Australia's white summer, Monbiot's red fury

Australia swaps summer for Christmas snow

Snow and ice covering buildings and cars at Mount Hotham as snow fell in Australia

Excerpts from Physorg.com

Snow and ice covering buildings and cars on December 19, 2010 at Mount Hotham,Victoria, as snow fell in Australia. The usual hot and summery December weather was replaced in parts by icy gusts sweeping up from the Southern Ocean, giving the country a taste of a white Christmas. Snow has fallen in parts of east coast states New South Wales and Victoria.

Snow fell in Australia on Monday, as the usual hot and summery December weather was replaced in parts by icy gusts sweeping up from the Southern Ocean, giving the country a taste of a white Christmas.

Snow has fallen in parts of east coast states New South Wales and Victoria, leaving ski resorts — some of which are usually snow-free at this time of year — with dumps of up to 10 centimetres (four inches).

“It’s white, everything is white,” Michelle Lovius, the general manager of the Kosciuszko Chalet Hotel at Charlotte Pass told AFP.

Lovius said such an amount of snow was unusual for early December, normally the peak of the wildflower season in the New South Wales mountain region.

Further south in Victoria state, Mt Hotham had 10 centimetres of snow on Sunday and Mt Buller up to five centimetres, Victorian Snow Report spokeswoman Maureen Gearon said.

http://cdn.physorg.com/newman/gfx/news/hires/1-snowandiceco.jpg
Snow and ice covering buildings and ski lifts at Mount Hotham, Victoria, December 19, 2010 as snow fell in Australia.

The cold blasts carried through to Sydney, where the temperature fell to 13 degrees Celsius (55 degrees Fahrenheit) early Monday, and dipped to 9.8 Celsius in the city’s west while winds of up to 100 kilometres (62 miles) an hour are forecast for much of the state’s coastline.

It was a different story on Australia’s west coast, where the worst flooding in 50 years isolated the town of Carnarvon, 900 kilometres north of Perth.

===================================================

Here’s some data:

All that rain seen in the plot above happened before the December flooding mentioned above…and the temperature today? Hardly summerlike continent-wide:

Townsville in the Northeast was balmy (isn’t it always?) but the vast majority of the country was well below normal. Bear in mind, this isn’t just a few stations at a few cities. I got a healthy respect for the size of the continent when I gave my tour with David Archibald in June. This can help you visualize the size:

Image from Mr_P’s blog here

Meanwhile, George Monbiot with the help of the kids at the “Climate Rapid Response Team”, try to argue that the cold and snow in England is a localized event.

George helpfully provides a link to NASA GISS’s map generator along with this hotsy totsy prose:

Last month’s shows a deep blue splodge over Iceland, Spitsbergen, Scandanavia and the UK, and another over the western US and eastern Pacific. Temperatures in these regions were between 0.5C and 4C colder than the November average from 1951 and 1980. But on either side of these cool blue pools are raging fires of orange, red and maroon: the temperatures in western Greenland, northern Canada and Siberia were between 2C and 10C higher than usual. Nasa’s Arctic oscillations map for 3-10 December shows that parts of Baffin Island and central Greenland were 15C warmer than the average for 2002-9.

Here’s that map, plotted with the defaults at GISS (same link as George provided), showing their world famous 1200km smoothed map, where data is “splodged” to places where there really isn’t any:

The reason there is “no data” is that there are no weather stations in the middle of the Arctic Ocean or Southern Ocean. This is fact, and GISS knows this. Watch carefully for the next image.

As proof of the “no data”issue, let’s plot GISS with 250 KM smoothing, by simply changing the GISSplotter pulldown menu:

Hey, that’s a lot of gray, note the caveat in yellow about missing data:

All the sudden, those “raging fires of orange, red and maroon” don’t look so big, do they George? There’s no reds, oranges or yellows over northern Greenland, or Iceland, or the East Siberian Sea, or most of Africa, and much of Antarctica’s coastline and the southern ocean.

In fact, a lot of those isolated red and maroon splotches in Greenland, Canada, and Russia are single data points. Yep, GISS takes data from these stations and smears the effect writ large on the 1200KM smoothing map. Journalists like yourself often don’t notice, they simply see the issue in shades of smeared red.

