Professor Phil Jones unwittingly(?) reveals that the global warming emperor is, if not naked, scantily clad, vindicating key skeptic arguments
Annotated Version of the Phil & Roger Show – Guest post by Indur M. Goklany

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Readers of WUWT are already familiar with the remarkable series of questions and answers between the BBC’s Roger Harrabin at right, and Professor Phil Jones at left (see the posts by Willis and Anthony). [In case you don’t already know, Phil Jones is the climate scientist at the center of the Climategate e-mails, and whose compilation of historic global temperature data from the late 1800s to the present is a key element of the IPCC’s reports.] These Q-and-As, as readers of the two earlier posts recognize, reveal (a) the lack of empirical support for claims that recent warming is exceptional and (b) the flawed logic behind assertions that “Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations.”
Specifically, the Q-and-As confirm what many skeptics have long suspected:
- Neither the rate nor magnitude of recent warming is exceptional.
- There was no significant warming from 1998-2009. According to the IPCC we should have seen a global temperature increase of at least 0.2°C per decade.
- The IPCC models may have overestimated the climate sensitivity for greenhouse gases, underestimated natural variability, or both.
- This also suggests that there is a systematic upward bias in the impacts estimates based on these models just from this factor alone.
- The logic behind attribution of current warming to well-mixed man-made greenhouse gases is faulty.
- The science is not settled, however unsettling that might be.
- There is a tendency in the IPCC reports to leave out inconvenient findings, especially in the part(s) most likely to be read by policy makers.
In the following, I have annotated some of the more critical Qs-and-As. Note that the following version of the Q-and-A was “last updated at 16:05 GMT, Saturday, 13 February 2010”, and is a little different from the original that appeared on line. The questions, identified by A, B, C…,are in bold. I have added emphasis to PJ’s responses (also in bold). My comments are italicized and in bold within square brackets.
So that one can follow the thrust of my annotations, I should note that my general approach to problems or phenomena that human beings have observed in nature is that human observations — whether they span a few decades, a few centuries or even millennia — cover only a brief span in the existence of the earth. Thus, with regard to any observed change, where direct cause-and-effect cannot be verified, the null hypothesis should, in my opinion, be that the changes are due to natural variability. This is why it is important to figure out, among other things, whether the changes that have been observed are, as far as we know, likely to be within (or outside) the bounds of natural variability. If the current warming period (CWP) is not as warm as the medieval warming period (or the Roman and other Warming Periods), then it is impossible to make the argument that CWP is exceptional. Second, if earlier periods were warmer, this indicates natural variability is greater and it is harder to make the claim that we have a “stable” climate. Most importantly, if the earth and its species survived, if not thrived, despite these other warmer periods, then it becomes harder to make the argument that species cannot adapt or the end is nigh.
Excerpts from the Q-and-As, with annotations [in brackets], follow.
Q&A: Professor Phil Jones
… The BBC’s environment analyst Roger Harrabin put questions to Professor Jones, including several gathered from climate sceptics. The questions were put to Professor Jones with the co-operation of UEA’s press office.
A – Do you agree that according to the global temperature record used by the IPCC, the rates of global warming from 1860-1880, 1910-1940 and 1975-1998 were identical?
An initial point to make is that in the responses to these questions I’ve assumed that when you talk about the global temperature record, you mean the record that combines the estimates from land regions with those from the marine regions of the world. CRU produces the land component, with the Met Office Hadley Centre producing the marine component.
Temperature data for the period 1860-1880 are more uncertain, because of sparser coverage, than for later periods in the 20th Century. The 1860-1880 period is also only 21 years in length. As for the two periods 1910-40 and 1975-1998 the warming rates are not statistically significantly different (see numbers below).
[This indicates that the recent warming is not exceptional. Moreover, even if it had been “exceptional,” that would not prove it is due to greenhouse gas emissions?]
I have also included the trend over the period 1975 to 2009, which has a very similar trend to the period 1975-1998.
