reviewed papers on the results. My raw data and code were online from day one, and even years later I sent out code to the occasional inquiry.
Sure, the researchers should not have fought the FOI requests. More to the point: FOI requests should never have been necessary. Any reputable journal in any field of endeavor should require complete data and source code to be placed online. If you will not enable others to verify your work, you cannot claim to be doing science.

Nick Stokes
December 14, 2009 1:59 am

Geoff Sherrington (23:33:14) :
You tell me what you base this vague statement on and I’ll post some graphs that differ from your comment.

Not vague, Geoff, or it needn’t be. As I’ve been saying, I’ve reproduced GG’s calc, which gives the distribution of trends calculated for each station. There are 6736 of them, and Darwin’s trend diff of 0.23 C/decade came in at number 576. A bit over 1 sd at the high end.

Nick Stokes
December 14, 2009 2:11 am

Geoff Sherrington (23:33:14) :
“Darwin is a real outlier among long data series.”

Geoff, I didn’t notice that you’d given the quote specifying long data series. I gave the figures for all series, where a lot of short series pack the tails. For series with over 40 years data, of which there are 4387, Darwin came in at #243, nearly at the 95% level.

djekume
December 14, 2009 6:56 am

I am attempting to reconstruct the graph you used showing a mounting slope of step-function adjustments, but I can’t do it. Can you explain where you are getting your data? If you use the appinsys website to plot GHCN Darwin 0 raw data against GHCN Darwin 0 adjusted data, you find that the temperature in 1942 was about the same as the temperature in 2008, on both the adjusted and unadjusted data.
http://www.appinsys.com/GlobalWarming/climgraph.aspx?pltparms=GHCNT100XJanDecI188020080900111AR50194120000x
Consequently, the correction in 1942 was the same as in 2008. The correction rises in the 60s-80s but then drops back again. On your chart, however, you show a much higher adjusted temperature in 2008 than in 1942 and the correction rising steadily until 2008.
What Darwin 0 data set are you using? Where can I find it?

carrot eater
December 14, 2009 8:45 am

Geoff Sherrington (23:33:14) :
Even if you don’t want to believe all the literature, you can see it for yourself, as I’ve noted elsewhere.
Go to the BoM’s ‘high quality’ page, and see the data for Darwin. What you see there is the current result of the ABoM homogenisation procedure, as described by Torok and Della-Marta, etc.
That data is clearly not the same as the raw data in the GHCN.
So you can see for yourself that the homogenisation done by the ABoM does not make it to the raw records used by GHCN.
The GHCN then goes on to do its own homogenisation using fairly similar procedures, except that they don’t have the benefit of having the historical metadata.

carrot eater
December 14, 2009 9:19 am

One thing getting lost in the mix is whether anybody even uses the GHCN homogenisation for the types of plots Willis was discussing. GISS Temp does not, and it looks like CRU doesn’t, either. So on top of everything, we’re discussing a homogenisation that doesn’t even go into the global temp anomaly data series that we usually see. Does it?
@djekume (06:56:08) :
Eschenbach moved the anomalies up and down so that they match at the beginning of the record, as opposed to the end. I don’t know if that viewer lets you do such a thing, so you might want to just download the data.

KevinUK
December 14, 2009 12:06 pm

Moderators
Whats this blatant piece of advertising for someone’s book doing on this thread
“Roger Knights (13:00:13)”
“Here’s a three-part solution I endorse, spelled out in a book called “Prescription for the Planet: The Painless Remedy for Our Energy & Environmental Crises”
Roger this is not the place for trying to promote someone’s book. Not one word of what you have posted bares any relevance to this popular thread. Hoping to get a higher Google ranking are we off the back of this thread? Do us all a favour and go and astroturf somewhere else.
For those of us who have actually worked in the UK nuclear industry including periods at Dounreay on the ‘slow breeder reactor’ (a Tom Marsham phrase), I can only say that Blees needs to come back and live on this planet where we’ve nevr built nor are ever likely to design and build a fast reactor with a positive breeding coefficient and ceratinly not 3500 of them by 2050.
Oh and by the way does this marvellous design of IFR ‘burn’ all the low level waste and intermediate level waste that arises from the reprocessing of its spent nucear fuel and its ‘breeder blanket’? If we want to get rid of weopons grade plutonium, its much easier to just recycle it into the thermal reactors as ‘mixed oxide’ fuel. And the solution to non-proliferation is also easy too. Just don’t bloody reprocess the spent fuel. End of!!
Now back to talking about the Darwin adjustments.
KevinUK