And guess what George? In those remote locations like Nuuk, Greenland, (see arrow, under a red splotch in SW Greenland) what have we there? Remote pockets of humanity. Humanity building little cities of warmth in the cold Arctic, growing cities:

With 15,469 inhabitants as of 2010, Nuuk is the fastest-growing town in Greenland, with migrants from the smaller towns and settlements reinforcing the trend. Together with Tasiilaq, it is the only town in the Sermersooq municipality exhibiting stable growth patterns over the last two decades. The population increased by over a quarter relative to the 1990 levels, and by nearly 16 percent relative to the 2000 levels.

Nuuk population dynamics

Nuuk population growth dynamics in the last two decades. Source: Statistics Greenland

Nuuk is not only a growing city, where UHI might now be a factor (but don’t take my word for it, see what NASA had to say about it at AGU this year), it is also a place where the official GHCN thermometers used by NASA are right next to human influences…like  turboprop jet exhaust, such as this one in Nuuk’s airport right on the tarmac:

 

Nuuk Airport looking Southwest Image: Panaramio via Google Earth

 

Nuuk Airport, Stevenson Screen. Image from Webshots – click to enlarge

Hmmm, I wonder what happened in Nuuk? The plot below is from NASA GISS (see it yourself here). No wonder George sees red dots on the map in Greenland. That “instant global warming” line seems out of character for natural variation in Nuuk. Note the data discontinuity. Often that suggests a station move.

And here’s the interesting thing. Nuuk is just one data point, one “raging red” anomaly in the sparsely spaced hands-on-human-measured NASA GISS surface temperature dataset for the Arctic. The patterns of warm pockets of humanity with airports and GHCN stations repeat themselves all over the Arctic, because as anyone who has visited the Arctic knows, aviation is the lifeline of these remote communities. And where do they measure the weather data? At the airport of course. Aviation doesn’t work otherwise.

See my complete report on the weird temperatures from Nuuk here. And while you are at it George, read my report about the weird temperatures from Svalbaard, another warm single data point from NASA GISS. Interestingly, at that station a local citizen did some science and proved the UHI effect at the airport.

Yes these are just two examples. But there is no denying these facts:

  • Remote communities in the Arctic are islands of anthropogenic warmth
  • These communities rely of aviation as a lifeline
  • The weather is measured at these airports, it is required for safety
  • Airports release huge amounts of waste heat, from exhaust, de-icing, terminal buildings, and even tarmac in the sun.
  • The majority of GHCN weather stations (used by NASA GISS) in the Arctic are at airports.

So, George,  when using NASA GISS to prove to your readers that warm pocket weather patterns elsewhere cause cold in England:

There is now strong evidence to suggest that the unusually cold winters of the last two years in the UK are the result of heating elsewhere.

The global temperature maps published by Nasa present a striking picture.

But on either side of these cool blue pools are raging fires of orange, red and maroon: the temperatures in western Greenland, northern Canada and Siberia were between 2C and 10C higher than usual.

Remember Nuuk and Svalbarrd’s thermometers, and then ask Jim Hansen why NASA GISS, a “space studies agency”, doesn’t use satellite data but instead relies upon a surface record that another division of NASA says likely has significant UHI effects that NASA GISS doesn’t filter out sensibly (they only allow for 0.05°C downward adjustment).

Be careful of the colors, George.

Speaking of colors, George doesn’t dare link/show you this image of the monster La Niña though (or maybe he’s simply unaware), where there’s scads of actual satellite measured data:

Look at all that colder water surrounding Britain, look at the size of the Pacific La Niña and the swath in the Atlantic of cool water and compare it to the size of Britain. That splotch of red by Greenland may be partly due to a somewhat persistent blocking high, much like the one that caused the heat wave in Russia this year.

Since George argues with colors, how about this one from UNISYS? No “raging fires of orange, red and maroon” on this one, but there are some warm pockets south of Greenland. The Pacific Warm Pool north of Australia even seems anemic.

 

UNISYS Current Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly Plot – click to enlarge

The oceans are the biggest heat sink on the planet, and there are no cities, no airports, no asphalt sea surfaces to bias the data. There’s no immediate human influence on the sea surface where the satellites look. The sea tells a different story that the human touched thermometers on land at airports, and the sea has no reason to boast its temperature.

