Here is the web page for Dr. Raymond S. Bradley who is listed as:
University Distinguished Professor in the Department of Geosciences and Director of the Climate System Research Center (http://www.paleoclimate.org).
Readers may also recognize Dr. Bradley from his co-authorship with Dr. Michael Mann in the famous MBH98 paper which produced the embattled “hockey stick” graph.
Dr. Bradley has also gained some recent notoriety with his accusations of plagiarism regarding the Wegman report to congress, by Dr. Edward Wegman of George Mason University, which was critical of MBH98’s statistical methods.
Here’s Dr. Bradley’s photo from his UMass web page:
Notice anything interesting? Here are some hints:
His graph for CO2 data titled “Greenhouse Gas Record from the Vostok Ice Core” shows a value around 360 ppm for CO2 at the “zero date” of the present history. The photo must be old, since the current value in the atmosphere from Mauna Loa is said to be around 390ppm currently.
So, it’s an old photo, what’s the problem you say?
For readers not familiar with the CO2 data from the Vostok Ice Core, you can find the official data set here from NOAA’s FTP servers:
CDIAC (Carbon Dioxide Information and Analysis Center)
ftp://cdiac.ornl.gov/pub/trends/co2/vostok.icecore.co2
NCDC (National Climatic Data Center)
ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/paleo/icecore/antarctica/vostok/co2nat.txt
NASA Goddard also offers access to the official Vostok data here:
http://gcmd.nasa.gov/records/GCMD_CDIAC_CO2_VOSTOK_ICECORE.html
…and they offer this helpful graph, which is time reversed from Dr. Bradley’s graph, with the present day on the left:
That’s odd, the Vostok CO2 data for the present is around 280ppm, way lower than the 360ppm shown on Dr. Bradley’s graph. Strange, but that NASA web page on Vostok Ice Core data shows the most recent update at:
So it must be current, right?
So let’s look at some other sources, maybe they are closer to Dr. Bradley’s value, surely there must be some update somewhere to this Vostok data that I’ve missed.
Let’s check Wikipedia, which always seems to be updated. Even though William Connelly doesn’t edit there anymore surely it’s been updated with this new data in the past year or so? Here’s the Wikipedia graph:

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vostok_Petit_data.svg
That’s odd, the CO2 data there shows just over 280ppm of CO2 in the Vostok record. But they reference Petit, et al 1999 on that page. Hmmm, I went to find that paper, and was able to locate a PDF copy of it here: http://www.daycreek.com/dc/images/1999.pdf and I saved a local copy here Vostok_nature_1999 to prevent overloading that website with downloads. Here’s the title of that 1999 paper from Nature:
Climate and atmospheric history of the past 420,000 years from the Vostok ice core, Antarctica
J. R. Petit*, J. Jouzel†, D. Raynaud*, N. I. Barkov‡, J.-M. Barnola*, I. Basile*,M. Bender§, J. Chappellaz*,M. Davisk, G. Delaygue†, M. Delmotte*, V. M. Kotlyakov¶, M. Legrand*, V. Y. Lipenkov‡, C. Lorius*, L. Pe´ pin*, C. Ritz*, E. Saltzmank & M. Stievenard†
Oh, OK, that explains it, the CO2 levels in 1999 must have been 360ppm and that’s where that value on Dr. Bradley’s graph comes from. Let’s check the Mauna Loa record for 1999 here: ftp://ftp.cmdl.noaa.gov/ccg/co2/trends/co2_mm_mlo.txt
The values for 1999 are:
1999 3 1999.208 369.46 369.46 367.90 26 1999 4 1999.292 370.77 370.77 368.19 30 1999 5 1999.375 370.66 370.66 367.84 29 1999 6 1999.458 370.10 370.10 367.87 30 1999 7 1999.542 369.10 369.10 368.42 30 1999 8 1999.625 366.70 366.70 368.21 30 1999 9 1999.708 364.61 364.61 367.95 29 1999 10 1999.792 365.17 365.17 368.41 31 1999 11 1999.875 366.51 366.51 368.58 29 1999 12 1999.958 367.85 367.85 368.58 29
Well that explains it then right? The value of the CO2 atmosphere in 1999 was around 360 ppm, so that’s what Dr. Bradley was showing in that old photo. And the 1999 Nature paper from Petit et al must show the same value, right? Here it is:
Huh, that’s strange, it only shows around 280ppm of CO2 at the “present” of 1999 when this graph was published.
