Do solar scientists STILL think that recent warming is too large to explain by solar activity?

 

Guest post by Alec Rawls

Study of the sun-climate link was energized in 1991 by Friis-Christensen and Lassen, who showed a strong correlation between solar-cycle length and global temperature:

This evidence that much of 20th century warming might be explained by solar activity was a thorn in the side of the newly powerful CO2 alarmists, who blamed recent warming on human burning of fossil fuels. That may be why Lassen and Thejll were quick to offer an update as soon as the 1997-98 El Nino made it look as if temperatures were suddenly skyrocketing:

The rapid temperature rise recently seems to call for a quantitative revisit of the solar activity-air temperature association …

We conclude that since around 1990 the type of Solar forcing that is described by the solar cycle length model no longer dominates the long-term variation of the Northern hemisphere land air temperature.

In other words, there was now too much warming to account for by solar cycle length, so some other factor, such as CO2, had to be driving the most recent warming. Of course everyone knew that the 1998 warming had actually been caused by ocean oscillations. Even lay people knew it. (El Nino storm tracks were all the news for six months here in California.)

When Lassen was writing his update in mid ’99, temperatures had already dropped back to 1990 levels. His 8 year update was outdated before it was published. 12 years later the 2010 El Nino year shows the same average temperature as the ’98 El Nino year, and if post-El Nino temperatures continue to fall off the way they did in 99, we’ll be back to 1990 temperatures by mid-2011. Isn’t it about time Friis-Cristensen, Lassen and Thejll issued another update? Do they still think there has been too much recent warming to be accounted for by solar activity?

The most important update may be the discovery that, where Lassen and his colleagues found a correlation between the length of a solar-cycle and temperatures over that cycle, others have been finding a much stronger correlation to temperatures over the next cycle (reported at WUWT this summer by David Archibald).

This further correlation has the advantage of allowing us make projections. As Archibald deciphers Solheim’s Norwegian:

since the period length of previous cycle (no 23) is at least 3 years longer than for cycle no 22, the temperature is expected to decrease by 0.6 – 1.8 degrees over the following 10-12 years.

Check out this alarming graphic from Stephen Strum of Frontier Weather Inc:

Lagged solar cycle length and temp, Stephen Strum, Frontier Weather Inc.

The snowed in Danes might like to see these projections, before they bet the rest of their climate eggs on a dangerous war against CO2.

From sins of omission to sins of commission

In 2007, solar scientist Mike Lockwood told the press about some findings he and Claus Frohlich had just published:

In 1985, the Sun did a U-turn in every respect. It no longer went in the right direction to contribute to global warming. We think it’s almost completely conclusive proof that the Sun does not account for the recent increases in global warming.

Actually, solar cycle 22, which began in 1986, was one of the most intense on record (part of the 20th century “grand maximum” that was the most active sun of the last 11 thousand years), and by almost every measure it was more intense than solar cycle 21. It had about the same sunspot numbers as cycle 21 (Hathaway 2006):

Sunspot prediction, NASA-Hathaway, 2006

Cycle 22 ran more solar flux than cycle 21 (via Nir Shaviv):

Cycle 22 was shorter than cycle 21 (from Joseph D’Aleo):

Solar cycle length, from Joseph D'Aleo

Perhaps most important is solar activity as measured (inversely) by the cosmic ray flux (which many think is mechanism by which solar activity drives climate). Here cycle 22 is THE most intense in the 60 year record, stronger even than cycle 19, the sunspot number king. From the Astronomical Society of Australia:

Neutron counts, Climaz Colorado, with sunspots, Univ. of Chicago

Some “U-turn in every respect.”