The sea — this truth must be confessed — has no generosity. No display of manly qualities — courage, hardihood, endurance, faithfulness — has ever been known to touch its irresponsible consciousness of power. – Joesph Conrad

So George, I ask you: “hottest year ever” or “hottest year at the airport”?

For more on La Niña and its effects in our current year, have a look here, particularly the Nino3.4 graph.

I should add this: I’m not denying that we’ve had a warm year. In fact we started out 2010 with a strong El Niño and ended with a strong La Niña, as illustrated here:

In the space of a single year, we’ve had a complete reversal. The forecast is for it to go even lower:

So in cooler times ahead in the dip of La Niña, the question is this: will we still see those “raging fires of orange, red and maroon” in the Arctic? NASA GISS history during the peak of the 2008 La Niña suggests we very well might:

Addendum 12/22

I added this in comments, so I’ll add it here also:

And finally, can you really trust data from an organization that takes incoming data for that station and shifts it more than an entire degree C in the past, making a new trend? See the difference between “raw” (which really isn’t raw, it has a scads of adjustments already from NOAA) compared to the GISS final output in this chart:

The data is downloaded from GISS for the station, datasets 1 and 2 were used (raw-combined for this location and homogenized) which are available from the station selector via a link to data below the charts they make on the GISS website. The data is plotted up to the data continuity break, and again after. The trend lines are plotted to the data continuity break, and there’s no trend in the raw data for the last 100+ years.

The curious thing is that there’s no trend in the raw data at Nuuk until you do either (or both) of two things:

1. You use GISS homogenized data to plot the trend

2. You use the data after the discontinuity to plot the trend

I believe the data discontinuity represents a station move, one that exposed it to a warmer local environment. And clearly, by examining the GISS data for Nuuk, you can see that GISS adds adjustments that are not part of the measured reality. What justification could there possibly be to adjust the temperatures of the past downwards? What justification in a growing community (as shown by the population curve) could there be for doing an adjustment that is reverse of waste energy UHI?

Australia swaps summer for Christmas snow

December 20, 2010 Snow and ice covering buildings and cars at Mount Hotham as snow fell in AustraliaEnlarge

Snow and ice covering buildings and cars on December 19, 2010 at Mount Hotham,Victoria, as snow fell in Australia. The usual hot and summery December weather was replaced in parts by icy gusts sweeping up from the Southern Ocean, giving the country a taste of a white Christmas. Snow has fallen in parts of east coast states New South Wales and Victoria.

Snow fell in Australia on Monday, as the usual hot and summery December weather was replaced in parts by icy gusts sweeping up from the Southern Ocean, giving the country a taste of a white Christmas.

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Snow has fallen in parts of east coast states and Victoria, leaving ski resorts — some of which are usually snow-free at this time of year — with dumps of up to 10 centimetres (four inches).

“It’s white, everything is white,” Michelle Lovius, the general manager of the Kosciuszko Chalet Hotel at Charlotte Pass told AFP.

“First thing this morning everything was just very still, very peaceful and every single thing was just blanketed in a thick cover of white.”

Lovius said such an amount of was unusual for early December, normally the peak of the wildflower season in the New South Wales mountain region.

“We’re hoping that it (the cold) stays in for five days and we get a white ,” she said.

Further south in Victoria state, Mt Hotham had 10 centimetres of snow on Sunday and Mt Buller up to five centimetres, Victorian Snow Report spokeswoman Maureen Gearon said.

“It is a blanket of white, which is beautiful at this time of year. People are out in their Santa hats taking photos in the snow,” Gearon told Australian news agency AAP.

Snow and ice covering buildings and ski lifts at Mount Hotham, Victoria

Enlarge

Snow and ice covering buildings and ski lifts at Mount Hotham, Victoria, December 19, 2010 as snow fell in Australia. The cold blasts carried through to Sydney, where the temperature fell to 13 degrees Celsius (55 degrees Fahrenheit) early Monday, and dipped to 9.8 Celsius in the city’s west

The cold blasts carried through to Sydney, where the temperature fell to 13 degrees Celsius (55 degrees Fahrenheit) early Monday, and dipped to 9.8 Celsius in the city’s west while winds of up to 100 kilometres (62 miles) an hour are forecast for much of the state’s coastline.It was a different story on Australia’s west coast, where the worst flooding in 50 years isolated the town of Carnarvon, 900 kilometres north of Perth.

