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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Goldie
December 2, 2011 3:43 pm

This email appears to be pure malicious gossip. The thing that his friends need to be asking themselves is – What is he saying about me when he thinks I won’t know about it?

mikemUK
December 2, 2011 4:06 pm

Out of curiousity, I just googled Wigley’s entry in Wikip. It’s pretty skinny, got no particularly recent statements of achievement.
Except at the bottom:
“This page was last modified on 25 November 2011 at 16.50”
Has anyone any idea what may have necessitated an amendment? – or what it was?
[REPLY: on the wikipedia page click on the “view history” tab. THAT page will allow you to view versions. You may find it interesting reading, seeing what was cut out. -REP]

davidmhoffer
December 2, 2011 4:14 pm

timg56;
These were just some of the facts the jury heard and the size of the settlement was based almost entirely on the degree of arrogance and unreasonableness of McDonalds, as determined by the jury. In otherwords, this really isn’t a good example to use.>>>
You make coffee by boiling water. Period. Spin it any way you want, you make coffee by boiling water. It was a nice spin story all right, and she clearly had a sympathetic jury, else the argument that she didn’t know coffee was hot would be just silly.
In fact it is a great story. A slick lawyer somehow convinced a jury of regular folks (plus you it seems) that people shouldn’t be responsible for knowing that coffee is hot and to be carefull not to spill it on themselves. If you think that lawyer did a great job representing her, you might want to check out the rest of the story. The aware (over $1 million) was over turned on appeal, and the damages reduced. I’ve forgotten to how much. But the reduced award was less than her legal fees.
I’ve since lost track of it, but last I heard, he was trying to extract $100K from her. Nice guy.

Glenn
December 2, 2011 4:20 pm

I wouldn’t lose any sleep if federal funding of NCAR was cut by half or more. It is about time to slim down on all these tea leaf gazing freeloaders.

oMan
December 2, 2011 4:33 pm

There is more than enough here to wonder about possible actions for defamation, tortious interference with contractual relations, false claims (was this email written on taxpayer time?) and simple violation of contract: if Wigley’s agreement with UCAR/NCAR required him to act in a professional and ethical manner, how does this kind of baseless and vindictive agitation square with such an obligation?
In general I am not eager to see the law used to discipline shabby conduct. But this is about 6 standard deviations out. It will be interesting to read what (if anything) Dr. Wakimoto offers in reply. The question cannot rest where it is now. Stay the course!

davidmhoffer
December 2, 2011 4:34 pm

DirkH;
We have to destroy them; in the US, in Germany.>>>
Might stink up the country side. How about the ocean instead?

Steve in SC
December 2, 2011 4:51 pm

It is pretty evident that in the case of the team, PHD (hereafter referred to in lower case only) does mean piled higher and deeper.
I too had to abandon my quest for such because I would be too prone to violence.
I am also a fair shot.

December 2, 2011 4:53 pm


I make coffee by boiling water. So the coffee is hot. True.
You make coffee by boiling water. So the coffee is also hot. True.
But did you know that you can make coffee by making the water REALLY REALLY REALLY HOT? Boiling hot water is dangerous. REALLY REALLY HOT water is REALLY REALLY REALLY dangerous. At a certain temperature, the water is DEADLY dangerous. True.
Hence the woman’s injuries. Hence the judgement. Hence that McDonalds no longer serves REALLY REALLY REALLY HOT coffee…
There are plenty of foolish judgements made by foolish juries and foolish judges – this isn’t one of them.

peter_ga
December 2, 2011 4:55 pm

I take it this is not really a question of the science behind the thesis, rather members of the team communicating with each other about possible ways to destroy a professional enemy by attacking their qualifications. If that is so, then it just shows how deep the conflict is. But suppose the situation was reversed. Would it be wrong for a group of skeptics to privately communicate about possible ways to revert the qualifications of prominent warmists?
Professional shit-fights can be very damaging. Lots of lies get told to decision makers. You have to stand your ground and prove your worth.

Bad Manners
December 2, 2011 4:57 pm

FWIW
the piece cut out of Wigley’s Wiki entry was:
“Wigley is also alleged to have authored a Climategate 1.0 email asserting that his fellow Climategate scientists “must get rid of” the editor for a peer-reviewed science journal because he published some papers contradicting assertions of a global warming crisis.”
The editor’s IP is 98.230.86.114

Dave Wendt
December 2, 2011 5:10 pm

timg56 says:
December 2, 2011 at 2:44 pm
I seem to recall reading at the time that the reason the woman’s injuries were as severe as they were was because before driving away from the window she placed the cup of hot coffee between her thighs in close proximity to her crotch. Is it your position that, if you sell someone a product and they immediately do something with it that almost guarantees that they will be injured, you have a legal responsibility to defray their medical expenses when that injury eventuates. McDonald’s was entirely correct to deny her claim and the fact that she received any damages at all is further proof that tort law in the U.S. is just a tarted up extortion racket.