If Lockwood and Frohlich simply wanted to argue that the peak of the modern maximum of solar activity was between solar cycles 21 and 22 it would be unobjectionable. What difference does it make exactly when the peak was reached? But this is exactly where their real misdirection comes in. They claim that the peak of solar activity marks the point where any solar-climate effect should move from a warming to a cooling direction. Here is the abstract from their 2007 Royal Society article:

Abstract There is considerable evidence for solar influence on the Earth’s pre-industrial climate and the Sun may well have been a factor in post-industrial climate change in the first half of the last century. Here we show that over the past 20 years, all the trends in the Sun that could have had an influence on the Earth’s climate have been in the opposite direction to that required to explain the observed rise in global mean temperatures.

In order to assert the need for some other explanation for recent warming (CO2), they are claiming that near peak levels of solar activity cannot have a warming effect once they are past the peak of the trend—that it is not the level of solar activity that causes warming or cooling, but the change in the level—which is absurd.

Ken Gregory has the most precise answer to this foolishness. His “climate smoothing” graphic shows how the temperature of a heat sink actually responds to a fall-off in forcing:

Gregory, climate smoothing, contra-Lockwood

“Note that the temperature continues to rise for several years after the Sun’s forcing starts to decrease.”

Gregory’s numbers here are arbitrary. It could be many years before a fall off in forcing causes temperatures to start rising. In the case of solar cycle 22—where if solar forcing was actually past its peak, it had only fallen off a tiny bit—the only way temperature would not keep rising over the whole solar cycle is if global temperature had already equilibrated to peak solar forcing, which Lockwood and Frohlich make no argument for.

The obvious interpretation of the data is that we never did reach equilibrium temperatures, allowing grand maximum levels of solar activity to continue to warm the planet until the sun suddenly went quiet. Now there’s an update for Lockwood and Frohlich. How about telling the public when solar activity really did do “U” (October 2005).

Usoskin, Benestad, and a host of other solar scientists also mistakenly assume that temperature is driven by trend instead of level

Maybe it is because so much of the evidence for a sun-climate link comes from correlation studies, which look for contemporaneous changes in solar activity and temperature. Surely the scientists who are doing these studies all understand that there is no possible mechanism by which the rate of change in solar activity can itself drive temperature. If temperature changes when solar activity changes, it is because the new LEVEL of solar activity has a warming or cooling effect.

Still, a remarkable number of these scientists say things like this (from Usoskin et al. 2005):

The long term trends in solar data and in northern hemisphere temperatures have a correlation coefficient of about 0.7 — .8 at a 94% — 98% confidence level. …

… Note that the most recent warming, since around 1975, has not been considered in the above correlations. During these last 30 years the total solar irradiance, solar UV irradiance and cosmic ray flux has not shown any significant secular trend, so that at least this most warming episode must have another source.

Set aside the other problems with Usoskin’s study. (The temperature record he compared his solar data to is Michael Mann’s “hockey stick.”) How can he claim overwhelming evidence for a sun-climate link, while simultaneously insisting that steady peak levels of solar activity can’t create warming? If steady peak levels coincide with warming, it supposedly means the sun-climate link is now broken, so warming must be due to some other cause, like CO2.

It is hard to believe that scientists could make such a basic mistake, and Usoskin et al. certainly have powerful incentive to play dumb: to pretend that their correlation studies are finding physical mechanisms by which it is changes in the level of solar activity, rather than the levels themselves, that drive temperature. Just elide this important little nuance and presto, modern warming gets misattributed to CO2, allowing these researchers to stay on the good side of the CO2 alarmists who control their funding. Still, the old adage is often right: never attribute to bad motives what can just as well be explained by simple error.

And of course there can be both.

RealClimate exchange on trend vs. level confusion

Finally we arrive at the beginning, for me anyway. I first came across trend-level confusion 5 years ago at RealClimate. Rasmus Benestad was claiming that, because post 1960’s levels of Galactic Cosmic Radiation have not been trending downwards, GCR cannot be the cause of post-60’s warming.

But solar activity has been well above historical norms since the 40’s. It doesn’t matter what the trend is. The solar-wind is up. According to the GCR-cloud theory, that blows away the GCR, which blows away the clouds, creating warming. The solar wind doesn’t have to KEEP going up. It is the LEVEL that matters, not the trend. Holy cow. Benestad was looking at the wrong derivative (one instead of zero).