Weather experts said it was not unusual for to experience chilly weather in eastern states in early December, as cold winds from deep in the Southern Oceans sweep upwards.

“It’s not uncommon to get a dusting of snow along the higher peaks of New South Wales and Victoria every couple of years (at this time),” Bureau of Meteorology climatologist Grant Beard told AFP.

Gearon agreed, saying that in previous years, those on the Victorian snowfields had been “having cocktails in the sun one day and skiing the next”.

(c) 2010 AFP

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December 21, 2010 11:03 am

To John H.F. et al.
Dinkum thanks. No furphie. I’ll bog in after I tucker me brekkie o chook berries. How’s that for stalking strine?

Leon Palmer
December 21, 2010 11:06 am

I hate mercator projections! Make a spark look like a forest fire at the high lattitudes. It’s a great map projection for alarmist — where least is known, effect is magnified.

Richard Sharpe
December 21, 2010 11:44 am

R. de Haan says on December 21, 2010 at 9:10 am

Weather Climate Headlines Drudge Report provides proof cognitive dissonance Arnold Schwarzenegger:
‘Epic proportions’ of snow could fall in Colo. mountains…
‘Mini ice age coming’…
Record rain in West…
Dramatic satellite image shows huge storms heading toward L.A…
Winter disruptions turn travel bitter and chaotic…
Misery at Heathrow…
BRITAIN CRAWLS TO A HALT…
Line for trains stretches 1.2 miles!
Schwarzenegger says he’d like a job working for Obama — combating global warming…

That just shows he knows it’s an easy job. One within his capabilities.

Ian George
December 21, 2010 11:49 am

The GISS map above shows Greenland to be almost the same size as Australia (Australia is some 10x the size of Greenland). How extensive would the warm sections look with the correct projection?

Ian George
December 21, 2010 12:09 pm

HADCRUT’s November anamoly is out. Only 0.43C (0.31C less than GISS).
Just shows how the Arctic makes a difference (even though there are no w/s monitoring temps).

December 21, 2010 12:17 pm

Ian –
I don’t disagree with your point about the projections, but:
Greenland = 2,166,086 km^2
Australia = 7,617,930 km^2
That’s a difference of 3.5x, not 10x.

from mars
December 21, 2010 12:34 pm

Gary says:
December 21, 2010 at 9:32 am
Anthony,
“Where/when is the CFS forecast chart for Nino3.4 from ? The date/credit at the top does not appear legibly on my screen (…)”
It is from Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM):
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/indices.shtml

hotrod (Larry L)
December 21, 2010 12:35 pm

A question for those who have ready access to the information. Exactly how many GISS reporting stations exist north of say 70 deg north and 80 deg north? It is obviously a small universe but it would be nice to know the actual number and where to find the documentation to prove it.
Larry

frederik wisse
December 21, 2010 12:36 pm

How on earth could someone declare that 2010 would turn out to be the hottest year ever even when it was only halfway ? What did Obama pay these prophets rendering him this lip-service ? As long as these US and UK governmental institutions do not wish to publish the exact details of their measurements and their smoothings plus other parameters used in their calculations , all their scientific computerruns may be a matter of garbage in = garbage out . It is for them to prove that they have been doing the right thing especially after climategate , otherwise everybody may feel free to be very skeptical about their publishes numbers . In 1980 i checked personally the records of us institutions for civil aviation and came to the conclusion that all their statistics were doctored , probably by self-elected scientists , reality was much more sober in order to boost the sales of aircrafts and aircraft equipment . I am now to old to do this sysiphus work of checking the numbers , but i am inviting young enthousiastic dedicated truth searchers to do the same with the us climate numbers ….. By the way there is 99% chance that december 2010 will prove to be the coldest month of december ever since official temperature measurements started in western europe . This is just chance ? Or do we need to freeze to death first before reality will sink in with your american president ?