AMac
December 14, 2009 12:57 pm

Far upthread, Nick Stokes made an important contribution that has been largely bypassed.
Willis Eschenbach, could you address the remarks on Darwin temperature adjustments made by Aussie climate person “Blair”?
Nick Stokes’ comment is on 11 Dec 2009 at (05:11:33).
He quotes “Blair,” who originally made his remarks on Darwin as Comment #64 (11 Dec 2009 at 4:15pm) at Brian’s Lavartus Prodeo post How low can you go? (A Nov. 24th 2009 comment of general relevance by “Blair” on temperature data adjustment in Australia is here.)
The Dec. 11th comment by “Blair” begins,

Roger posted a link to my post from a couple of weeks ago so I won’t repeat the information there. As it happens, we’re currently reworking the Australian historical temperature data set, using the more complex adjustment scheme outlined in that post rather than the single annual adjustment used at present, and also incorporating a fair bit of pre-1960 data that was effectively unavailable for use last time round because it was only available on paper and hadn’t been entered into the computer database. Hopefully that will be done earlyish next year.
In the specific case of Darwin, while we haven’t done the updated analysis yet, I am expecting to find that the required adjustment between the PO and the airport is greater in the dry season than the wet season, and greater on cool nights than on warm ones. The reason for this is fairly simple – in the dry season Darwin is in more or less permanent southeasterlies, and because the old PO was on the end of a peninsula southeasterlies pass over water (which on dry-season nights is warmer than land) before reaching the site. This is fairly obvious from even a cursory glance at the data – the record low at the airport is 10.4, at the PO 13.4.
Darwin is quite a difficult record to work with…
[Continues]

December 14, 2009 1:28 pm

“…As it happens, we’re currently reworking the Australian historical temperature data set, using the more complex adjustment scheme outlined in that post rather than the single annual adjustment used at present, and also incorporating a fair bit of pre-1960 data that was effectively unavailable for use last time round because it was only available on paper and hadn’t been entered into the computer database. Hopefully that will be done earlyish next year.”
The game’s afoot, Watson.

carrot eater
December 14, 2009 2:25 pm

AMac (12:57:01) :
That speaks to the historical metadata and the homogenisation done by the ABoM. Those aren’t used by the GHCN discussed in this topic, but they can be compared to the GHCN results.
Of course, if the ABoM finds more raw data, or enters more hand-written data into the computers, then the GHCN can use that. Another comment by Blair (I assume that is Blair Trewin) said they found some old data from another site in Darwin, so maybe that will help with the weirdness around 1941.

Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2009 3:00 pm

Re Nick Stokes 05:11:33 on 11 Dec
Nick,
You quote a preson working with Australian adjustments at Darwin:
” in the dry season Darwin is in more or less permanent southeasterlies, and because the old PO was on the end of a peninsula southeasterlies pass over water (which on dry-season nights is warmer than land) before reaching the site. This is fairly obvious from even a cursory glance at the data – the record low at the airport is 10.4, at the PO 13.4″
Nick, what you forget to mention is that although southeasterly winds do indeed pass over water before reaching the old Darwin P O site, they pass over water for about 8 km (5 miles).
Before that, they have passed over some 3,000 km of dry hot country (geometrically speaking).
Testing: Where is your comment wrong?
Hint: Look at a wind rose, if you know what it is.
Yours was not a quality post.

Ripper
December 14, 2009 3:07 pm

“Steve Short (14:04:50) :
This document published by CSIRO in 2008 on Processed Climate Data for Timber Service Life Prediction Modelling has many graphs of interest”
Crikey! Lots of graphs of interest!
They appear to match the decline in Briffa’s tree ring.