A few months later I took an opportunity to state my rebuttal as politely as possible, which elicited a response from Gavin Schmidt. Here is our 2005 exchange:

Me: Nice post, but the conclusion: “… solar activity has not increased since the 1950s and is therefore unlikely to be able to explain the recent warming,” would seem to be a non-sequitur.

What matters is not the trend in solar activity but the level. It does not have to KEEP going up to be a possible cause of warming. It just has to be high, and it has been since the forties.

Presumably you are looking at the modest drop in temperature in the fifties and sixties as inconsistent with a simple solar warming explanation, but it doesn’t have to be simple. Earth has heat sinks that could lead to measured effects being delayed, and other forcings may also be involved. The best evidence for causality would seem to be the long term correlations between solar activity and temperature change. Despite the differences between the different proxies for solar activity, isn’t the overall picture one of long term correlation to temperature?

[Response: You are correct in that you would expect a lag, however, the response to an increase to a steady level of forcing is a lagged increase in temperature and then a asymptotic relaxation to the eventual equilibrium. This is not what is seen. In fact, the rate of temperature increase is rising, and that is only compatible with a continuing increase in the forcing, i.e. from greenhouse gases. – gavin]

Gavin admits here that it’s the level of solar activity, not the trend in solar activity, that drives temperature. He’s just assuming that grand maximum levels of solar forcing should have bought the planet close to equilibrium temperature before post-80’s warming hit, but that assumption is completely unwarranted. If solar activity is driving climate (the hypothetical that Schmidt is analyzing), we know that it can push temperatures a lot higher than they are today. Surely Gavin knows about the Viking settlement of Greenland.

The rapid warming in the late 90’s could easily have been caused by the monster solar cycle 22 and there is no reason to think that another big cycle wouldn’t have brought more of the same. Two or three more cycle 22s and we might have been hauling out the longships, which would be great. No one has ever suggested that natural warming is anything but benign. Natural cooling bad, natural warming good. But alas, a longer grand maximum was not to be.

Gavin’s admission that it is level not trend that drives temperature change is important because ALL of the alarmist solar scientists are making the trend-level mistake. If they would admit that the correct framework is to look at the level of forcing and the lapse to equilibrium then they would be forced to look at the actual mechanisms of forcing and equilibration, instead of ignoring key forcings on the pretense that steady peak levels of forcing cannot cause warming.

That’s the big update that all of our solar scientists need to make. They need to stop tolerating this crazy charade that allows the CO2 alarmists to ignore the impact of decades of grand maximum solar activity and misattribute the resulting warming to fossil fuel burning. It is a scientific fraud of the most disastrous proportions, giving the eco-lunatics the excuse they need to unplug the modern world.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

342 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
January 5, 2011 10:49 am

Hi Stephen wilde
Great input. ( January 5, 2011 at 8:37 am )
To your point:
• Nighttime temperatures increased more than daytime (inconsistent with solar forcing; consistent with GHG forcing)
I would comment:
UHI – is known primarly to cause night temperature rise and certainly appears a likely contributor to this phenomenon. Again a problem with temperature data – not Solar theory.
K.R. Frank

January 5, 2011 11:29 am

Leif Svalgaard says:
January 5, 2011 at 9:54 am
What is your learned opinion of the recent emergence (around 1996/97) of Siberia’ peak? Is this new magnetic pole?
This is the composite result of convection currents from all over the inner core many thousands of miles away. There is no such thing as ‘the magnetic pole’. What we see is the combined effect of many convection cells. As you move away the details gets smeared out. A cosmic ray coming upon the Earth will not even see these irregularities, but rather a nice dipole [somewhere North of Canada for the moment].