from mars
December 21, 2010 12:40 pm

For all that do not understand my point when comparing UAH low troposphere temperatures for 1998 and 2010,consider that:
1)El Niño years are warmer than ENSO-neutral ones, because El Niños liberate heat from the ocean to the atmosphere.
2)The 1997-1998 event was a Super El Niño , with NINO 3.4 SST anomalies that peaked at +2.8 ºC and an ONI of +2.5ºC, so it is not surprising that is was the warmest year in the satellite lower troposphere temperature data.
(for a nice graph from Bob Tisdale see here: http://i53.tinypic.com/33v0uxg.jpg
and a nice table here: http://www.cpc.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/lanina/enso_evolution-status-fcsts-web.pdf)
3) The 2009-2010 event was just a moderate-to-strong El Niño, with NINO 3.4 SST anomalies that peaked at +1.9 ºC and an ONI of +1.8ºC. That is , a peak at 68% of the 1997-1998 NINO 3.4 SST Anomaly and 72% of the 1997-1998 ONI. Clearly the 2009-2010 El Niño was significantly weaker than the 1997-1998 one.
BUT the UAH lower troposphere themperature anomaly are almost equal so far in the year.
(if you prefer numbers, Roy Spencer states:“2010 is now in a dead heat with 1998 for warmest year, with the following averages through November:
1998 +0.538
2010 +0.526″)
If there was no warming trend, 2010 should be significantly cooler than 1998, but that is not the case, the temperature anomalies are very similar, so something else has warmed in these years. Obviously 2010 warmth is the result of a moderate to strong El Niño on top of a warming trend. A warming trend that is obvious in all temperature datasets:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:1979/offset:-0.15/mean:12/plot/gistemp/from:1979/offset:-0.24/mean:12/plot/uah/mean:12/plot/rss/mean:12/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:1979/offset:-0.15/trend/plot/gistemp/from:1979/offset:-0.24/trend/plot/uah/trend/plot/rss/trend
If you doubt that the warming is antropogenic, that is a legitimate question. There is needed a lot of analysis to assess how much of the warming is natural and how much is a consecuence of greenhouse gas emissions.
But doubting that the Earth is warming when ALL temperature datasets show that is just silly.

December 21, 2010 12:44 pm

Are “remote Rossby wave trains” anything like coal trains of death?

Fitzy
December 21, 2010 1:25 pm

How recursive can Anomallies be?
Can an Anomally have an anomally within it, and if the Anomally – anomally bucks the Trend the Anomally is presented against, does the Anomally anomally prove the counterpoint, or disprove the Anomally?
Bugger.
All this Post Normal is denormalising my Normal understanding of Trends within Anomallous anomallies.
Lucky for me I have Wikileaks to re-educate me on world politics and Wikipedia – (which sounds suspiciously like an immoral holiday in Thailand) to re-educate me on everything else.

Rhys Jaggar
December 21, 2010 1:26 pm

The unusually cold winters in the UK are part of a regularly repeating phenomenon of occasionally cold winters coming in a run.
1979 -1987, 1962 – 1969, 1940 – 1947, others no doubt.
I don’t fully understand the systemic changes through cycles, but I do recognise the pattern.
Get over it. It’s normal.

Jimbo
December 21, 2010 1:39 pm

Further to my last comment noting Monbiot’s blog when he said:
“Global warming means that flying across the Atlantic is now as unacceptable as child abuse”
Why is it that the following link on his blog talking about his CANADA TOUR is dead?
http://www.monbiot.com/canada-tour-2006
He forgot the internet has some memory. See Monbiot’s comment on Waybackmachine
Just wonering!

Roy
December 21, 2010 2:00 pm

Since Monbiot and those who think like him maintain that current high temperatures in the Arctic (or rather those parts of the Arctic for which we have measurements) are a sign of global warming this article about a recently discovered mummified forest in the Canada Arctic ought to make them think again.
Mummified Arctic forest could yield clues to global warming
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/12/21/mummified-arctic-forest-could-yield-clues-to-global-warming/
“A mummified ancient forest unearthed north of the Arctic Circle may give researchers clues about what to expect as climate change again affects the polar region. Joel Barker, a researcher at The Ohio State University, stumbled on the forest’s remnants while camping last year on Canada’s Ellesmere Island, just 500 miles from the North Pole. The forest stood more than 1,000 miles north of the northernmost trees of today.”
“The trees and their branches, leaves, needles and roots were perfectly preserved from when they were buried in an avalanche 2 million to 8 million years ago, when the Arctic climate was getting colder, according to Canada’s CBC News.”
Why was the climate so much warmer when that forest existed? Climate change in the past obviously had natural causes. When did those causes cease to operate?