Well OK, the archived NOAA data on the FTP server must be updated and have ~360ppm somewhere in the dataset, right? So I looked through it to be sure. Here’s the most recent data from: ftp://cdiac.ornl.gov/pub/trends/co2/vostok.icecore.co2
Hmmm, the most recent data is from 2342 yr BP (years before present) and shows 284.7. That can’t be right, because the distinguished Dr. Bradley shows the data at around 360ppm. Yet, the header shows the co-author names from the 1999 Nature paper on the Vostok ice core data analysis. Surely there must be an update to it?
Maybe the other NOAA data set from NCDC is what he used? at: ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/paleo/icecore/antarctica/vostok/co2nat.txt
Well, it agrees with the CDIAC data, but there’s still no ~360ppm of CO2 listed in the data for the most recent readings.
Well gosh, how can this be?
The answer is seems, is that there is no new data from the Vostok Ice core. It ended, and the official repositories of that data have no new data. The last CO2 value for the Vostok Ice Core dataset is listed as being 284.7ppm.
So how does Dr. Bradley get ~360ppm? Easy, I think he uses the same technique he and his co-authors learned when writing the famous MBH98 paper that made the hockey stick -splice the instrumental record onto the paleo record:

Graph above from Fred Pearce’s Feb 2010 article in the Guardian shows the instrumental record attached to the ice core record.
And here’s a later version from 2003 showing the same instrumental record splice along with paleo data (Figure 1. from Mann et al. EOS Forum 2003):

Source: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/pubs/mann2003b/mann2003b.html
So it seems rather apparent that Dr. Bradley (or whoever made the graph) simply took the Vostok Ice Core CO2 paleo data and “spliced” it with the instrumental record on the end. Or, as Joe Romm likes to say “make stuff up”.
The only problem is, as he presents it with the title of his graph: Greenhouse Gas Record from the Vostok Ice Core as shown below…
…it’s patently false in my opinion. Ditto for the red Methane line, but that’s another story.
Now here’s the problem. If you took surface temperature data from Antarctica, and spliced it with surface temperature data from Hawaii, and then presented it as the entire historical record from Antarctica, our friends would have a veritable “cow”.
Or, if you took stock performance data from poorly performing Company “A” and spliced on better performing stock data from Company “B”, and then made a new graph and used that graph to sell investors on Company “A”, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) would have a veritable “cow” when they found out, wouldn’t they? People go to jail for such things.
But hey, this is Climate Science.
big h/t to WUWT reader Brian M. who sent the tip in via email.
Addendum: I should add that I have no evidence that this graph has been used in any scientific publications or professional presentations by Dr. Bradley, I’m only pointing out that for this photo, which appears to be staged, what is presented doesn’t match the actual Vostok data. Readers should not extrapolate anything beyond this scope until new examples are presented. – Anthony







Having looked at the temperature graph for Vostok many times whilst reading this post it has occurred to me that the temperature signal is progressively less noisy the farther back in time you go.
Is that simply due to the thinner and thinner annual layers from the deeper core leading to smoothing of the noise?
Anthony
A very interesting post.
Did you realise that you must have accidentally transposed the image, as the second half of the temperature record on the Hockey stick is upside down? Our instrumental and anecdotal records show a slow steady temperature rise (with advances and set backs ) from around 1700, long before Dr Hansens Giss figures kicked them into the stratosphere.