December 14, 2009 3:59 pm

“…and also incorporating a fair bit of pre-1960 data that was effectively unavailable for use last time round because it was only available on paper and hadn’t been entered into the computer database. Hopefully that will be done earlyish next year.”
This also speaks (strongly) to the issue of whether data was dropped or not. I am particularly interested in data which is:
(a) known to exist from independent historical and/or academic sources source and/or acknowledgment by BOM itself in some way e.g. past summary reports; and
(b) potentially has application for regressions and algorithmically based corrections of sites such as Darwin and Brisbane (airports),
and hence can be used in due diligence examination of the quality of modern trends revealed post-adjustment by BOM (and hence by GHCN, CRU etc).
Soooo interesting that Blair (Trewin?) is clearly stating that, here in 2009, BOM is still in possession of ‘a fair bit’ of pre-1961 records which have somehow never been entered into their electronic records over (errrr) the last 48 years. If memory serves me correctly I first started putting data onto punch cards at uni in about 1970 during my masters.
So now we know from the tough nuts over at the Lavartus Prodeo blog that ‘data never entered’ (still!) could simply have been misinterpreted by sceptics as ‘dropped data’. How very silly of us (yet again).
In respect of Darwin, maybe BOM might post the reputedly mythical Oenpelli 1920 – 1963 record for a site just 230 km from Darwin. Hope springs eternal (I suppose)….

Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2009 4:27 pm

Here is some detail attributed to Torok and Nicholls of the Australia Bureau of Meteorology, for Darwin (inclusing both the old PO site and the post-1940 airport site), dated mid 1990s.
14015 1021 1991 0 -0.3 -0.3 dm
14015 1021 1987 0 -0.3 -0.6 dm*
14015 1021 1964 0 -0.6 -1.2 orm*
14015 1021 1942 0 -1 -2.2 oda
14015 1021 1894 0 0.3 -1.9 fds
14015 1001 1982 0 -0.5 -0.5 or
14015 1001 1967 0 0.5 0 or
14015 1001 1942 0 -0.6 -0.6 da
14015 1001 1941 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1940 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1939 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1938 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1937 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1907 0 -0.3 -0.9 rd
14015 1001 1894 0 -1 -1.9 rds
014015 is the Australian station number.
1002 mean minimum temperature, 1001 means maximum.
The next column is the year of a change.
Next column, a 1 is for a change in a single year. A 0 is for all previous years.
The first column with temperature changes in deg C is the magnitude of an adjustment, though I am uncertain about the sense of the sign.
The next column is the cumulative effect of the changes, presumably preceding the corresponding year, but uncertainly extending back (to the start of the data or to the previous change?)
Then lastly there is a code for the reason for the adjustment. The common “rp” means “poor site, site cleared”. Now if you are familiar with Darwin, you will know that unchecked grass can grow taller than a Stevenson screen, so what effect that has on the temperature is rather hard to envisage – if it was grass. There was also an episode reported above of a pile of adjacent dirt being levelled.
Someone above has said that the most recent site is next to the Stuart highway, which is the main link from Darwin to the outside world. If I have identified it correctly on Google earth, it is about 190 meters from the Highway, but I’m not confident. The airport fence is the boundary on the Northern side of the Highway for 5.5 km. Given that the dominant winds are from the east and SE, this would blow the UHI effect from suburbs like Winnellie and Berrimah more or less for 15 km until past Palmerston. This is the direction of the wind for more than 40% of the year. There has been a lot of urbanisation to the SE of this area since about 1980. Have a look on Google Earth.
The big problem arises when you try to discover what the Torok and Nicholls adjustments reported above were applied to, because there had been earlier adjustments (eg Simon Torok’s Ph.D. thesis). Do these adjustments apply to raw data or to adjusted data?
The next big question is whether these adjustments are still pertinent. There have been later adjustments. Did they replace or add to these adjustments? The BOM seems reluctant to make a statement.
Indeed, the silence of the BOM on this whole Darwin episode is deafening. Could not someone like Dr David Jones, Head of Climate Change at the BOM, make a definitive statement to clear the air? When we correspond, he tells me that certain “products” are sold by BOM to the public, but that fees (which are not small) will be charged for further inquiries. Is this a variant of “don’t release the data”? If so, it’s directed against the taxpayers who funded it. As I understand it, all Australian data supplied to NOAA or whomever is the global source, is supplied for free.
Not a healthy, democratic arrangement
Here is some detail attributed to Torok and Nicholls of the Australia Bureau of Meteorology, for Darwin (inclusing both the old PO site and the post-1940 airport site), dated mid 1990s.
14015 1021 1991 0 -0.3 -0.3 dm
14015 1021 1987 0 -0.3 -0.6 dm*
14015 1021 1964 0 -0.6 -1.2 orm*
14015 1021 1942 0 -1 -2.2 oda
14015 1021 1894 0 0.3 -1.9 fds
14015 1001 1982 0 -0.5 -0.5 or
14015 1001 1967 0 0.5 0 or
14015 1001 1942 0 -0.6 -0.6 da
14015 1001 1941 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1940 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1939 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1938 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1937 1 0.9 0.3 rp
14015 1001 1907 0 -0.3 -0.9 rd
14015 1001 1894 0 -1 -1.9 rds
014015 is the Australian station number.
1002 mean minimum temperature, 1001 means maximum.
The next column is the year of a change.
Next column, a 1 is for a change in a single year. A 0 is for all previous years.
The first column with temperature changes in deg C is the magnitude of an adjustment, though I am uncertain about the sense of the sign.
The next column is the cumulative effect of the changes, presumably preceding the corresponding year, but uncertainly extending back (to the start of the data or to the previous change?)
Then lastly there is a code for the reason for the adjustment. The common “rp” means “poor site, site cleared”. Now if you are familiar with Darwin, you will know that unchecked grass can grow taller than a Stevenson screen, so what effect that has on the temperature is rather hard to envisage – if it was grass. There was also an episode reported above of a pile of adjacent dirt being levelled.
Someone above has said that the most recent site is next to the Stuart highway, which is the main link from Darwin to the outside world. The airport fence is the boundary on the Northern side of the Highway for a few km. Given that the dominant winds are from the east and SE, this would blow the UHI effect from suburbs like Winnellie in the direction of the weather station about 30 % of the year. There has been a lot of urbanisation to the SE of this area since about 1980. Have a look on Google Earth.
The big problem arises when you try to discover what the Torok and Nicholls adjustments reported above were applied to, because there has been earlier adjustments (eg Simon Torok’s Ph.D. thesis). Do these adjustments apply to raw data or to adjusted data?
The next big question is whether these adjustments are still pertinent. There have been later adjustements. Did they replace or add to these adjustments? The BOM seems reluctant to make a statement.
Indeed, the silence of the BOM on this whole episode is deafening. Could not someone like Dr David Jones, Head of Climate Change at the BOM, make a definitive statement to clear the air? When we correspond, he tells me that certain “products” are sold by BOM to the public, but that fees (which are not small) will be charged for further inquiries. Is this a variant of “don’t release the data”. If so, it’s directed against the taxpayers who funded it. As I understand it, all Australian data supplied to NOAA or whomever is the global source, is supplied for free.
Not a healthy, democratic arrangement, is it?
I think it would clear air for the BOM to post (a) the Australian raw data, warts and all and (b) the methods used to adjust the data to arrive at the BOM online values.
That would be a bit scientific, at least.

Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2009 4:59 pm

Nick Stokes,
I quoted you above as writing
Nick Stokes (02:11:43) :
“Darwin is a real outlier among long data series.”
An ordinary person would read this as meaning that Darwin is an odd man out among long data series. (Maybe because of its high trend when adjusted).
I am asking if you have examined other long term data series to support this insinuation.
Have you?

Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2009 5:15 pm

carrot eater (09:19:57) : on 14/12
So where does this leave an eager new researcher who wishes to do a proxy study. Unless he has been deeply immersed in the history of adjustments, how in hell can he choose the right temperature series, let alone know that others exist and that some are quite different?
So we come back to where on gfg – giorgio gilestro’s webpage – a distribution of corrections to slope is given to purportedly show that the plusses balanced the minuses. More or less, since the time factor was left out. Eric Steig approves of it.
Would a good scientist use inputs from two different adjustment methods (or probably more, including other countries) to produce such a global graph? Not this one. Why, there is not even public documentation on how the changes to date have been made, which have been dropped, which have been modified. How can you produce such a graph when a change this year can change an estimate 100 years ago and when several hundred changes are being made each year in the USA alone?
As we say here, “dreamin’ “

Roger Owens
December 14, 2009 5:18 pm

A simple question. I seem to remember that we’re not allowed to average averages. Is that wrong? Seems using these “adjusted” figures is even worse. I agree completely with Mr. Ryan Stephenson, Gail Combs, et. al, but who is going to do all this work? For many places all over the world? Maybe we should just go back to common sense (?) or find an equivalent way to measure temperatures similar to reading tree rings.

