Steve McIntyre writes:
Yesterday, I received updated Yamal data (to 2005) from Rashit Hantemirov, together with a cordial cover note. As CA and other readers know, Hantemirov had also promptly sent me data for Hantemirov and Shiyatov in 2002. There are 120 cores in the data set, which comes up to 2005. I’ve calculated a chronology from this information – see below.

How interesting it is that the Hantemirov data in green, diverges from the CRU 2008 “Hockey Team” data in red. No wonder they had to “hide the decline”. The trees lie!
Give it up fellows, your cover’s blown.
I was going to run a larger excerpt of Steve’s latest post, but these two comments on the thread seem to sum it up pretty well.
morebrocato: Posted May 15, 2012 at 9:29 AM
It is utterly fascinating to me to see that Steve McIntyre and the folks at RealClimate have essentially the same rundown of events, yet in the way it’s presented and framed, you’d think they have nothing in common.
You state:
“A URALS regional chronology had been calculated as of April 2006. This was a version of the regional chronology which remained unchanged for many years” and then he ‘concludes’: “The regional chronology has not been a “work in progress” for years.”
But the reply is:
This is a very clear statement that of what he thinks (or rather he thinks he knows). But the reality of science is that finished products do not simply spring out of the first calculation one does.
So it’s absolutely true that this whole ‘late-night-at-the-office’ thing was indeed had by the Briffa et al researchers when the new data came in, and it could be assumed that they did (as you say, “99.9%”) similar calculations (the differences are meaningless) that perhaps showed identical results to your charts posted here and earlier regarding the wider regional Urals-Yamal data set.
So then, when Steve McIntyre sees the results of the ‘insta-reconstruction’ he immediately throws it out there… (one camp says this is the ‘a-ha’ moment of voluminous data, the other says ‘not-so fast’).
People generally try something, find something wrong, try something else, fix one problem, test something else, deal with whatever comes up next, examine the sensitivities, compare with other methods etc. etc. All of those steps contribute to the final product, and it is clear that the work on this reconstruction is indeed ongoing.
So the question then becomes… What gave the original researchers the idea that there’s something wrong with the data, rather than thinking this new data instead challenged their original findings? I suppose we’ll see the flags that were raised when the actual paper comes out in October (which will be a fascinating thing itself), but it could boil down to simply the thought that the presently measured temperature record (and its recent HS shape) should either be matched in the cores, or there may then need steps to be taken to refine the sample in an Esper-ian Mann-er.
In my head, isn’t that the only way they could come up with the idea that it’s going to take ‘too much time’ to go through the data? Otherwise, why do the initial ‘insta-reconstruction’ in the first place if you know in advance the large number of samples are going to need to be filtered.
When it finally comes out, it will be interesting to see if these same methodologies described in that paper were applied to the smaller Yamal area/cores. Perhaps they won’t be because of an ascribed anomalously high value of the site itself in supplying unvarnished windows into regional temperature. But, whatever that site selection methodology is, it still would then have to be applied to the other sites in the regional chronology (though it is on record in at least one place that on site-selection alone the Khyadyta River passes muster).
To continue…
For an analogous example, the idea that the first simulation from a climate model would be a finished product is laughable – regardless of the existence of that original output file. It would obviously be part of the work in progress. Although science is always in a work in progress in some sense, it is punctuated by milestones related to the papers that get published. They stand as the marker of whether a stage has been reached where something can be considered finished (though of course, it is always subject to revision).
My thought here (which I’ve been having a lot lately), is when new science revises and/or corrects old science, there should be some sort of acknowledgement of an incorrect or unadvisable procedure from a previous paper that henceforth should be avoided– included in the new stuff, no? It could/should be easy to say that the original MBH paper relied on substandard data and/or methodologies— particularly when corrected in future ‘milestone’ publications come out, regardless if they ‘confirm’ the original. It would be great for climate science communication if this happened, but unfortunately there’s too much poison in the well because only folks like Steve McIntyre figured out ‘publicly’ what all the climate scientists were conversing about often (in the climategate emails). The same thing could be said about the early Yamal papers.