Gary
December 21, 2010 2:11 pm

from mars says:
December 21, 2010 at 12:34 pm
Gary says:
December 21, 2010 at 9:32 am
Anthony,
“Where/when is the CFS forecast chart for Nino3.4 from ? The date/credit at the top does not appear legibly on my screen (…)”
It is from Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM):
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/indices.shtml
From Mars, You do not understand my question; it is not from the Australia BOM.
Anthony included in the above post a chart showing the CFS forecast for Nino 3.4; it is a NOAA forecast, and it shows 3.4 dipping to -2.5F. This does not match the latest CFS forecast included in the CPC ENSO update from Monday 12/20 (the link I included in my post), which prognosticates that 3.4 has peaked at -1.5F and will begin warming early in the winter.
I am asking Anthony if he could provide the exact source (link) for the chart/forecast he posted, and I would welcome any analysis or comment why there is a discrepancy. The date of the forecast is not legible on my terminal, and I am wondering if it is an older forecast, or if it was generated by a different division of NOAA – in which case, why such a difference between them ?

Gary
December 21, 2010 2:20 pm

From Mars,
Perhaps I should add that the chart I am inquiring about immediately follows the one you thought I was referring to, which, of course, is from the BOM.

Theo Goodwin
December 21, 2010 2:56 pm

from mars says:
December 21, 2010 at 12:40 pm
“For all that do not understand my point when comparing UAH low troposphere temperatures for 1998 and 2010,consider that:
1)El Niño years are warmer than ENSO-neutral ones, because El Niños liberate heat from the ocean to the atmosphere.”
Let’s begin with what Earthlings call a critical equivocation. When you say that El Nino years are warmer, you are referring to a “global average temperature,” right? But then you refer us to the data sets, right. But the data sets do not contain “global average temperatures;” rather, they contain actual measured temperatures. (Well, as close as climate scientists can get to an actual measured temperature – an average of day and night readings.) So, which is it? Are you going to make your argument in terms of “global average temperatures” or actual measured temperatures? My guess is that you will use “global average temperatures.” I do not believe that you can make your argument in terms of actual measured temperatures. My reason is that you would need a representative sample of temperatures from each of the years compared, but climate science has not had a clue on how to create an representative sample of actual measured temperatures. Instead, it resorts to the obvious contrivance of a “global average temperature.”

David A. Evans
December 21, 2010 3:05 pm

Neil Cozens says:
December 21, 2010 at 3:24 am
Mmmmm. Fullers ESB was my preferred tipple but I’d be asleep before the end of the 1st innings.
DaveE.

from mars
December 21, 2010 3:47 pm

Theo Goodwin says:
“But the data sets do not contain “global average temperatures;” rather, they contain actual measured temperatures”
What are you saying?
The datasets obviously contain global average temperatures, if you were to access the “actual measured temperatures” you will have thousands of different values for each month, one for each place in the Earth where measurements were done.
What the datasets show is the global average of the different “actual temperatures” measured over the planet.
That should be a pretty obvious thing.

Johnegg
December 21, 2010 4:04 pm

It’s funny how we(the ordinary public) never heard much about the Arctic Oscillation until it became expedient for warmists to bring it out. If we had had the much-predicted warmer winter, the knowledge behind it would be something only meteorologists talked about.