January 5, 2011 12:11 pm

There is no such thing as ‘the magnetic pole’.
Well, well that is a revelation, do I need to say more? For years you tried to convince me that is somewhere around Ellesmere Island. What about one near Antarctica, not a magnetic pole?
somewhere North of Canada for the moment
You are getting dated, North Canada had its day, its finished about 10 years ago. Onwards and forward to Siberian taiga !
Soon we’ll be harmonizing our views on Sun-Earth magnetic link. You got a head start on Mike Lockwood, I will be emailing him this and the others on the list if I can get their email addresses.
I like the idea that even top experts can learn something from an amateur.
I feel sorry for poor Dr. Hathaway, just wouldn’t listen to the obvious.
I am off now to the other solar thread. See you there.

January 5, 2011 12:12 pm

Frank and Robuk,
Thanks for the extra input as regards UHI and I agree.
I wouldn’t ignore increased zonality though. Possibly a combination.
Either way it shows that there is a good explanation other than AGW and that the phenomenon is not a problem for solar based theories.

kramer
January 5, 2011 3:09 pm

Leif Svalgaard says, January 3, 2011 at 10:23 am
don’t believe everything you find on the Internet” 🙂
Understood but Nature.com also had a similar story:
According to our reconstruction, the level of solar activity during the past 70 years is exceptional, and the previous period of equally high activity occurred more than 8,000 years ago. We find that during the past 11,400 years the Sun spent only of the order of 10% of the time at a similarly high level of magnetic activity and almost all of the earlier high-activity periods were shorter than the present episode.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v431/n7012/full/nature02995.html#B1

January 5, 2011 4:28 pm

kramer says:
January 5, 2011 at 3:09 pm
Understood but Nature.com also had a similar story
When you cherry pick, be sure to pick all the cherries:
http://www.leif.org/EOS/muscheler05nat_nature04045.pdf

oneuniverse
January 5, 2011 7:40 pm

kramer says: Understood but Nature.com also had a similar story
Leif Svalgaard says: When you cherry pick, be sure to pick all the cherries
Dr. Svalgaard, I’m disappointed (if no longer surprised) that you’re again promoting Muscheler et al.’s criticism of Solanki et al. without mentioning that Solanki et al.’s reply was printed in the same issue of Nature, and that Solanki et al. showed that the Muscheler et al. analysis was incorrectly based on normalized and detrended data, which, if corrected, resulted in an analysis much in agreement with Solanki et al.’s original paper.
Solanki et al. also noted that “their large values of [the cosmic ray modulation strength] contradict the integrated cosmic-ray flux measured by the abundance of 44Ti (half-life of about 60 years) in meteorites9,10 that have fallen since AD 1766. The 44Ti activity in meteorites is completely independent of transport effects and redistribution in the Earth’s atmosphere, so it provides direct measurements of past cosmic ray flux.”
Muscheler et al. have made no further comment, so the Solanki et al. result remains.
We had much this conversation almost a year ago. Like kramer, I mentioned Solanki et al. , you countered with Muscheler et al.’s critique – I then pointed out the above.
Your casual and wrong accusation of cherry-picking against kramer is, needless to say, also offensive.

January 5, 2011 8:12 pm

oneuniverse says:
January 5, 2011 at 7:40 pm
Solanki et al. also noted that “their large values of [the cosmic ray modulation strength] contradict the integrated cosmic-ray flux measured by the abundance of 44Ti (half-life of about 60 years) in meteorites9,10 that have fallen since AD 1766.
This is based on very few falls with large uncertainties. Even the half-life of Ti44 was not well known.
Steinhilber et al http://www.leif.org/EOS/2009JA014193.pdf Figure 7 shows clearly that the main conclusion of Muscheler stands, namely that the sun has been as active as now several times in the near past. Compare 1730s with 1950s and 1980s on the graph. Several other recent papers e.g. Berggren et al also state that the recent maximum is not extraordinary. Geomagnetic data e.g. slide 5 of http://www.leif.org/research/AGU%20Fall%202010%20SH53B-03.pdf also shows that cycle 4 was on par with cycle 19, etc. Rather than fling around dueling links and references, I prefer to investigate myself the matter carefully. This may disappoint various believers in long-held dogmas.