12 of the oldest instrumental records shown graphically in next two links.
http://i47.tinypic.com/2zgt4ly.jpg
http://i45.tinypic.com/125rs3m.jpg
Scores of old instrumental records collected on my site here.
http://climatereason.com/LittleIceAgeThermometers/
Anthony, to prevent embarassment to Dr Mann can you correct your inadvertent mistake and readjust the graph so it shows this steady increase instead of the decline?
tonyb
Joanne Nova has many great points to make about the Ice Cores to help interpret Dr. Bradley’s graph:
Ice Core evidence — where is carbon’s “major effect”?
http://joannenova.com.au/2010/08/ice-core-evidence-no-endorsement-of-carbons-major-effect/
The big picture: 65 million years of temperature swings
http://joannenova.com.au/2010/02/the-big-picture-65-million-years-of-temperature-swings/
Carbon rises 800 years after temperatures
http://joannenova.com.au/2009/12/carbon-rises-800-years-after-temperatures/
The 800 year lag – graphed
http://joannenova.com.au/global-warming/ice-core-graph/
Ray simply employed Mike’s trick to boost the gentle incline, in order to increase the impact of an otherwise boringly periodic graph.
Why can the skeptic community not accept that standard mathematical procedures, as employed here by a master in the field, are beyond their comprehension?
May I suggest that the term for selectively borrowing from previous authors, deleting terms such as ‘carbon dioxide’ which do not support ones theory, while hypocritically accusing others of plagiarism, and posing in front of Mike’s Trick graphs, should henceforth be known as Bradlification.
OT: Happy Thanksgiving Anthony and to everyone else that makes this site so insightful and fun.
Best,
John from CA
By the way, at this moment it’s a toasty -56F in Vostok, Antarctica…with highs during the day warming up to -30F (brrrrr).
Happy Thanksgiving!
Why don’t you guys just ask the man himself about the chart?
Wow! I was not aware it takes several millennia for carbon dioxide to get enclosed in Antarctic ice. If you have a look at Historical CO2 Record from the Vostok Ice Core, the difference between Age of ice and Mean age of air in it is anywhere between 1879 and 6653 years (at depth 506.4 m and 3119.51 m respectively). The present spike (or any other, for that matter) is made invisible by such a heavy smoothing.
[snip]
Gentlemen,
I find this to be an appalling case of guilt by association. Here we have a photograph of a chart with Dr. Ray Bradley in the foreground. I simply cannot understand why this chart is characterized as false simply because it is in the same picture with Dr. Bradley.
This chart has done nothing except being photographed in the wrong place at the wrong time.
REPLY: I can’t tell if you are being sarcastic or not, if so use the /sarc tag
But the issue is data splicing of two different data sets. And the fact that this photo seems to be staged so that the chart is the most prominent portion of the photo, as Dr. Bradley leans to the left to expose it clearly and the full title. – Anthony
We can’t see the full chart behind him in the photograph, so we can’t tell if there are any notes that should be included. Even so, it seems a bit of stretch to make something out of this as the general data displayed is accurate even if the title is not strickly correct. (though we don’t know if some notes may be hidden behind him). CO2 levels of the past 400,000 years at least are pretty well established now, and so the most important thing about the chart behind Dr. Bradley is not as much the source as the huge spike in CO2 in the modern era when compared to the last 400,000 years. I would agree though that in general the last few decades of CO2 levels in the chart should be colored a different way to make it clear that they came from direct measurements.
The CO2 Record in Plant Fossils
Because plant stomata numbers do not change after the leaves or needles fall from the tree they make a good indicator or proxy of atmospheric CO2 in Earth’s past. What they show is that the popular belief that CO2 levels prior to the Industrial Revolution were a steady 280 ppm (parts per million) may be incorrect.
http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/stomata.html
http://www.co2science.org/subject/s/summaries/sdco2proxy.php
That’s nothing, check out the CO2 concentration in this very similar graph from 2006 (page 32):
385!
Anthony said:
“REPLY: Gore’s AIT chart is temperature data and CO2, seen annotated here:”
Well, yes, I know that. I’m talking about the CO2 portion of that chart, strictly. I’m looking at a frame that’s earlier than the one you showed, ending at “Today” (no future projection). It’s identical to the Bradley chart, according to my calibrated eyeball–every wiggle and pause–so I assume it’s from the same source.
