Team ugliness – a call to get a skeptics PhD thesis revoked

Guest post by Dr. Patrick Michaelsoriginally on Forbes, reposted here at the request of the author.

Climategate II: An Open Letter to the Director of the National Center for Atmospheric Research

To: Dr. Roger Wakimoto

Director, National Center for Atmospheric Research

Boulder, Colorado

Roger, you are the head of what is perhaps the most prestigious atmospheric science laboratory on the planet, and, as such, I presume that you will always go the extra mile to protect the reputation of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and its related University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR).

I’m sure you have seen and discussed with your staff many of the “Climategate” emails released first in November, 2009, and then more recently, earlier this month.

Everyone agrees that the tone and content of many of them is a bit shrill and occasionally intolerant (kind of like University faculty meetings), but there is one repeating thread, by one of your most prestigious employees, Dr. Tom Wigley, that is far beyond the pale of most academic backbiting.

The revoking of my doctorate, the clear objective of Tom’s email, is the professional equivalent of the death penalty. I think it needs to be brought to your attention, because the basic premise underlying his machinations is patently and completely false. Dr Wigley is known as a careful scientist, but he certainly was careless here.

The global circulation of this email has caused unknown damage to my reputation. Also, please note that all communications from Dr. Wigley to his colleagues on this matter were on the NCAR/UCAR server.

The relevant email was sent to Rick Piltz, a UCAR employee at the time, and copied to Michael Mann, Pennsylvania State University, James Hansen and Gavin Schmidt, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Benjamin Santer, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,the late Steven Schneider, Stanford University, and several other very prominent climate scientists. The influence of these individuals is manifest and evidence of a very serious attempt to destroy my credential.

What Dr. Wigley wrote to this group of individuals was:

“You may be interesting [sic] in this snippet of information about Pat Michaels. Perhaps the University of Wisconsin ought to open up a public comment period to decide whether Pat Michaels, PhD needs re-assessing?”

As I said, revoking the doctorate of a scientist is the equivalent of imposing a professional death penalty. Unfortunately, Wigley’s rationale for organizing this effort was based upon a pure fabrication.

Wigley’s call for a “re-assessing” of my dissertation stems from his contention that I either misled my academic committee or my committee was guilty of professional malfeasance, both very serious charges. (His email is reproduced in its entirety at the end of this note.)

My 1979 dissertation was a model relating interannual and interseasonal variations in the shape of the atmosphere, as reflected by the surface barometric pressure field, to variations crop yields across the United States.

In this type of model, one usually factors out the technological component of crop yields (which, incidentally, explains much more variation than any climate component) and then models the remaining variation in yield with the climate factor, in order to “isolate” the climate component. The explained variance of this residual yield by climate is generally about 50%, which is very close to the average I found for corn, soybeans, and winter wheat.

Wigley said in his email that I claimed to have explained 95% of the variation in crop yield, which he said “would have been a remarkable results” [sic]. In fact, there is no such statement, nor anything related to that, in my dissertation. He went on to state that I did this by simultaneously modelling the technological, spatial and climate components of agricultural yield, instead of separating out technological components first.

Despite his claimed familiarity with my dissertation, I did no such thing. Table 2, beginning on page 154 of the dissertation, is labelled “DETRENDING FUNCTIONS”, and gives the equations that were used to remove the technological component. All subsequent analyses were on the detrended data.

Wigley then alleged that either I lied to my examination committee, or that they were buffoons. It is worth noting that the committee included the famously tough Reid Bryson, father of the modern notion that human beings could change the climate.

“Apparently, none of Michaels’ thesis examiners noticed this. We are left with wondering whether this was deliberate misrepresentation by Michaels, or whether it was simply ignorance.”

This came to my attention with the release of the first East Anglia emails in November, 2009. This email and other, new statements by him about my dissertation have surfaced with the recent release of additional emails, and his letter about my dissertation is again being circulated around the web.

I think you will agree that it is time for Dr. Wigley to state that his attempt to generate a movement to remove my doctorate was based upon clear errors on his part, errors that he should have known about, and yet he has let the record stand for over two years. What he “discovered years ago” was certainly not in my dissertation.

Roger, I don’t think you would put up with this, and I think Wigley must be compelled to come forth. Remember that he did this on NCAR’s (and the taxpayer’s) dime.