January 5, 2011 9:48 pm

oneuniverse says:
January 5, 2011 at 7:40 pm
Muscheler et al. have made no further comment, so the Solanki et al. result remains.
Inverse cherry-picking on your part, ignoring e.g. http://www.leif.org/EOS/muscheler07qsr.pdf
“Identification of the causes of past climate change requires detailed knowledge of one of the most important natural factors—solar forcing. Prior to the period of direct solar observations, radionuclide abundances in natural archives provide the best-known proxies for changes in solar activity. Here we present two independent reconstructions of changes in solar activity during the last 1000 yr, which are inferred from 10Be and 14C records. We analyse the tree-ring 14C data (SHCal, IntCal04 from 1000 to 1510 AD and annual data from 1511 to 1950 AD) and four 10Be records from Greenland ice cores (Camp Century, GRIP, Milcent and Dye3) together with two 10Be records from Antarctic ice cores (Dome Concordia and South Pole). In general, the 10Be and 14C records exhibit good agreement that allows us to obtain reliable estimates of past solar magnetic modulation of the radionuclide production rates. Differences between 10Be records from Antarctica and Greenland indicate that climatic changes have influenced the deposition of 10Be during some periods of the last 1000 yr. The radionuclide-based reconstructions of past changes in solar activity do not always agree with the sunspot record, which indicates that the coupling between those proxies is not as close as has been sometimes assumed. The tree-ring 14C record and 10Be from Antarctica indicate that recent solar activity is high but not exceptional with respect to the last 1000 yr.

ge0050
January 5, 2011 10:54 pm

• Nighttime temperatures increased more than daytime (inconsistent with solar forcing; consistent with GHG forcing)
GHG is not consistent with increased nightime temperatures. In real greenhouses, temperatures are higher during the day and lower during the night as compared to the surroundings.
What is consistent with increased nighttime temperatures is change due to land use. 150 years ago only 4 percent of the earth’s surface was used for agriculture. Now with mechanized farming the figure is 37%, with 3% of the earth’s surface now urbanized.

oneuniverse
January 6, 2011 3:02 am

Leif: Rather than fling around dueling links and references, I prefer to investigate myself the matter carefully.
So, based on your careful investigation, you chose to direct kramer to a single paper, the flawed Muscheler et al. 2005 reply. It’s like recommending MBH98/99 – kind of absurd, no?

January 6, 2011 5:48 am

oneuniverse says:
January 6, 2011 at 3:02 am
So, based on your careful investigation, you chose to direct kramer to a single paper, the flawed Muscheler et al. 2005 reply.
kramer cited one paper. I cited one for balance. And I wouldn’t call it flawed as it is consistent with several other recent papers.

Robuk
January 6, 2011 7:10 am

kramer says:
January 5, 2011 at 3:09 pm
Leif Svalgaard says, January 3, 2011 at 10:23 am
“don’t believe everything you find on the Internet” 🙂
Understood but Nature.com also had a similar story:
“According to our reconstruction, the level of solar activity during the past 70 years is exceptional, and the previous period of equally high activity occurred more than 8,000 years ago. We find that during the past 11,400 years the Sun spent only of the order of 10% of the time at a similarly high level of magnetic activity and almost all of the earlier high-activity periods were shorter than the present episode.”
Here is the PDF.
http://cc.oulu.fi/~usoskin/personal/nature02995.pdf
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/03/14/dr-nicolas-scaffeta-summarizes-why-the-anthropogenic-theory-proposed-by-the-ipcc-should-be-questioned/
The warmers could not fault Dr Scafetta`s paper so they tried I beleive, to destroy the proxy data he used 10be and 14C.