I guess scientists have at least some right to hold onto their own data until their ready to publish it, and Gavin may be right about the ‘insta-reconstruction’ not constituting ‘adverse results’ that went unreported, but that depends on what comes out as the grand dendro methodology we’re all waiting for. But, in all this, it begs the question of why bother publishing the 2008/9 paper on Yamal? Even the researchers themselves would have known that that paper was near irrelevant compared to what the larger regional chronology would say when they ever got it done. For all the talk that NW Siberian dendrochronologies are such minor players in modern Climate Science, there certainly seems to be quite an apetite for even re-hashing that data occasionally while the Big One is tinkered with back at the lab.
In summary, McIntyre is wrong in his premise, wrong in his interpretation, and wrong in his accusations of malfeasance. – gavin]
It’s like there’s a “Connect the dots” game going on, but at the same time, it’s an M.C. Escher drawing or some optical device…
“A ha! I have found a rabbit! No, you idiot… You’re staring right at a duck”.
To Gavin’s credit, in situations like these it’s best to award the benefit of the doubt to the scientists themselves who are describing their own work/motives. However, they do have a high burden of explanation for their methodology.
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Nosmo King Posted May 15, 2012 at 9:33 AM
It must be really humiliating to “The Team” that they, with their grants and tenured positions, are getting eaten alive by Steve and a few others — the real scientists in the discussion — who work for the love of the truth and not much else.
Keep up the amazing work, Steve! You may not think of it in these terms, but you are doing a huge service to millions of people who, without your noble efforts, might fall victim to the tyranny of what it is the warmists are truly trying to achieve.
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Read Steve McIntyre’s latest here
UPDATE: Richard Baguley of the UK writes to me to advise of this post on Suyts Space, which is quite interesting:
Why Are Dendro Shafts So Straight?
I am perpetually flabbergasted at the outright denial of scientific facts by alarmists. When I comment on alarmist blogs and the conversation turns to dendrochronology, I point out the facts that bristlecone pines have a very limited temperature growth range. I’ll include a picture from the Treering Society(pdf). The reason for this is two fold. One, to demonstrate the very narrow range of the growth in terms of temps and time (the right side of the graphic) and then 2) to give the people with biology backgrounds something to mull over what this graphic is actually stating, which I’ll get to after my main point. (and how it relates to the left side)
We see that we have no lower bounds (or upper for that matter) of the regional temps. So, the sensitivity to temps are constrained within this narrow margin of time and temps. Even if all of the other factors going into tree growth were quantified to such an exacting purpose as to be able to pick up on a few 1/10ths of a degree (they are not) the physical limitations of growth means we would see see a flattening in the plotting of temperatures. No extremes could be plotted because the trees are incapable of divining such a signal.
He goes on to demonstrate how – well worth a read here.
Warm weather can have little rain and cooler weather, more rain. These would produce very similar growth (rings). Infestations can also seriously alter growth when it should be high. Trees suck for this kind of knowledge seeking.
personal to:
Gavin A. Schmidt-
Sir,
The ball is in your court.
Regards,
L. Wu
here’s a simple observation as to why is the hockey stick shaft straight, denying the LIA and MWP while we’ve got a huge blade at the end. It’s all about the (automated?) selection criteria. If one chooses data because it shows a rise at the end (or in some cases – a decline) then what we have may be a random collection of pure noise that has lost the temperature signal all together. The blade is present because that was the selection criteria for each piece of data. If we have a truly random collection of data – except for the selection criteria of the recent higher temperatures, then the randomness of the stick body will average out to 0 variation, losing the MWP and LIA and giving us what is potentially a meaningless result for the blade. True temperature data would have to show the LIA and MWP as it happened at each location as well as show the more recent correspondence to the local temperature record – for each series of the overall data. Short of that, all one can do is pick a random population of all the series and not apply a selection criteria and hope there’s actually data in the noise.