[The fact that the magnitude of the trend for 1975-2009 is smaller than the trend for 1975-98 indicates that there has been no warming OR A DECLINE IN THE RATE OF WARMING from 1998-2009, which is not necessarily the same as saying there has been cooling during this period. HOWEVER, SEE KERR (2009), WHICH INDICATES NO WARMING FROM 1999-2008. Regardless, this is at odds with the IPCC’s model-based claim that were emissions frozen at 2000 levels then we would see a global temperature increase of 0.2°C per decade. This, in turn, suggests that the IPCC models have overestimated the climate sensitivity for greenhouse gases, underestimated natural variability, or both. This also suggests that there is a systematic upward bias in the impacts estimates based on these models. See here.]
So, in answer to the question, the warming rates for all 4 periods are similar and not statistically significantly different from each other. [This indicates that the recent warming is not exceptional. Moreover, even if it had been “exceptional,” that would not prove it is due to greenhouse gas emissions?]
Here are the trends and significances for each period:
| Period | Length | Trend
(Degrees C per decade) |
Significance |
| 1860-1880 | 21 | 0.163 | Yes |
| 1910-1940 | 31 | 0.15 | Yes |
| 1975-1998 | 24 | 0.166 | Yes |
| 1975-2009 | 35 | 0.161 | Yes |
…
D – Do you agree that natural influences could have contributed significantly to the global warming observed from 1975-1998, and, if so, please could you specify each natural influence and express its radiative forcing over the period in Watts per square metre.
This area is slightly outside my area of expertise. When considering changes over this period we need to consider all possible factors (so human and natural influences as well as natural internal variability of the climate system). Natural influences (from volcanoes and the Sun) over this period could have contributed to the change over this period. Volcanic influences from the two large eruptions (El Chichon in 1982 and Pinatubo in 1991) would exert a negative influence. Solar influence was about flat over this period. Combining only these two natural influences, therefore, we might have expected some cooling over this period. [Not necessarily — what about “natural internal variability” as well as other sources of “natural influences”? This response also assumes that we know all the modes and magnitudes of internal variability and pathways—both qualitatively and quantitatively—by which the sun, for instance, affects our climate.]
E – How confident are you that warming has taken place and that humans are mainly responsible?
I’m 100% confident that the climate has warmed. As to the second question, I would go along with IPCC Chapter 9 – there’s evidence that most of the warming since the 1950s is due to human activity.
[However, the key question — unfortunately unasked — is what fraction of the warming is due not to human activity but to well-mixed man-made greenhouse gas emissions (such as CO2, CH4, and so forth but not including land use, land cover, soot, etc.). This is the key question only because the majority of the policy discussion is centered on reducing well-mixed greenhouse gases.]
…
G – There is a debate over whether the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) was global or not. If it were to be conclusively shown that it was a global phenomenon, would you accept that this would undermine the premise that mean surface atmospheric temperatures during the latter part of the 20th Century were unprecedented?
There is much debate over whether the Medieval Warm Period was global in extent or not. The MWP is most clearly expressed in parts of North America, the North Atlantic and Europe and parts of Asia. For it to be global in extent the MWP would need to be seen clearly in more records from the tropical regions and the Southern Hemisphere. There are very few palaeoclimatic records for these latter two regions.
Of course, if the MWP was shown to be global in extent and as warm or warmer than today (based on an equivalent coverage over the NH and SH) then obviously the late-20th century warmth would not be unprecedented. On the other hand, if the MWP was global, but was less warm that today, then current warmth would be unprecedented.
We know from the instrumental temperature record that the two hemispheres do not always follow one another. We cannot, therefore, make the assumption that temperatures in the global average will be similar to those in the northern hemisphere.
H – If you agree that there were similar periods of warming since 1850 to the current period, and that the MWP is under debate, what factors convince you that recent warming has been largely man-made?
The fact that we can’t explain the warming from the 1950s by solar and volcanic forcing – see my answer to your question D.
[1. Notably, Phil Jones doesn’t dispute the premise that “the MWP is under debate.” See Harrabin’s accompanying report. 2. The response is based on laughable logic. It is an “argument from ignorance”! See comments on answer to D. What about internal natural variability and other “natural influences”? How well do we know the external and internal sources of natural variability?]