Robuk
January 6, 2011 7:14 am

ge0050 says:
January 5, 2011 at 10:54 pm
• Nighttime temperatures increased more than daytime (inconsistent with solar forcing; consistent with GHG forcing)
GHG is not consistent with increased nightime temperatures.
What is consistent with increased nighttime temperatures is change due to land use. 150 years ago only 4 percent of the earth’s surface was used for agriculture. Now with mechanized farming the figure is 37%, with 3% of the earth’s surface now urbanized.
And where are the majority of the weather stations situated.

Robuk
January 6, 2011 7:20 am

Is there a study using T min only, this measure appears to be the one that shows an increase, it is also the measure that is linked to UHI.
If day time temps are not increasing, the rise in T min can only come from more retained heat from buildings tarmac etc, if T min rural is different to T min urban this would indicate a definite UHI forcing.
Stop using average temperature.

Dave Springer
January 6, 2011 7:47 am

Bob Tisdale says:
January 4, 2011 at 4:53 am
Cassanders says: January 4, 2011 at 4:04 am.
“I don’t believe you answered my question. How would the pulse remain intact after 1600 years?”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation
The longest known route for thermohaline circulation upwells in the southern Pacific after 1600 year transit time.
Wind driven warm surface currents make the trip from tropics to pole in just a few years. It’s the cold deep currents that move so slowly.
The Gulf Stream (a warm surface current) flows at 2 meters per second on the southern end and slows as it sinks to a terminal speed of about 0.1 meters per second at the northern end.

January 6, 2011 8:46 am

Robuk says:
” • Nighttime temperatures increased more than daytime (inconsistent with solar forcing; consistent with GHG forcing)
GHG is not consistent with increased nightime temperatures.”
Yes, Robuk, In addition find it very optimistic indeed that some people can feel so sure how CO2 should work so and so in night time.. when they cant show real data from ICE cores or the like that actually clearly shows a CO2 effect at all.
Leif and others: We DO agree that the solar activity has been larger in the period 1940-2000 than in the last several hundreds years, right? So never mind what we have a Solar activity level high compared to the last many hundred years and thus we shold not at all be surpriced that more decades with a steady high Solar input is accompanied by a temperature increase 1940-2000. So this particular argument against Solar theory appears weak indeed.
K.R. Frank

January 6, 2011 9:06 am

Frank Lansner says:
January 6, 2011 at 8:46 am
Leif and others: We DO agree that the solar activity has been larger in the period 1940-2000 than in the last several hundreds years, right?
No, that is the point, it has not. Several decades of the 19th and 18th centuries were just as active.

January 6, 2011 9:38 am

Leif Svalgaard says:
January 6, 2011 at 9:06 am
“Leif and others: We DO agree that the solar activity has been larger in the period 1940-2000 than in the last several hundreds years, right?”
No, that is the point, it has not. Several decades of the 19th and 18th centuries were just as active.

I have collected a few graphs to show this: http://www.leif.org/research/Decades%20with%20Equal%20Activity.pdf

January 6, 2011 10:00 am

“Leif Svalgaard says:
January 6, 2011 at 9:06 am
Frank Lansner says:
January 6, 2011 at 8:46 am
Leif and others: We DO agree that the solar activity has been larger in the period 1940-2000 than in the last several hundreds years, right?
No, that is the point, it has not. Several decades of the 19th and 18th centuries were just as active”
That 60 year period (six decades) taken as a whole was more ‘active’ than any other 60 year period since 1600.
Several individual decades or lesser runs of decades of higher activity may have occurred since 1600 however.
Anyhow since 1600 the sun has become more active overall and over the same period the world has fitfully recovered from the LIA.
Furthermore from 1000 to 1600 it seems that the sun became less active overall and during that period the world descended into the LIA.