Theo Goodwin
December 21, 2010 4:33 pm

from mars says:
December 21, 2010 at 3:47 pm
“The datasets obviously contain global average temperatures, if you were to access the “actual measured temperatures” you will have thousands of different values for each month, one for each place in the Earth where measurements were done.”
Excuse me. I assumed that climate scientists maintained some sort of connection to actual measured temperatures. I stand corrected.

agimarc
December 21, 2010 4:35 pm

The Alaskan villages at risk due to manmade global warming story is mostly a scam. Here’s why: The terrain where the ground meets water on the North Slope and NW Alaska is pretty flat, and gets rearranged on a regular basis by storms, ice floes and blown ice heaves during the winter. The villages in question are located close to the Arctic and Bering because that is where the food is located (whales, seals, walrus). The closer the village is to the water, the less energy they spend having to drag the food or boats to storage.
It is a similar situation to the US Gulf Coast where communities on barrier islands are regularly lawnmowed by hurricanes / tropical storms.
On the other hand, we could use some manmade global warming up here, as it has been pretty cold for a few weeks – zero F to low teens F. When it gets that cold skiing is more work than fun. /whining
Merry Christmas to one and all. Cheers –

eadler
December 21, 2010 4:48 pm

Anthony Watts wrote:
“All the sudden, those “raging fires of orange, red and maroon” don’t look so big, do they George? There’s no reds, oranges or yellows over northern Greenland, or Iceland, or the East Siberian Sea, or most of Africa, and much of Antarctica’s coastline and the southern ocean.
In fact, a lot of those isolated red and maroon splotches in Greenland, Canada, and Russia are single data points. Yep, GISS takes data from these stations and smears the effect writ large on the 1200KM smoothing map. Journalists like yourself often don’t notice, they simply see the issue in shades of smeared red.”
The interpolation of data in the Arctic regions based on a few stations by GISS is based on valid statistical analysis published a long time ago in the peer reviewed literature. The relationship between the temperature measured by buoys to the nearest land stations was studied, and the correlation length used by GISS was validated in this region. Here is one example, and there are others.
http://iabp.apl.washington.edu/AirT/RigorEtal-SAT.pdf
If you have any peer reviewed literature that shows this to be in error, it would be enlightening.
In fact the satellite tropospheric temperature data for November 2010 validates the map produced by GISS. The very same pattern of warmth over Greenland and Hudson’s bay, Central Europe and Siberia, surrounds the cold spot covering Northern Europe and England. The satellite data shows, that the idea that the urban heat islands at Nuuk and Svalbaard have deceived scientists into a belief in warming where none exists is wrong.
http://www.accuweather.com/blogs/climatechange/news/42622/how-did-november-2010-rank-glo.asp
http://vortex.accuweather.com/adc2004/pub/includes/columns/climatechange/2010/590x363_12062005_ch_tlt_2010_11_anom_v03_2.png
REPLY:Sorry Eric, you must be color blind. The GISS plot shows surface anomaly values of maroon for 12.5C at Nuuk, while the RSS map value shows lower troposphere (14,000 feet) anomaly of 4-5C, and you say there’s no contribution of UHI at the surface? Quite a leap of faith for you for you don’t you think? At least I demonstrated bias at the actual source of the measurement, your argument is far removed. My issue is the magnitude of anomaly. I simply don’t believe it to be accurate for the surface data.
I found this passage from Rigor et al interesting:

Questionable observations from the land stations were checked against the observations at neighboring stations. If the observations reported by any station exhibited gross errors, that is, if more than 10% of its reports were questionable during any given year, that station’s data were removed from the database.

Now why would they have to do that? Polluted surface station data perhaps? GISS doesn’t even take this step, they just throw it all into the big sausage grinder of homogenization and hope for the best.
And regarding data interpolation, that article you cite is for interpolating buoy data with surface data, GHCN, used by GISS, has no buoy data. You can prove this to yourself by visiting this page at GISS: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/
And clicking on the North Pole 90N 0W, which gives you this list:

Note the closest station (Alert) is 834KM away, which doesn’t even provide data to GISS anymore, most are over 1000km away.
But you can get Alert data right now, right here: http://www.wunderground.com/global/stations/WCYLT.html
Seems pretty lame to me that GISS can’t even find up to date close-by data to interpolate, especially for such a “critical” area. If they were in fact using buoy data as the paper you cite shows a method for, we might have no argument for missing data. Sorry, but your arguments fail.
– Anthony

David Gould
December 21, 2010 4:59 pm

Richard G,
No, of course I am not saying that we have 132 years of satellite records. However, we do have 132 *12-month periods*. These periods overlap. When looking at 12-month running averages, we are looking at those 132 12-month periods, and every month that passes adds another one. The ocean, without the UHI effect, has been remarkably warm over the last little while.

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