Thank you very much.

Patrick J. Michaels

Cato Institute and

George Mason University

From: Tom Wigley [EMAIL REDACTED]

To: Rick Piltz [EMAIL REDACTED]

Subject: Re: FYI–”Phil Jones and Ben Santer respond to CEI and Pat Michaels attack on temperature data record”

Date: Tue, 13 Oct 2009 19:45:45 -0600

Cc: [E-MAILS REDACTED]

Dear folks,

You may be interesting in this snippet of information about Pat Michaels. Perhaps the University of Wisconsin ought to open up a public comment period to decide whether Pat Michaels, PhD needs re-assessing?

Michaels’ PhD was, I believe, supervised by Reid Bryson. It dealt with statistical (regression-based) modeling of crop-climate relationships. In his thesis, Michaels claims that his statistical model showed that weather/climate variations could explain 95% of the inter-annual variability in crop yields. Had this been correct, it would have been a remarkable results. Certainly, it was at odds with all previous studies of crop-climate relationships, which generally showed that weather/climate could only explain about 50% of inter-annual yield variability.

How did result come about? The answer is simple. In Michaels’ regressions he included a trend term. This was at the time a common way to account for the effects of changing technology on yield. It turns out that the trend term accounts for 90% of the variability, so that, in Michaels’ regressions, weather/climate explains just 5 of the remaining 10%. In other words, Michaels’ claim that weather/climate explains 95% of the variability is completely bogus.

Apparently, none of Michaels’ thesis examiners noticed this. We are left with wondering whether this was deliberate misrepresentation by Michaels, or whether it was simply ignorance.

As an historical note, I discovered this many years ago when working with Dick Warrick and Tu Qipu on crop-climate modeling. We used a spatial regression method, which we developed for the wheat belt of southwestern Western Australia. We carried out similar analyses for winter wheat in the USA, but never published the results.

Wigley, T.M.L. and Tu Qipu, 1983: Crop-climate modelling using spatial patterns of yield and climate: Part 1, Background and an example from Australia. Journal of Climate and Applied Meteorology 22, 1831–1841

There never was a “Part 2″.

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gnomish
December 2, 2011 11:32 am

so maybe economic vampirism ain’t all bunnies and flowers?

Wil
December 2, 2011 11:38 am

It really amazes me how the so called “climate scientists” get any work done at all – if anyone were to actually read all the ClimateGate 1 and 2 emails from this groups they seem to be spending ALL their time trolling the web specifically looking for anyone who disagrees with them as well as trolling ALL the media outlets for any sign of disagreement, managing the various “science” magazines and who does and does NOT get published, as well as constantly looking for more funding. WUWT and Steve know the reach of these guys better than most.
Which leads to the question – then who actually does all the grunt work?

Kay
December 2, 2011 11:43 am

Didn’t Wigley threaten to beat up Michaels in the first batch of emails?

DirkH
December 2, 2011 11:46 am

Phil. says:
December 2, 2011 at 10:21 am
“crosspatch says:
December 2, 2011 at 9:23 am
“Misrepresenting the work of scientists is a serious offense.” — Michael Mann 23 October 2009 4666.txt
Indeed, unfortunately it’s something that Michaels engages in!”
Phil, you just showed that you understand as little of science as Michael Mann.

davidmhoffer
December 2, 2011 11:48 am

Louis Hooffstetter says:
December 2, 2011 at 9:43 am
Sue Wigley and in the process depose Mann, Hansen, Schmidt, Santer, and every other “prominent climate scientist” copied on this email. Force them to tell the truth under oath, but be sure to wear your toughest foul weather gear.>>>
I recommend clothes pins also. For your nose…..
Seriously, with all the dirt being exposed, and all the potential law suits that evidence is turning up to support, one can only wonder…. how long before one of “the team” defects, cuts a deal, and throws the rest of them under the bus to save their own skin?

Dale Thompson
December 2, 2011 11:51 am

Lawyer up!

DonS
December 2, 2011 11:54 am

This was Wigley’s email address ten minutes ago: : wigley@ucar.edu
Probably one of many, but time is at a premium.