January 6, 2011 10:17 am

Stephen Wilde says:
January 6, 2011 at 10:00 am
That 60 year period (six decades) taken as a whole was more ‘active’ than any other 60 year period since 1600.
Except that it was only a tiny bit more active, and was split by 13 years of low cycle 20.
Anyhow since 1600 the sun has become more active overall and over the same period the world has fitfully recovered from the LIA.
The recovery by the Sun was over by 1730s

January 6, 2011 11:24 am

Stephen Wilde says:
January 6, 2011 at 10:00 am
That 60 year period (six decades)
is also stretching the period a bit. It was more like from 1945-1996 as cycle 23 was already on the way down, so make it about five decades, rather than six.

oneuniverse
January 6, 2011 12:19 pm

Leif and others: We DO agree that the solar activity has been larger in the period 1940-2000 than in the last several hundreds years, right?
Frank, from what I’ve seen, the terrestrial deposition of cosmogenic isotopes mostly record a decrease in concentration from ~1750 to the present (corresponding with increasing IMF, ceteris paribus), preceded by a period relatively higher concentration from ~1400-1750 (encompassing the Maunder and Sporer mimima).
There’s a decrease in concentration around 1790 (preceding the Dalton minimum) which in some data sets is similar to the 20th C. levels (in others it is higher), but it’s of shorter duration.

oneuniverse
January 6, 2011 12:34 pm

Leif: kramer cited one paper. I cited one for balance. And I wouldn’t call it flawed as it is consistent with several other recent papers.
The Muscheler et al. analysis is seriously flawed and shouldn’t be relied upon – whether the flawed results are consistent with the results in some other papers is surely irrelevant.
Leif: Steinhilber et al http://www.leif.org/EOS/2009JA014193.pdf Figure 7 shows clearly that the main conclusion of Muscheler stands, namely that the sun has been as active as now several times in the near past.
Why are you relying upon the Steinhilber reconstruction which you’d earlier rejected as using an invalid calibration (in the earlier referenced Scaffeta thread) ? It was rejected by you in the context of their finding against the proposed Svalgaard and Cliver 4.6 nT floor for the solar-wind magnetic field strength, but acceptable to you now when it helps make your point here?
I noticed that Cliver has abandoned the 4.6 nT number, and is now arguing for a ~ 2.8 nT floor. He writes “In both 2008 and 2009, the notion of such a [~ 4.6 nT] floor was undercut by annual B averages of ~ 4 nT. ” (“The Floor in the Solar Wind Magnetic Field Revisited”, Cliver & Ling.) It would be inappropriate to praise Steinhilber et al’s paper for also finding against the 4.6 nT figure, since their analysis was wrong (re: your defense of the incorrect Muscheler et al. analysis).
Leif: Berggren et al also state that the recent maximum is not extraordinary.
I assume you’re referring to Bergrenn et al. 2009, “A 600-year annual 10Be record from the NGRIP ice core, Greenland”, which concludes : “We observe that although recent 10Be flux in NGRIP is low, there is no indication of unusually high recent solar activity in relation to other parts of the investigated period.”
At the same time, in their Fig. 1 , the 10Be flux is lower in latter half of the 20th century than at any other point in their 600 year record.
Leif: Even the half-life of Ti44 was not well known.
Solanki et al. 2003 refer to a 44Ti half-life of about 60 years. In 2006, Ahmad et al. (“Improved measurement of the Ti44 half-life from a 14-year long study”) calculated the half-life to be 58.9 +/- 0.3 years.

Dave Springer
January 6, 2011 12:45 pm

Robuk says:
January 6, 2011 at 7:14 am
“Now with mechanized farming the figure is 37%”
That’s environmentalist propaganda and even so there’s detail left out. 11% is actually cultivated and the remainder is used to graze livestock. Virgin forest covers another 37% and the remainder is unsuitable.
If the global warming climate boffins’ claim was actually happening there’d be vast tracts of frozen land being transformed into arable land and lengthening growing seasons everywhere else. Alas, it just ain’t so. But at least production is up and water requirements down substantially due to higher atmospheric CO2 which goes to show that every global climate disrupted cloud has a silver lining.

Verified by MonsterInsights