GISScapades

Guest post by Willis Eschenbach

Inspired by this thread on the lack of data in the Arctic Ocean, I looked into how GISS creates data when there is no data.

GISS is the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, a part of NASA. The Director of GISS is Dr. James Hansen. Dr. Hansen is an impartial scientist who thinks people who don’t believe in his apocalyptic visions of the future should be put on trial for “high crimes against humanity”.  GISS produces a surface temperature record called GISTEMP. Here is their record of the temperature anomaly for Dec-Jan-Feb 2010 :

Figure 1. GISS temperature anomalies DJF 2010. Grey areas are where there is no temperature data.

Now, what’s wrong with this picture?

The oddity about the picture is that we are given temperature data where none exists. We have very little temperature data for the Arctic Ocean, for example. Yet the GISS map shows radical heating in the Arctic Ocean. How do they do that?

The procedure is one that is laid out in a 1987 paper by Hansen and Lebedeff  In that paper, they note that annual temperature changes are well correlated over a large distance, out to 1200 kilometres (~750 miles).

(“Correlation” is a mathematical measure of the similarity of two datasets. It’s value ranges from zero, meaning not similar at all, to plus or minus one, indicating totally similar. A negative value means they are similar, but when one goes up the other goes down.)

Based on Hansen and Lebedeff’s finding of a good correlation (+0.5 or greater) out to 1200 km from a given temperature station, GISS show us the presumed temperature trends within 1200 km of the coastline stations and 1200 km of the island stations. Areas outside of this are shown in gray. This 1200 km. radius allows them to show the “temperature trend” of the entire Arctic Ocean, as shown in Figure 1. This gets around the problem of the very poor coverage in the Arctic Ocean. Here is a small part of the problem, the coverage of the section of the Arctic Ocean north of 80° North:

Figure 2. Temperature stations around 80° north. Circles around the stations are 250 km (~ 150 miles) in diameter. Note that the circle at 80°N is about 1200 km in radius, the size out to which Hansen says we can extrapolate temperature trends.

Can we really assume that a single station could be representative of such a large area? Look at Fig.1, despite the lack of data, trends are given for all of the Arctic Ocean. Here is a bigger view, showing the entire Arctic Ocean.

Figure 3. Temperature stations around the Arctic Ocean. Circles around the stations are 250 km (~ 150 miles) in diameter. Note that the area north of 80°N (yellow circle) is about three times the land area of  the state of Alaska.

What Drs. Hansen and Lebedeff didn’t notice in 1987, and no one seems to have noticed since then, is that there is a big problem with their finding about the correlation of widely separated stations. This is shown by the following graph:

Figure 4. Five pseudo temperature records. Note the differences in the shapes of the records, and the differences in the trends of the records.

Curiously, these pseudo temperature records, despite their obvious differences, are all very similar in one way — correlation. The correlation between each pseudo temperature record and every other pseudo temperature records is above 90%.

Figure 5. Correlation between the pseudo temperature datasets shown in Fig. 3

The inescapable conclusion from this is that high correlations between datasets do not mean that their trends are similar.

OK, I can hear you thinking, “Yea, right, for some imaginary short 20 year pseudo temperature datasets you can find some wild data that will have different trends. But what about real 50-year long temperature datasets like Hansen and Lebedeff used?”

Glad you asked … here are nineteen fifty-year long temperature datasets from Alaska. All of them have a correlation with Anchorage greater than 0.5 (max 0.94, min 0.51, avg 0.75). All are within about 500 miles of Anchorage. Figure 6 shows their trends:

Figure 6. Temperature trends of Alaskan stations. Photo is of Pioneer Park, Fairbanks.

As you can see, the trends range from about one degree in fifty years to nearly three degrees in fifty years. Despite this huge ~ 300% range in trends, all of them have a good correlation (greater than +0.5) with Anchorage. This clearly shows that good correlation between temperature datasets means nothing about their corresponding trends.

Finally, as far as I know, this extrapolation procedure is unique to James Hansen and GISTEMP. It is not used by the other creators of global or regional datasets, such as CRU, NCDC, or USHCN. As Kevin Trenberth stated in the CRU emails regarding the discrepancy between GISTEMP and the other datasets (emphasis mine):

My understanding is that the biggest source of this discrepancy [between global temperature datasets] is the way the Arctic is analyzed. We know that the sea ice was at record low values, 22% lower than the previous low in 2005. Some sea temperatures and air temperatures were as much as 7C above normal. But most places there is no conventional data. In NASA [GISTEMP] they extrapolate and build in the high temperatures in the Arctic. In the other records they do not. They use only the data available and the rest is missing.

No data available? No problem, just build in some high temperatures …

Conclusion?