…
N – When scientists say “the debate on climate change is over”, what exactly do they mean – and what don’t they mean?
It would be supposition on my behalf to know whether all scientists who say the debate is over are saying that for the same reason. I don’t believe the vast majority of climate scientists think this. This is not my view. There is still much that needs to be undertaken to reduce uncertainties, not just for the future, but for the instrumental (and especially the palaeoclimatic) past as well. …
Q – Let’s talk about the e-mails now: In the e-mails you refer to a “trick” which your critics say suggests you conspired to trick the public? You also mentioned “hiding the decline” (in temperatures). Why did you say these things?
This remark has nothing to do with any “decline” in observed instrumental temperatures. The remark referred to a well-known observation, in a particular set of tree-ring data, that I had used in a figure to represent large-scale summer temperature changes over the last 600 years.
The phrase ‘hide the decline’ was shorthand for providing a composite representation of long-term temperature changes made up of recent instrumental data and earlier tree-ring based evidence, where it was absolutely necessary to remove the incorrect impression given by the tree rings that temperatures between about 1960 and 1999 (when the email was written) were not rising, as our instrumental data clearly showed they were.
This “divergence” is well known in the tree-ring literature and “trick” did not refer to any intention to deceive – but rather “a convenient way of achieving something”, in this case joining the earlier valid part of the tree-ring record with the recent, more reliable instrumental record. [1. Given the divergence problem, how can it be assumed that tree rings are valid proxies for temperature for other places at other times? 2. The divergence problem may be well known among tree ring researchers but laymen and policy makers for whom the IPCC Summary for Policy Makers was supposedly written are generally ignorant of it. I also suspect that scientists in other disciplines were not aware of the divergence problem. They were owed this information up front, in the only document on climate change they were likely to read. Another sin of omission.]
I was justified in curtailing the tree-ring reconstruction in the mid-20th Century because these particular data were not valid after that time – an issue which was later directly discussed in the 2007 IPCC AR4 Report.
The misinterpretation of the remark stems from its being quoted out of context. The 1999 WMO report wanted just the three curves, without the split between the proxy part of the reconstruction and the last few years of instrumental data that brought the series up to the end of 1999. Only one of the three curves was based solely on tree-ring data.
The e-mail was sent to a few colleagues pointing out their data was being used in the WMO Annual Statement in 1999. I was pointing out to them how the lines were physically drawn. This e-mail was not written for a general audience. If it had been I would have explained what I had done in much more detail. ….
Some brief answers have been slightly expanded following more information from UEA.
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Kay (06:50:49) : Of course, my bad. RWP not MWP.
David Ball, spice your remarks with enough relevant science – or ignore Hearnden, his spots never change. Consciously or blindly, he’s trolling – he
spat atanswered you but ignored the perfectly scientific responses from Smokey and from Sunsettommy.It’s good to see Tom P again drifting out of the shadows
to be a bouncy cheerleader for the “Team”.
Last year an entity calling himself Tom P bloomed for a
while to comment on Climate Audit issue threads re:
Briffa/Yamal/Mann and Mc&Mc until the CRU emails
brought an individual also called “Tom P” by Mann, Jones,
et alia to light as a probable CRU correspondent and
direct Climategate participant.
It’s well documented that this past weekend Doctor
was directly quoetd as saying very uncomfortable
things about 15 years of no warming (since 1995)
and the hidden cooling he considers at this point in
time to be “statistically insignificant”.
Over the weekend on WUWT an entity called Tom P tried to
imply Dr. Jones was “misquoted” by the Mail
concerning that 1995 date. He seems to have hoped no
one actually read the Harriban Q & A piece.
Under WUWT “Daily News – The Jones U Turn”
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/02/14/daily-mail-the-jones-u-turn/
Tom P (04:32:53) wrote:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1250872/Climategate-U-turn-Astonishment-scientist-centre-global-warming-email-row-admits-data-organised.html?ITO=1490
[Dr. Jones never stated any such thing in the Harriban
Q & A interview, or hinted that subsequent warming is
being lost as “noise”.]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8511670.stm
AS with GISS, NASA, CRU and NOAH, Tom P is filling in the blanks as he wishes to make reality conform to his vision.