Brian G Valentine
December 2, 2011 5:10 pm

Where’s Roger Rabbit, aka Peter Cottontail? I’d like to see his take on this.
So far this second batch of emails has revealed a race to the absolute bottom of some people who I didn’t think could get any lower if they tried.
I was wrong! And prior to this I didn’t even handicap Wigley for the race!

rabbit
December 2, 2011 5:26 pm

I have never heard of a university revoking a degree. Does anyone know of any cases? I suspect it would require a blatant and incontrovertible case of fraud in the earning of the degree, and not just error or incompetence.
It’s certainly one of the most vicious tactics I’ve ever read of. Where is their decency?

Damage6
December 2, 2011 5:26 pm

This is utterly disgusting and this must not stand! I try to maintain some level of civility but this incident and the many other episodes of outright bullying, suppression and attacks conducted by the “team” are completely beyond the pale. Their conduct has been nothing short of villianous and they MUST be called to account their crimes. I urge you to all contact your elected representatives and demand a full investigation on all the treacherous conduct by government officials and taxpayer funded scientists engaged in this disgusting attack on science and that the ones who are in public service be dismissed from their positions and any university who refuses to similarly disipline the proffessors and other public funded scientists involved should have all federal grant money revoked.

michaelspj
December 2, 2011 5:34 pm

Rabbit
I know of one. Ed Anders, who won the undergraduate teaching award at Chicago (and I took Chem 105 from him–he was great), and designed the alpha particle scatterer for the Lunar Surveyor, had his pulled, for reasons I am not clear on.

DRE
December 2, 2011 5:43 pm

These A-Holes are ruining science and all this crap suddenly makes me feel like retching. I hope that everything they were discussing doing to Michaels happens to them 10 fold…or more.

Dave Wendt
December 2, 2011 5:45 pm

Dave Stephens says:
December 2, 2011 at 4:53 pm
Most every McD’s I’ve been in use the same Bunn commercial drip coffeemakers or versions thereof. These machines don’t heat the water beyond boiling. They don’t even heat the water to boiling, the brewing occurs at 200 degrees. Warming plates are usually kept significantly lower because trying to keep the coffee at brewing temp with the warmer will oxidize it to crap in minutes.

RockyRoad
December 2, 2011 5:52 pm

Latitude says:
December 2, 2011 at 1:31 pm

Wil says:
December 2, 2011 at 11:38 am
Which leads to the question – then who actually does all the grunt work?
=================================================
………….Harry

Funny enough, Latitude, that it bears repeating! (Thanks for the laugh. And is this why “The Cause” is fracturing?–gosh, I certainly hope so!)

Roger Knights
December 2, 2011 5:58 pm

Kay says:
December 2, 2011 at 11:43 am
Didn’t Wigley threaten to beat up Michaels in the first batch of emails?

No, that was “Sluggo” Santer. A Fox interviewer asked Michaels about it and he said, “That’s no joke; Santer’s a big guy.” But he didn’t seem too fazed–possibly because he looked like a big guy himself.

crosspatch
December 2, 2011 6:03 pm

Bengu Sezen had her PhD revoked from Columbia this year.
Jan Hendrik Schön lost his in 2004.
Gwendolyn Griffith Adell had hers revoked.
They happen all the time, rabbit.

DonB in VA
December 2, 2011 6:07 pm

Those of you pleading for a law suit be aware that the jury will be not be composed of your peers but MY neighbors. I live on the banks of the Potomac River in northern Virginia and the young woman who cuts my hair each month was completely unaware that there was a river nearby. Try explaining to her the finer points of CO2, ENSO, diurnal oscillations, Maunder Minimum, LIA, etc……… That’s your jury pool.

Jesse
December 2, 2011 6:10 pm

Egotistical people drive me crazy. Unfortunately our universities are full of egotistical people who believe they are smarter than everyone else. It reminds me of the old playground taunt “my Dad is bigger than your Dad”. What a sorry world we live in.

Noblesse Oblige
December 2, 2011 6:34 pm

It is a slam dunk prediction that ClimateGate 2 will drive the boys yet deeper into the bunker, making them yet more threatened, more shrill, and more aggressive against opposition … and more ridiculous. They destroy themselves.

December 2, 2011 6:41 pm

DonB,
In a case like this the most important element may be the days, weeks, and maybe even months of pre-trial depositions under oath. Much more wide-ranging questions can be asked in a deposition than can be asked in a trial. And of course, in a trial witnesses can be called and cross examined. Juries are unpredictable, but most jurors have a feel for which side is being honest, and which side is blustering and tapdancing.
There are now thousands of statements sent via email on record, by a relatively small clique that controls the climate peer review process and lots of taxpayer money. Many of their statements will be extremely hard to defend. One or two might be explained away. But each one is a brick in the wall, and by now it’s a very big wall.

Jim Barker
December 2, 2011 6:45 pm

Just want to set the story straight on the whole McDonald’s scalding coffee bit.
http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cur78.htm