“People generally try something, find something wrong, try something else, fix one problem, test something else, deal with whatever comes up next, examine the sensitivities, compare with other methods etc. etc. All of those steps contribute to the final product, and it is clear that the work on this reconstruction is indeed ongoing.”
This is a transparent apology for “work on it til you get the result you want.”
FWIW,
There are many 400+ yr. old Oaks and 1000+ yr. old cedars in Oklahoma.
Core samples, anyone?
What is really interesting here is that the ONE FOI granted has shown the whole thing to be scam. This will indeed help Horner etc and their case against UVA? They now have De Facto evidence.
It seems to me that there is an obvious explanation for the Team’s refusal to release the data, and the failure of anyone else to come up with anything remotely resembling a hockey stick whatever substitute data they use.
The Team simply made the whole thing up from the beginning. There is no data at all, not any. To answer Mike Smith’s question, it’s fraud, plain and simple.
The Team are fraudsters and serial liars, all of them.
It is getting pretty hard to defend the position that ‘trees reasonably capture the prevailing climate’ from a biological perspective. Gavin and the Americans are not going to admit this, it’s their job not to. Each time the Russians get involved more of the truth comes out. Why is that? Could it be they have no axe to grind, that they are just interested in the science and the truths that emerge from its proper conduct?
It is interesting to see the good science coming out of the Canadians and Russians and then the shenanigans going on south of the of the 49th parallel. Hard not to think about that book, “Dumbing Down Our Kids: Why America’s Children Feel Good About Themselves but Can’t Read, Write, or Add”. Excerpt at http://www.sntp.net/education/education_stats.htm
“American students lag far behind their counterparts in both Asia and Europe, especially in math and science.”
Let’s not forget the Great White Norths. Break dancing on oiled cardboard in the streets as entertainment has been replaced by idle, partial and uninformed talk about climate change and how to sue the oil companies for the coming Consequences of Our Evil Ways. It is Hollywood’s “Original Sin meets Godzilla” as envisioned by Scorsese. Team….it’s time to grow up!
Gavin’s arguments in defence of the, ‘We never knew about that regional chronology’ meme are not paper thin, they are as evanescent as the moral fibre of the CRU Senate, itself only out-zypher-ed by that lot in Pennsylvania. [In literary circles a zypher is a light wind from the West.]
Hang in there Steve. I’d really like to pop over for a French Vanilla with you at Timmy’s sometime.
McIntyre gets some new Yamal data – still no hockey stick AGAIN!
When this is over Mcyintire will be the hero of the 21st century
don’t forget…..China couldn’t find a hockey stick either…..but they did find the MWP and LIA
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/12/07/in-china-there-are-no-hockey-sticks/
Luther Wu says:
May 15, 2012 at 10:03 am
personal to:
Gavin A. Schmidt-
Sir,
The ball is in your court.
Regards,
L. Wu
He’s on the sidelines, trying to convince the judge that his first lob was so devastating, no one could possibly have returned it.
(Reposting. Sorry – messed up tags above)
If one trusts Steve McIntyre’s reconstructions (I do), and the data they represent, one should conclude that there has been no significant warming in that area since about 1925. This flies in the face of the CRU findings, and points to the fact that all CRU codes and data are suspect. I don’t understand the impulse …to award the benefit of the doubt to the scientists themselves who are describing their own work/motives.
I’m not a scientist, but Steve’s work suggests to me that the particular climate scientists we are most concerned with on this web site over the years (the Team) are (at best) mistaken about their own findings in Yamal, and at worst, are perpetrating a contemptible lie.
Pretending that we don’t believe in dendro to begin with, and that analysis of their work is just playing a game of “gotcha” doesn’t seem to be too helpful. Hantemirov’s work means something.
I’m pretty sure their response will be either “You are wrong because, shut up.” or “Look over there, a squirrel.” In scientificky terms, of course!