The Climateers and Warmistas are bringing their in second
string teams and lame pal-reviewed daisy chain research
to try to pitch the same old story with pom poms and pizzazz.
How very sad.
Adding an ending to ‘Song of the Cru,’ my response to Peter Hearnden.
Fudging, shedding
Culling, shredding
Hiding, losing
Denying, abusing.
That’s what we have to do,
To bring the science to you,
Oh that’s what we have to do-o-o
To bring global warming to you.
Smokey:
“Apparently you were unaware that they admitted to inventing thirteen years of temperature data sets in this particular instance”
Maybe because he admitted nothing of the sort? If you read the file, he explained in great detail how he had to make up CODES (not temperature data sets) in order to compile his data. He goes on to explain how the temperature sets were reconstructed:
“You see? The leading zero’s been lost (presumably through writing as i7) and then a zero has been added at the trailing end. So it’s a 5-digi WMO code BUT NOT THE RIGHT ONE. Aaaarrrgghhhhhh!!!!!! I think this can only be fixed in one of two ways: 1. By hand. 2. By automatic comparison with other (more reliable) databases.”
Like the rest of the supposed scandalous e-mails from “Climategate,” this is an example of deliberately misconstruing a completely normal work-around given the real-world realities of messy data. There is not one example of faking scientific data referenced in the entire body of the hacked e-mails, and endlessly repeating that discredited libel doesn’t change the facts.
Jimbo (10:03:45) writes:
“Debate what for goodness sake?
– Whether the MWP was muted? You have received numerous rebuttals and references showing it was not muted.
– Whether the MWP was global? You have received numerous rebuttals and references showing it was global.
You said:
“It wasn’t warm in enough places at the same time to give, on average across either hemisphere, more than a muted MWP.”
Are you saying that all references I pointed to you don’t understand temperatures.”
So what’s Jimbo’s source? It warrants a closer look:
“Cambridge, MA – A review of more than 200 climate studies led by researchers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has determined that the 20th century is neither the warmest century nor the century with the most extreme weather of the past 1000 years.”
This assertion comes from a paper published in “Energy and Environment,” a trade journal, according to Scopus, not a peer-reviewed publication. It’s not listed in the ISI; you can find it in less than 50 libraries worldwide (another few dozen have electronic subscriptions). The authors have long and storied histories as industry shills, taking money from Exxon, the Western Fuels Association, etc.
This is the wrong paper to try and hang a bluff on. It has the scientific credibility of something scrawled on the back of a greasy spoon placemat by a six-year-old.
Interesting now how Dr Jones clearly remembers the details of “the trick” when at the very beginning of Climategate he was defensive and stated along the lines of “how am I supposed to remember what I wrote back then?”
Also striking is the great degree of similarity between the trends of the four time periods (Q.A), yet at Question H, he is stating that his belief in AGW is based on something else, how they can’t explain the warming since the 1950s “by solar and volcanic forcing.” Aren’t those two matters inconsistent? If the trend is not out of bounds with regard to a much earlier period (i.e., 1860-1880 or 1910-1940), why is the rate from 1950-???? so exceptional?
I must be missing something in translation.
As to if the WMP was or was not global, it seems that Dr Jones is saying because there are no data [from certain areas of the world] to confirm it did exist as a global phenomenon, then it must not have been so. But isn’t it an equally valid assumption that it WAS global or nearly so, and wait for data to be unearthed to prove otherwise?
Eugene Langschwager
Executive Director
Climate Science Coalition of America
http://www.climatescienceamerica.org
Surely there must be tree-ring data for temperature analysis in the Southern Hemisphere during the Mideival Warm Period
Robert (17:28:50),
Of course, that would be your spin.
But it is clear to even the most casual reader that 13 years of data are missing in that instance, and that the “Harry” writer is going to make up the data.