Hansen and Lebedeff were correct that the annual temperature datasets of widely separated temperature stations tend to be well correlated. However, they were incorrect in thinking that this applies to the trends of the well correlated temperature datasets. Their trends may not be similar at all. As a result, extrapolating trends out to 1200 km from a given temperature station is an invalid procedure which does not have any mathematical foundation.

[Update 1] Fred N. pointed out below that GISS shows a polar view of the same data. Note the claimed coverage of the entirety of the Arctic Ocean. Thanks.

[Update 2] JAE pointed out below that Figure 1 did not show trends, but anomalies. boballab pointed me to the map of the actual trends. My thanks to both. Here’s the relevant map:

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NickB.
March 25, 2010 11:49 pm

John,
Thanks for the link. In regards to it, and Bart’s comments below… there is one comment from VS that I think is worth highlighting because its applicability to climate science is absolutely profound (paraphrased):
Many observed, solid microeconomic relationships do not translate to real world observations at the macro level.
For climate science this could (assuming the data aren’t crap and VS and the other econometricians that have said the same thing are running the tests right) mean that the CO2 behavior in the lab is valid (which no one disputes anyway) but it is nothing but noise in the context of the climate.
That is a profound thought. Personally, I would like to see what happens if VS checked trends in pavement and temperature for correlation ; )

March 26, 2010 12:08 am

I made a simple operation. I read out the DJF-and JJA tremperatures from GISS for 75 degN and 65degS for the periode from 1980 to 2010 and also read out the sea ice coverage from here: http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/. After this I calculated the correlation for ice-max. and min. in arctic and antarctic. here are the plots: http://www.wzforum.de/forum2/read.php?6,1852561.
The result: The arctic sea ice coverage has a good correlation to GISS temps anomalies (R=0.7). On the other side in the antarctic there is not a correlation at all, either for Ice-max in September nor for ice-min in march to the GISS average temperatures of the 3 month before. That means, the ice coverage has no link to temps?? That can’t be true! So I would mean, that the giss temps are some kind of okay for the arctic, for the antarctic not at all. Look to the temperature-record for antarctic.

March 26, 2010 12:19 am

PS: The excell-sheet is here for download and checking: http://www.dh7fb.de/gissice/gissIce1.xls
greetings from Berlin, Germany DH7FB

March 26, 2010 12:42 am

Willis Eschenbach (17:03:37) :
JAE (16:06:04)
?? I don’t get it. Fig. 1 shows the anomaly, not trends. Isn’t the problem simply that the 1200 km “weighting” is not representative?
Jae, you are correct. However, at the moment, the anomaly and the trends are quite similar, and I couldn’t find a GISS map of the trends. Here’s the closest I could find, zonal trends by month. I didn’t know if most folks would be able to interpret it, so I showed the anomaly map.

Willis you can make Tren d maps from the same map maker utility at this like:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/maps/
Where it says map type it is default to anomaly but click on it and it has the trend option. Here is an example that hopefully lasts long enough:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/do_nmap.py?year_last=2010&month_last=2&sat=4&sst=0&type=trends&mean_gen=1203&year1=1881&year2=2010&base1=1951&base2=1980&radius=1200&pol=reg
Sometimes you have to adjust the time intervals to get the cranky Gistemp program to work 🙂

Lance
March 26, 2010 1:51 am

James Hansen said he would campaign to unseat several members of Congress who have a poor climate change voting record, and in the same breath says:
“The problem is not political will, it’s … the lobbyists. It’s the fact that money talks in Washington, and that democracy is not working the way it’s intended to work.”
http://www.environmentalleader.com/2008/06/24/james-hansen-try-fossil-fuel-ceos-for-high-crimes-against-humanity/
??????
Call me stupid, but I thought that democracy was the right to vote whatever you want to vote, not what mr. Hansen wants you to vote.
What is the matter with these people?
It is the best example of the pig-farm I have seen in years….all animals are equal, it’s just that some animals are more equal than others.

March 26, 2010 2:28 am

I think we should be counting up how many different ways the climate science community are going to redisscover the EXTREMELY well know concepts of:
stationarity and cointegtration.

Richard Telford
March 26, 2010 2:39 am

Willis Eschenbach (16:36:18) :
This has nothing to do with how mining companies infill missing data. They generally use kriging, which is very, very different both conceptually and in practice
Kriging is a distance-weighted average. GIStemp is a distance-weighted average. How exactly are they conceptually very different?
Your Fairbanks example does not constitute a test of the method. First there is a cherry picking problem – you have chosen the site for which you think the method will perform worst. Second you have not demonstrated that the reconstruction has no skill, just that it is not perfect. The RE statistics is probably a good test of skill. Third, there is a large variance when considering a single case.