December 14, 2009 6:05 pm

Geoff Sherrington (17:15:39) :
carrot eater (09:19:57) : on 14/12
“Why, there is not even public documentation on how the changes to date have been made, which have been dropped, which have been modified.”
As we say here, “dreamin’ “
Absolutely!
Quiate apart from any suggestion that NOAA, NASA, ABoM have been remiss in this area , this is clearly where, IMHO, the people who set up IPCC and the ‘leading scientists’ who advise it and are the ‘leading authors’ of the report fell down on their responsibilities very badly.
They should have set up a whole unit from the outset whose sole responsibility was to carefully record, document and oversee the QUALITY CONTROL/QUALITY ASSURANCE aspect of all key/core datasets presented by the UN to the world in respect of global warming, despite those datasets arising within a national (US, UK principally) context.
I note that IPCC was founded very many years after the modern principles of QC/QA were developed in the later 19th/early 20th century by intelligent people (Whitney, Taylor, Shewhard etc) working firmly within a context of (shock horror) American manufacturing i.e. BUSINESS.
Maybe that is the answer. Those ‘leading scientists’ and ‘leading authors’ possibly had never have been much exposed to a deep culture of quality control and quality assurance. We may well rue the day there were very few engineers amongst them. Not the sort that could put men on the Moon and bring ’em back alive.

carrot eater
December 14, 2009 8:15 pm

Geoff Sherrington (16:27:47) :
“The first column with temperature changes in deg C is the magnitude of an adjustment, though I am uncertain about the sense of the sign.”
I think the sign is the direction of the adjustment for the previous years. The idea is to get everything on the same scale as the most recent measurement, so discontinuities are reconciled by adjusting the older data, not the newer data.
“There have been later adjustments. Did they replace or add to these adjustments?”
Sounds like Della-Marta et al mostly left Torok’s adjustments in place through 1993 (except as noted), and then did their own homogenisation from scratch on the ensuing data. I’m not sure what choice you pose between ‘replace’ and ‘add’.
“The BOM seems reluctant to make a statement.”
What, have you been asking them things?
“Could not someone like Dr David Jones, Head of Climate Change at the BOM, make a definitive statement to clear the air? ”
Nowhere in Willis’s post does the BoM come directly into play. The entire post is about the GHCN, so it’s the NOAA that’s in the line of fire here. I don’t think a response is absolutely necessary, since I don’t think Willis actually made any discernible point, but maybe somebody is working one up; it’s been what, a whole week? That said, the ABoM could provide come clarification on the historical metadata (which you’ve already found). As I’ve repeated, the GHCN does not use this metadata, but having it would give an idea of the physical underpinnings for why adjustments are made.
“Is this a variant of “don’t release the data”? ”
As we’ve been hearing, governments want their weather services to make some money. This is of course unfortunate for people in the general public who want to play with the data, and you should encourage them to reconsider. Though the pricing is not prohibitive, if I’m looking at the right thing.
http://reg.bom.gov.au/silo/Subscriptions.shtml
But in any case, they give raw data (well, monthly averages) to the GHCN (I haven’t checked if it’s only mean, or also max and min), and they don’t seem to mind the GHCN having that available on their website.
“I think it would clear air for the BOM to post (a) the Australian raw data, warts and all and (b) the methods used to adjust the data to arrive at the BOM online values.”
In principle it’d be nice to get the unadjusted data straight from the ABoM page, but getting it from the GHCN is good enough. If the GHCN has max/min data for Australia, then that’s good enough. As for the method, it looks like Torok to 1993, then Della-Marta to maybe 2000; I’m unsure if the most recent stuff is homogenised yet. A comparison of the ABoM homogenised set with the GHCN raw would tell you that, I suppose.

Nick Stokes
December 14, 2009 8:28 pm

Geoff Sherrington (16:59:39) :
Nick Stokes,
I quoted you above as writing
Nick Stokes (02:11:43) :
“Darwin is a real outlier among long data series.”
An ordinary person would read this as meaning that Darwin is an odd man out among long data series. (Maybe because of its high trend when adjusted).
I am asking if you have examined other long term data series to support this insinuation.
Have you?

Yes. Did you read my reply (02:11:43)? You quoted it. I said:
For series with over 40 years data, of which there are 4387, Darwin came in at #243, nearly at the 95% level.