And when you claim:
You’re being an enabler for scientific misconduct. Do you actually believe that Phil Jones is out of a job, and there are multiple ongoing investigations, because this is all on the up-and-up, and just a simple misunderstanding??
The problem with Peter H. …
He wants others to debate a muted MWP. Does anyone think he would be willing discuss a stronger MWP than presently indicated? Personally, I believe the MWP has been severely UNDERESTIMATED. So, next time you drop by, Peter, be prepared to discuss whether the MWP was much stronger than currently estimated.
Be prepared to discuss what temperatures would be required for farming in Greenland as a start.
Lucy Skywalker writes:
“David Ball, spice your remarks with enough relevant science – or ignore Hearnden, his spots never change. Consciously or blindly, he’s trolling – he
spat atanswered you but ignored the perfectly scientific responses from Smokey and from Sunsettommy.”Yeah it is too much for him to reply me or Smokey,who had the gall of being reasonably civil AND post information as part of a counterpoint against what he wrote.
Instead he chose to reply a dead on arrival post,thus giving attention to someone who was being less than civil to Peter.
But I am not surprised,since I see this happen many times in various places over the years.
Sad really.
By the way lucy,will miss your forum when you make the change.
I thank you for your advice Lucy Skywalker (16:31:06) as I hold you in the highest esteem. Perhaps you might be missing that I am posting for everyone reading this blog, not Peter Hearnden. Their ideology is as flawed as badly as their science. It is what motivates them since they believe their cause is noble (moral high ground). There are plenty here who fight the scientific fight much better than I can. They are good at that, but science is not the only battle front involved, is it? The trolls that come here are not fighting on the scientific level at all. If you feel that my role is unnessecary or does damage to the credibility of WUWT?, I will humbly defer to your recommendation.
Case in point Robert (17:49:03) : dismisses Soon and Baliunas’s paper as worthless, even though they hold teaching positions at Harvard. Robert also knows that John Holdren has tried to marginalize and prevent both authors from gaining peer review status, forcing them to find ways to publish elsewhwere. He knows all this yet is using this misinformation to his advantage when those who are unaware of the back story might believe him. This is schoolyard bully tactics, and I am not afraid of the bullies.
sunsettommy (19:41:18) : Thanks for that tommy. Really nice. I watched as Hearnden mocked many posters here and I waited. He continued to do this and I realized he was not here to debate the science at all. He took off pretty quickly once he was revealed. So think what you will of me.
Nah, I myself would disagree with you on this, Dirk. For the AGWers to claim that the MWP was local IS to claim it didn’t happen. That has been Mann’s position all along with the Hockey Stick – that the other temps globally brought down the “local” MWP to be average – erasing the MWP from the record. Mann has been denying it all along by playing with all the data, and as we’ve found from the emails, fudging it.
If someone wants to say we have heard them denying it, I am not going to give them a pass on their pretending it didn’t exist. In the artificial absence of that MWP bulge, Mann got away with murder. I see no reason to play nice guy. These people were lying to the world. Let’s see how they like the term “denier” applied to themselves.
When I first heard of Climategate and started reading the emails and saw that Jones stepped down, pending who-knows-what, I got some sense that Jones might have been the leaker. I said so much somewhere in the comments at CA. Much speculation was on Keith Briffa at the time, but something in Jones made me suspect him. I can’t recall the exact combination of inputs that led me there.
This Q&A doesn’t exactly surprise me, and makes me want to throw that idea back out there. To hear what he says here, one must wonder how he could keep on selling “The Sky Is Falling! The Sky Is Falling!” SOMEONE at UEA was having second thoughts. Here Jones shows that he was. Therefore, it seems to me that he is a likely candidate for being “Deep Leak.”
You all can count this as anecdotal if you want, because – like Phil Jones – I was not able to keep track of all my data, but here is something:
It isn’t just in climate science that this occurs. I long ago had a source that claimed that 85% of Carbon 14 dates that come out of the labs were thrown away, because the results were seen as spurious or outliers. Why? Because they didn’t fit into the expected time scheme.