O. Weinzierl
March 26, 2010 2:50 am

The first thing you learn when interpolating (or whatever) data is that the software you use has a blanking function. Otherwise people will soon ask you why you show values where there are no data.

Dave Wendt
March 26, 2010 2:56 am

Willis Eschenbach (02:07:17)
Andrew P. (18:37:01)
Why can’t [they use] the data from the IABP bouys? http://psc.apl.washington.edu/northpole/ there’s always one not far from the pole every time I look…
Very good question, I fear I have no answer. Seems like a natural to me. Anyone?
I would think the fairly constant movement of the buoys would make it difficult to use them to attempt to derive temperature trends. The NASA North Pole webcam installations have generally moved from their placement points close to the Pole to around Lat 70 off the east coast of Greenland over their reporting lives which have been mostly far less than a year. Still there are generally several dozen buoys scattered about the Arctic at most times and collectively they ought to provide better temp approximations than infilling from 1200 kms away.

FTM
March 26, 2010 3:01 am

How does this knuckle-head keep a job? You pull a stunt like this in the real world and the HR people tell you to go home and come back Saturday to get your stuff. As many times as Hansen has been caught fudging his “work” you’d think that he’d have been shown the door a long time ago.
By the bye, where’s the outrage? Hansen thinks that I should be put on trial for crimes against humanity and that’s perfectly acceptable. I think that Hansen should be fired for attempting to perpertrate a proven fraud against humanity and that’s hate speech. Is it 1984?

Ryan
March 26, 2010 3:11 am

Anomoly of -6Celsius in Northern Russia and +6Celsius in the Artic next door. Hmmmm, something a little odd about that….

Sean McHugh
March 26, 2010 4:07 am

Help!!
I am not a warmist and I really want to understand this. Looking at Figure 4, in what meaningful sense is the steepest and most curvy purple Ps 5 (purple) deemed to have a better ‘correlation’ (0.97) to the almost flat-line red Ps 2, than does the in-between orange Ps 3 (0.91)? Genuine assistance will be appreciated.

Tony Price
March 26, 2010 4:07 am

On a lighter note (but with a more serious undertone) and by amazing coincidence, I’ve just posted a satirical article on “The Spoof” titled “New Study Suggests News Climate Is Warming” and containing the following:
When asked what he was currently working on, Dr. Hansen outlined his past work on eliminating the Inconvenient Warm Period – “What did the Vikings know? They couldn’t even write, let alone submit an article to a mainstream journal. I’ve just proved that the last decade was the warmest since NOAA’s flood, and that the Arctic saw record temperatures, using interpolated gridded data based on minimal evidence. I’m currently working on LIAR – that’s Little Ice Age Redaction, and I’ll show you my work in progress” he said, knocking over a bottle of correcting fluid as he reached for a large chart.
I’ve quoted Anthony’s name as “the renowned skeptical blogger” – I hope he doesn’t mind.
Article is here: http://www.thespoof.com/news/spoof.cfm?headline=s5i71502

PaulsNZ
March 26, 2010 4:15 am

They didn’t want to use my thermometer readings because I had it in the fridge, once I moved it to the oven NASA where more than happy to use my readings.

GaryPearse
March 26, 2010 4:40 am

Do they At least adjust for latitude?

Pascvaks
March 26, 2010 4:40 am

What do the Russians and Canadians say about Herr Hansen’s Crystal Ball extrapolations?
NASA is no different than any other large, old organization. They all tend to get weaker and die of cancer. Their current Administrator wants to put them on a NEW and much less demanding track; one up to their current and projected capabilities.
When the US no longer has a AAA Credit Rating, should we drop the N from NASA, NOAA, NSA, NCIS, NCAA, etc.?
(I know; NCIS was a joke:-)
PS: Half serious now, I wonder if most of the ice at the poles isn’t mixed with a lot of plastic. Perhaps that’s why is doesn’t seem to be any good any more.

ditmar
March 26, 2010 4:45 am

Re curiousgeorge 50 I was in the RAF marham during the 80s/90s as a tecky on the victor air to air refuellers. We had to have a jet or two on standby to refuel the tornado ac on intercept flights. I was on standby in case of a scramble during easter one year, easter was a time when the russians flirted regularly with uk air space, I was called out on good friday evening and we scrambled 2 jets, our job was to service,repair and make ready for any other sorties. Anyway we got very little sleep as we were contiually sending refuellers to help the fast jets. Over the course of the weekend we ran out of servicable jets and had to borrow from another squadron also at marham.(We didn’t have many jets perhaps 15 per sqn). Each jet carrying about 120k lbs of fuel. w
So its not just the fast jets its the refuellers too

Dave F
March 26, 2010 5:00 am

Aren’t the anomalies based on 1951-1980 data? This would mean using satellite data would compare to a period that did not exist in the satellite record.