While not excusing the guy—he certainly should have known better—he’s probably displaying that IPCC graph to secure funding—to show he’s “one of them (wink, wink).”
‘Short Description: Greenhouse trace gas changes over the last four climatic cycles (Vostok ice core, Petit et al., 1999). The CO2 and CH4 records are plotted together with the Vostok ice isotopic record (dD). The present-day antarctic CO2 (365ppmv) and CH4 (1600 ppbv) are also indicated” (Emphasis added) ‘
Short description for the graph is incorrect by all rational thinking:
The present day CO2 CH4 are also idicated ….by an arrow. The fact that the current levels are attached to the last four climatic cycles and are not a part of Vostock ice core, Petit et al.,1999 data is totally reprehensible.
This is not science…… this is smoke and mirrors better consigned to the circus tent than a University. Any University governance that can ratify this type of behaviour needs to take a good look at their priorities and what prestige will be left at the end of this episode that can only be recorded historically as the ‘grey’ ages of scientific discovery.
stumpy : “Does anyone know what co2 levels are for antarctica itself?”
About the same as everywhere else …
http://members.westnet.com.au/jonas1/CO2AtVariousStations.JPG
… but with less seasonal variation.
Goodness knows where I downloaded the data from. I could probably find out if you need it. My comment for myself (Aug 2010) says “All data was downloaded last year, I think, and might not all have been downloaded at the same time.”
@Anthony Watts
“This leads the uninitiated to think that the Vostok Paleo ice core record in fact shows this value, when it doesn’t”
I guess that means that people who limit their scientific exposure to squinting at the background details of pictures of professors might come out somewhat misinformed.
This is a pretty bizarre post and the Wegman angle only adds to that. First we have the Steve McIntyre accusing Bradley of unattributed copying from Fritts when his own samples show him clearly attributing Fritts and now we have “I found something that isn’t precisely clear if you knew nothing else whatsoever about climate science in the background of his headshot”.
If this is the best available, so far as criticism goes, Bradley must be clean as a whistle. I’m left scratching my head over these bizarre accusations however.
REPLY: No, it’s not the “best available” simply an odd puzzle. Why does this group of people continually splice dissimilar data sets? That’s the question. – Anthony
“And the fact that this photo seems to be staged so that the chart is the most prominent portion of the photo, as Dr. Bradley leans to the left to expose it clearly and the full title. – Anthony”
Leaning-slightly-to-the-left-no-my-left-his-right-gate?
Berényi Péter says:
November 24, 2010 at 12:10 pm
Wow! I was not aware it takes several millennia for carbon dioxide to get enclosed in Antarctic ice. If you have a look at Historical CO2 Record from the Vostok Ice Core, the difference between Age of ice and Mean age of air in it is anywhere between 1879 and 6653 years (at depth 506.4 m and 3119.51 m respectively). The present spike (or any other, for that matter) is made invisible by such a heavy smoothing.
=======
I can’t count the number of times I’ve seen the phrase, “Move along, there’s nothing to see here” /sarc 😉
I completely agree and if you take into account the realization that atmospheric mixing requires 14-24 months to reflect Northern to Arctic circulation as well as the amount of ice core required to sample for CO2, the idea of putting Greenland and Vostok Ice Core data on the same page in the same time frame seems silly and the idea of “Global state” from the Ice Core records ludicrous.
I could be missing something important, I’ll keep an open mind and assume the entire record isn’t a complete Climate Science mess.
No, I haven’t missed it. I believe I said it was all meaningless because this level of CO2 is having no noticeable effect on our climate, at least not to our real climate.
The y axis is a little disingenuous.
Not if you worked in marketing!
I’m with KFB. Why not contact Dr. Bradley and ask for the source of his data? Surely the good doctor or his people will be happy to provide some provenance.
I don’t know Anthony, compare slide 32 to slide 34 on the PDF from
mpaul says:
November 24, 2010 at 10:49 am
I think this might be the source of the graph:
http://files.eesi.org/corell_061506.pdf
So I don’t think its right to say Bradley ‘made this up’, rather I think he simply plagiarized it.
REPLY: We don’t know that – Anthony