Do I know this as fact? No. It was footnoted, sourced from some paper that I did not have the wherewithal to pursue at the time. It was quite a bit before the internet came along. If true then, is it still true? Could I find something about it now? I will try. I can’t promise any results, but I’ll try.
Re: Icarus (Feb 14 16:20),
Obviously we shall have to wait and see what happens in the next two decades, but as we have seen a warming of 0.18°C per decade over the last three decades, that doesn’t seem unreasonable. The IPCC have been right for the last two decades and that can indeed give us some confidence in their projection for the next two decades as well.
Underline mine.
Below is a pretty curve
Suppose you were the IPCC living and projecting in the year 1025AD, just before the peak in these NOA data. Even if you have been projecting correctly from 800AD, in 20 ye intervals, you would fail in the prediction at the top.
The plot is interesting for two reasons:
1st, there is nothing unprecedented in a continuous rise in temperature, and one living in 800AD would not need the IPCC to project continuous warmth, just the feeling of his bones would be enough.
2nd There will always be a top after which a fall starts.
If the plot does not appear, here is the link:
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/wuwt_icecoreanim_image21.png?w=510&h=198
To those asking about trends. Trends are dangerous! There are two problems with them. A trend is a smoothed representation of a time series that purports to show you the overall tendency of the data over a period. So, we have two problems. How to do the smoothing, the most common way is a linear regression giving a straight line through the data. This is usually very misleading and can be heavily influenced by erroneous extremes in the data. My preference is some form of locally-weighted regression, also known as loess. This gives a more accurate representation of what is going on without obliterating the variability in the data. The second problem is what plagues this discussion. Over what period do you calculate trend. Any point in a time series will be above or below the average value of the series. So, it is very easy to select periods for trend that support whatever point you are trying to make – in this case, warming or cooling. In my view, trends should always be calculated over the whole period of reliable data. Then you can’t be accused of selecting the most appropriate subset of the data for your purpose. Also, forget statistical significance, it’s a red herring in this context. If you’ve dishonestly chosen a period that shows what you want, then the fact that the trend is significant is irrelevant – it’s still crap! Looking at trend over the last 5 or 10 years of a 150 year record is the ultimate in special pleading and has nothing to do with science. If you can’t look at the whole record and summarise your conclusions, you are no scientist.
Smokey (11:50:44) :
“And McIntyre got the data from CRU. We all believe the CRU data, don’t we? You know, the temperature data that they make up as they go along.”
You asserted that the shape of the Yamal chronology rested on one tree. I’ve shown that it doesn’t. Your tortuous attempt to link this analysis to any temperature data is irrelevant.
Robert (17:49:03)
Oh, yeah, and the peer-reviewed Hockeystick from the prestigious publication “Science” was such solid science … peer-reviewed, top journal, utter crap. Go figure …
You don’t understand, do you. Your scorn is scientifically meaningless. It doesn’t matter where something is published. It only matters whether it is true or not. When you attack a paper based on where it is published, you are merely revealing that you have no substantive issues. It could be written on a bathroom wall, for all I care, that’s meaningless. Learn to ask the right question – is the science solid? That’s the only thing that matters, not your puerile attack on Energy and Environment.
Next, having published in E&E, I can assure you that it is in fact peer reviewed. Or you can believe Dr. Tom Osborne, who says in the CRU emails,
So not only is your claim scientific nonsense, it is factually incorrect. You’re batting two for two …
“A – Do you agree that according to the global temperature record used by the IPCC, the rates of global warming from 1860-1880, 1910-1940 and 1975-1998 were identical?
An initial point to make is that in the responses to these questions I’ve assumed that when you talk about the global temperature record, you mean the record that combines the estimates from land regions with those from the marine regions of the world. CRU produces the land component, with the Met Office Hadley Centre producing the marine component.
Temperature data for the period 1860-1880 are more uncertain, because of sparser coverage, than for later periods in the 20th Century. The 1860-1880 period is also only 21 years in length. As for the two periods 1910-40 and 1975-1998 the warming rates are not statistically significantly different (see numbers below).