Mac the Knife
December 2, 2011 12:02 pm

Dr. Michaels,
Hail, Fellow Badger!
I’m a ‘two time offender’ (BS/MS), out of the Metallurgical Engineering department. Is there anything your brother UW – Madison alums might do to help you redress these back stabbing slurs?
On Wisconsin!
MtK
PS: Big Ten title football game this Saturday against Michigan State – Go BADGERS!!!!!!!!

December 2, 2011 12:03 pm

Aren’t we missing something here? The Malfesence of MANN et.al. actually demands the retraction of his (and their) Phd’s by the spirit of the granting of Phd’s.
Turn about is fair play.
Max
PS: Their Phd’s are worthless anyway. These folks produce NOTHING worthwhile for humanity.

RichieP
December 2, 2011 12:04 pm

“Wil says:
December 2, 2011 at 11:38 am
It really amazes me how the so called “climate scientists” get any work done at all …
Which leads to the question – then who actually does all the grunt work?”
Same people who always do the dull leg work in any department, the grad students and postdocs and, above all, the technicians, the Harrys of this world. Imagine being a young scientist or, just as dangerous, a lowly technician in an environment like this, especially if you had the slightest doubt about The Cause. You know you’d never get any work or be bullied out if they knew. That’s what the ‘consensus’ is really about, people far too scared to speak up. And it stinks.

Editor
December 2, 2011 12:12 pm

Julian Wiliams in Wales says:
December 2, 2011 at 10:39 am

… This behaviour is dirty and disreputable and a stain on all scientists. It is up to the profession at large to stand up for Dr Michaels. Enough is enough. These guys need to pulled out by their peers and asked to explain themselves or apologise and make amends..

New to climate science, are you? The odds of mainstream climate scientists saying anything to one of their peers, much less asking someone “to explain themselves and apologize”, are zero. Not small. Zero. They’re all too dedicated to “the cause”.
w.

APACHEWHOKNOWS
December 2, 2011 12:16 pm

Tax them do not retract their PHD’s.
They are in the evil 1% after all, evidence, the grants.
Any PHD with a record of supporting AGW gets a life time “Sir” tax of say 50% over all the other PHD’s rate.

SteveSadlov
December 2, 2011 12:25 pm

No doubt a lawsuit (or series of them) must now be brewing.

KnR
December 2, 2011 12:29 pm

Again not much of surprise, we know their a set of dirty bast**d willing to attack any who ‘cross them’ for some time , it would be truly funny if their downfall came about becasue of their own ego and their inability to understand the control they have of their own world means nothing outside of it especially in a court of law.

jorgekafkazar
December 2, 2011 12:29 pm

“….Wigley is one of the less reprehensible scoundrels….” –Smokey
Which is why he probably will apologize…
“Misrepresenting the work of scientists is a serious offense.” — Michael Mann
…and say that he was misinformed by someone he will refuse to name..

December 2, 2011 12:37 pm

Mac The Knife–
U rah rah!
All my committee members are either dead or not at Madison any more. My guess is that NCAR/Wigley/Wakimoto are meeting right now and trying to figure what to do…and maybe deleting emails like crazy. I think they can see the writing on the wall and they probably are not going to have a good weekend when they think about all the implications, and game where this is inevitably headed.
Nothing really for us to do…just watch Bucky win and enjoy the weekend. If Climategate 1 and 2 are any guide, they will do all the heavy lifting for us.
You do know Tom Wigley was Ben Santer’s PhD advisor, right?

December 2, 2011 12:42 pm

Actually an anecdote is worthwhile. Back in the late 1970s, Wigley came to Madison and stopped in the suite of graduate student offices that I was in, asked me a few questions about my work, said a few words, and then left in some kind of huff. I remember at the time, one of my colleagues, Paul Kostrow, commented “Man, what’s with that guy, he think’s his doesn’t stink!”