So yes, I examined 4387 other series. All of them.

carrot eater
December 14, 2009 8:39 pm

Geoff Sherrington (16:59:39) :
(to Nick) “I am asking if you have examined other long term data series to support this insinuation.”
Doesn’t his reply at (02:11:43) tell you? He looked at >40 year records.
Geoff Sherrington (17:15:39) :
“So where does this leave an eager new researcher who wishes to do a proxy study.”
I don’t see the difficulty. You’ve got CRU, GISS, NOAA and now JMA, as well as two satellite records. Any eager new researcher would read the literature and get an idea of how each is constructed, if he were competent. To the limited extent that these don’t all agree, I think even laymen have a feel for the relevant differences – GISS’s Arctic infilling, for example.
“More or less, since the time factor was left out. Eric Steig approves of it.”
The initial analysis was very elegant and simple, yet informative. Nick Stokes took it a step further, by limiting it to post 1940. I bet many people here would not have guessed the shape of the distribution – hence, it’s informative. We see that homogenisation has subtle net effects on GHCN, not a huge one; we see that Darwin not representative, and we see that you’ll also find the opposite of Darwin. This does not tell us that the homogenisation method of GHCN is good, but it is a good indication that it isn’t some crude intentional fraud, as claimed by Willis.
“Would a good scientist use inputs from two different adjustment methods (or probably more, including other countries) to produce such a global graph?”
I have no idea what you’re talking about. GHCN and GISS both start with raw, except in the case of US data. They do their own adjustments.
“Why, there is not even public documentation on how the changes to date have been made, which have been dropped, which have been modified. How can you produce such a graph when a change this year can change an estimate 100 years ago and when several hundred changes are being made each year in the USA alone?”
Have you read every single paper from NOAA, GISS and CRU on the topic?

Kevin Aldcroft
December 14, 2009 8:53 pm

It just goes to show that you that with the right incentives some so called scientist can be pesauded to adjust any results or findings to suite a hidden agenda. The pay off for these so called climate scientists must be worth millions in grants sponsorships and government funding but its is no excuse or reason to taint the scientific community by using fake data, just build their case, they should all be charged with fraud.

December 14, 2009 10:28 pm

carrot eater (20:39:09) :
“GHCN and GISS both start with raw, except in the case of US data.”
I basically agree with most of what you have said with the exception of the above statement.
How do we know this data is raw? It seems like while it is one small step for you to assert that, it is one giant leap for GHCN and GISS to be certain it is so.
For example, we only have the claim by ABoM that it supplies only raw data to NCDC and NASA. As a patriotic Aussie I’d like to believe (and do) that is true. I can’t speak for all the other countries in the world and I don’t think you can either. I can imagine many have carried out good, bad and truly ugly adjustments of their own. I think it is quite probable NOAA and NASA have and do receive ostensibly raw data which was not truly raw. NCDC and NASA have no means of knowing otherwise.
Beyond this, every country has the right to not upload, lose, or drop data and often does as even the case of ABoM shows. As far as NOAA and NASA are concerned all the data they get is what the supplying countries choose to supply. So as we have seen, this obviously constrains what GHCN and GISS can do e.g. in terms of subsequent gridding and data adjustments.
The only value of Willis’ work lies only in the fact that he has highlighted a highly complex situation in the treatment of JUST ONE station, Darwin by JUST ONE agency GHCN. But I respectfully suggests this at least shows just how convoluted and complex the situation can get.
At the end of the day NOAA, NASA and CRU are just organisations within two (developed) countries. They are not the whole world or the UN.
The adjusted and homogenized data is being implicitly used by the UN (IPCC) on behalf of all the human race, rich, middle class and poor alike. Most are blithely unaware of the complexity of this (data gathering) situation and clearly IPCC (aka the Phil Jones’ of this world) doesn’t want to tell them.
Yet in the ultimate irony for the first time in human history we are being lobbied by the UN to act both very radically and fully in concert as a sentient species on an issue facing every human and Earth itself, in significant part on the basis of this data!
In this unique context, endless blatherings of ‘don’t see the difficulty’ and ‘have you read every single paper’ references to authority just don’t resolve my ethical and scientific issues with this ‘mere exercise in data gathering’ – very sorry.

December 14, 2009 11:53 pm

Calling all activists and people who want to do street actions regarding climate change madness. Please visit and join http://www.truthmovementaustralia.com.au
And our meetups page.
http://www.meetup.com/truth-movement-australia/
We are taking to the streets this DEC and JAN Or untill Climate Change (carbon) phobia ENDS!

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