Anyone know what the Y axis values are?
As a former accountant, I can only say that raw data proves when someone is cooking the books.
Latitude says:
May 15, 2012 at 11:00 am
don’t forget…..China couldn’t find a hockey stick either
Perhaps the Chinese need to look harder for a tree where a huge animal may have died and left extra nutrients for a long time. : -)
When climate-alarmists withheld their “science” from dissenting scientists they, inadvertently or not, mounted an assault on falsificationism as the bedrock of the scientific method. The result: science is put to the service of narrative, or rather enslaved to it.
If you are a tree you have a finite amount of resources which one can, from an evolutionary sense, allocate in two ways:
1) on yourself by investing in growth of branches, roots and girth; as one is a member of a long lived species and investment in self means more years whereby one can produce seeds.
2) one can invest in the next generation by producing seeds, which is a loss to self.
The proportion of investment for a species growing in a marginal ecology is going to be quite complex. Successful trees had ancestors which the ‘best’ investment strategy, for the long term.
It maybe that a cool, wet spring is ideal for giving seeds a chance to actually become a tree and this signals the trees to invest in seeps and so have low self investment; hence narrow tree rings. Or a cool, wet spring could be the signal that there will be an overabundance of grazing animals in the Fall and that investments in seeps is a waste of time, and so self investment is the best strategy; wide tree rings.
The lead time for a tree is long; they have to make a decision to go for seed production in the spring, they cannot make it up as they go along, awaiting the summer before they allocate resources.
The way I understand Steve McIntyre’s thrust in this and the other recent Yamal posts is, although there are still significant dendrochronology issues with trying to use trees as thermometers he focuse rather on the problems he finds in the CRU/Briffa reconstructions/regional chronologies are centered around their inconsistent discourse on their studies and their propensity for ignoring data in their pocession that they know is contrary to their findings.
Look forward to more from Steve.
John
I can just imagine the contents of e-mails (On G-mail, Hotmail or the like!) that would be sent from our dear friend Dr Mann, to Dr (?) Hantemirov, for having the temerity of willingly sending data to this Canadian Antichrist!
jaschrumpf says:
OT, I know, but… everyone who thought of Monty Python’s “How To Identify Trees From Quite A Long Way Away” when they read this, raise your hand.
*hand*
Thank you for reminding me of that – LOL!
Yup. Now we see exactly why they don’t want to release their data.
The Yamal dispute is too long and deadlocked for an outsider to understand each side’s arguments. So please correct me if I’m totally missing it. Could Steve’s failure to reproduce be explained by the following?: We know from the instrument record that there has been a warming in the recent decades, so if tree growth is to be used as a temperature proxy, the trees that don’t show a clear correlation with the instrument record have to be thrown out, and this has been poorly documented. What then remains is a subset of trees that do correlate with the recent instrument record. That is, showing warming, which is known as a fact, and the more reliable instrument record, the more trees can safely be regarded as junk and thrown out. And the longer we go back, relatively fewer trees get thrown out and we get more noise than signal, and the more noisy trees, the flatter their average. Which is bound to produce a hockey stick. So, if some trees don’t show an obvious temperature correlation, how can know that trees generally did grow according to temperature in the past, even if they’re showing a correlation now?
Its really basic stuff this , if you leave out data you should have included you need to make a job justify it, you cannot ans should not leave it out becasue it undermines your case our ‘the cause ‘ . That is so basic its what you expect from an science undergraduate let alone a ‘professional ‘
And that’s before we get to the to how little data they actual used , given the great claims they made with it and if trees are can provide anywhere near the accuracy being claimed for them .
Out of ‘the Team’ is there one person that actual has good experience and qualifications in the area of biology/tree growth or does being a ‘climate science’ make you an instant universal expert. Well if you ask the Team we known the answer to that , as ego is something that is never in short supply when these boys are around .
The academic standard is so poor you have to ask do they give out climate science professorships for collecting newspapers coupons?