Philip Peake
December 2, 2011 12:46 pm

The reference to medical study results reminded me…
A long time ago, I worked for a well-known pharmaceutical company research center (in Paris).
One day, one of the researchers cam to my office to ask if it were possible to write an editor for his raw-result data.
I told him it was possible, but why would he need to do that?
Basically, the answer was that when he plotted the results, there was a pronounced and unexplainable blip in the graph. He wanted to remove the data points that caused it.
I asked if it were not more reasonable to run some more experiments, and the added data would either smooth out the blip, or make it me apparent. In the case that it became apparent, there would probably be more work to do to explain why.
He didn’t like that answer, mumbled stuff about expense, time and the need to get the results completed and looking good for submission to the various EU and US drug agencies.
I (of course) said I wouldn’t help, unless he could persuade one of the directors to put a request in writing. I suspect he found someone else to do it.

December 2, 2011 12:47 pm

I said something similar on Willis’ thread earlier; I cannot imagine what it must have been like to see your “worst paranoid fantasies” turn out to be not paranoid enough. Sure, since you are at Cato and GMU you probably expected that the Team was black-balling you for committees, making sure the “right” people reviewed your papers, countering your “industry supported dis-information” with their rapid response element (those helpful volunteers, NGOs, and media Team members). Who could conceivably imagine that they would maliciously lie about your 30 year old dissertation in secret to the leadership of your profession? I feel like I should start looking into tin-foil hats.

December 2, 2011 12:48 pm

This goes beyond suppression of peer reviewed literature. Dr. Michaels is both diplomatic and correct. Wrigley should be called before a professional review panel and stripped of all titles and honors. He has no honor and his conduct indicates he is undeserving of any titles.

Roy
December 2, 2011 12:48 pm

I hope that we will soon learn what the response of Roger Wakimoto is. Since the disgraceful attempt by “the Team” to destroy Patrick Michaels’ reputation and career have been made public the response of Roger Wakimoto to Michaels’ message should also be made public. Anything less than a outspoken denunciation of the disgraceful behaviour of “the Team” will merely compound the original offence.
Furthermore grant awarding bodies should be very careful in judging any future requests for funding from people who were party to the plot to destroy Michaels’ career. It is hard to see any justification for the award of public money to people who cannot be trusted to undertake their research in an honest and unbiased way.

December 2, 2011 1:01 pm

This sentence fragment As an historical note, I discovered in an email tells me everything I need to know about this guy as a person.

davidmhoffer
December 2, 2011 1:16 pm

Donations to a legal fund? Do we need that? OK, I mean does Pat need that….
This all happened in the United States? The most litigious nation on earth? Where uber sharp legal firms extract million dollar settlements out of McDonalds because a little old lady spilled coffee on herself and argued that McDonald’s hadn’t taken the appropriate steps to warn her that it was hot? Land of the lawyer who bought a case of cigars, insured them, smoked them, and then won a court award against the insurance company by arguing that the cigars were clearly lost due to fire, and his insurance covered loss by fire? (Of course the downside was they got him charged with multiple counts of arson, one for each cigar he had testified in a court of law to having lit and smoked). There’s even a law firm in the U.S. that reportedly searches for bankrupt companies that they can buy out for pennies but have actual IP that other companies have been using and so can be sued for violating the bankrupt company’s patent rights (in fact, I think that’s what the recent big law suite against RIM was founded upon).
Sounds to me like there’s a lot of good law suits hanging around. Summarize the detail, send a letter to the top ten or so litigation firms, and ask them to make an offer. One or more of ’em will have a hot shot to two…or four hundred… that will take it on and fund it for a cut of the pay out.
Isn’t America wonderful?

pokerguy
December 2, 2011 1:22 pm

I think most [SNIP: Policy -REP] can pretty much agree that the real enemy is the profoundly negligent MSM. The story is right here, in front of their eyes. A magnificent piece of low-hanging fruit. The story of the century. One way to break through would be to convince some journalist of note, one with substantial liberal cred, that he has an absolutely golden opportunity. CAn you imagine the job a Matt Taibbi could do on Michael Mann and co.? That he writes for Rolling Stone…an as in-the-tank progressive publication as I can think of…is all to the good.
I’ve written him a few emails which I’m certain he’ll ignore. But it can’t hurt to try.

Dave Wendt
December 2, 2011 1:26 pm

Phil. says:
December 2, 2011 at 10:21 am
crosspatch says:
December 2, 2011 at 9:23 am
“Misrepresenting the work of scientists is a serious offense.” — Michael Mann 23 October 2009 4666.txt
“Indeed, unfortunately it’s something that Michaels engages in!”
For example?