[This indicates that the recent warming is not exceptional. Moreover, even if it had been “exceptional,” that would not prove it is due to greenhouse gas emissions?]
”
I never thought I’d ever be in a position to be in agreement with the good Dr. Phil, but have a look at this.
I don’t like anomalising and gridding raw data just so you can see a trend but instead I prefer to just look at the trends in the raw/adjusted data for individual stations. I’ve therefore produced a series of ‘interactive maps’ showing the trends (in deg.C/century) over a number of different time periods (1880 to 2010, 1880 to 1909, 1910 to 1939, 1940 to 1969 and 1970 to 2010) in the form of colour coded ‘dots’ for each individual sttsion in the GISS raw (unadjusted) and adjusted (homogenised) datasets.
It takes a little while to load the trend data into these Flash maps but it is well worth the wait. If you receieve a prompt say that it is taking Abobe Plash Player a while to load the data into the map please click the ‘No’ button (perhaps several times) until the full map is loaded.
You can then zoom in and out and pan left/right and up/down using the map and if you click an individual coloured dot it will show the chart of raw/adjusted data for each time period for that station. It’s best to load each map into a separate tab within your browser and that way you can click between tabs and contrast the difference in the maps for each time period. here are some links to the ‘interactive maps’.
GISS raw data trends 1880 to 2010
GISS raw data trends 1880 to 1909
GISS raw data trends 1910 to 1939
GISS raw data trends 1940 to 1969
GISS raw data trends 1970 to 2010
In particular compare the trends during the 1910 to 1939 period with those for the 1970 to 2010 period. No wonder Dr Phil thinks that the warming trends during the 1910 to 1940 and 1975 to 1998 are not statistically significantly different from one another. It looks to me like the 1910 to 1940 trends in the US stations are greater than those for the 1975 to 1998 period. What do you think?
Now what is going on with all those ‘dark red dot’ Canadian stations between 1970 to 2010 and all those ‘dark red’ stations in Greenland, Iceland, northern Norway and Russia between 1910 to 1939? Please note ‘dark red’ is >+5 deg.C/century and ‘dark blue’ is <-5 deg.C/century – thats right they are the upper end of the IPCC's '21st century catastrophic global warming' range.
Do we really need to 'anomalise and grid' the raw data in order to see clear evidence of (non-global) warming/cooling on an approx 30 year multi-decadel cycle of warming (1910 to 1939) followed by cooling (1940 to 1969) followed by warming (1970 to 2000) followed by cooling (perhaps from 2000 onwards?)? I don't think we do.
Ah! but this data hasn't been adjusted yet? What effect do the adjustments have on the trends? Well have a look for yourself.
GISS raw data trends 1880 to 2010
GISS raw data trends 1880 to 1909
GISS raw data trends 1910 to 1939
GISS raw data trends 1940 to 1969
GISS raw data trends 1970 to 2010
See any signifcant differences? Not really as the warming (and cooling) is real, it’s largely in the Northern Hemisphere and is largely Northern Hemisphere winter warming and has very little to do with man’s emissions of CO2 and everything to do with natural climatic variability due to things like the AMO/PDO/ENSO that the GCMs choose to ignore.
Spencer: Natural variability unexplained in IPCC models>
Now isn’t it about time for the GCMs to be re-programmed to take full account of natural climatic variability rather to to be deliberately programmed to tell a ‘doom and gloom’ future catastrophic global warming story as they are now?
Tom P (23:48:39) :
“Smokey (11:50:44) :
“You asserted that the shape of the Yamal chronology rested on one tree. I’ve shown that it doesn’t.”
No, you haven’t.
Lucy Skywalker sets you straight here: <a href=Tom P (23:48:39) : edit
Smokey (11:50:44) :
“And McIntyre got the data from CRU. We all believe the CRU data, don’t we? You know, the temperature data that they make up as they go along.”
You asserted that the shape of the Yamal chronology rested on one tree. I’ve shown that it doesn’t."
No, you haven't. Lucy Skywalker sets you straight here.
“Something is happening here but you don’t know what it is, do you, Mr. Jones?”