Dear NOAA and Seth, which 1930's were you comparing to when you say July 2012 is the record warmest?

The press release is out, and the usual serial bloviators are rushing to trumpet the news. July 2012 was the hottest ever on record! “Yikes! We’re gonna roast! Global Warming!” they wail on Twitter and blogs. The driver of this is AP’s Seth Borenstein, who never met a hot story he didn’t like.  Here’s a quote from that story Ouch July in US was hottest ever in history books:

The average temperature last month was 77.6 degrees. That breaks the old record from July 1936 by 0.2 degree, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Records go back to 1895.

Three of the nation’s five hottest months on record have been recent Julys: This year, 2011 and 2006. Julys in 1936 and 1934 round out the top five.

Of course the first thing I do when I see these sorts of things is go look at the data. It tells a far more interesting and credible story. Here’s some graphs NCDC and Seth won’t ever put in a press release or AP story:

From NCDC’s Climate at a glance page:

Now let’s compare to July 1936:

A few things stand out right away.

1. Due to regional weather pattern variability, one state in 1936 had below normal temperatures, Texas. Take the 1936 Texas below normal temperature out of the mix and there goes your 0.2F record making difference with July 2012.

2. Many states had warmer temperatures in 1936 than 2012.  Here’s a table, all numbers in degrees Fahrenheit:

State 1936 2012
Montana 74.7 71.4
N. Dakota 79.7 73.8
S. Dakota 83.8 78.8
Minnesota 76.2 74.4
Wisconsin 74.8 74.7
Nebraska 83.1 80.0
Iowa 82.7 79.4
Kansas 85.1 84.3
Oklahoma 85.8 85.5
Missouri 84.9 83.7
Illinois 83.1 81.7
Indiana 80.9 80.2
Mississippi 82.0 81.8
California 76.3 75.0

Now compare that to the same map of 1934, and we also see many warmer states than in 2012.

What’s interesting is that that if AGW had overcome natural variability, and many claim this, we wouldn’t see any statewide temperatures in 2012 lower than in 1936 or 1934.

And with all the adjustments that have been going on, which 1930’s are we really talking about? The real one or the adjusted one? NASA GISS uses NCDC adjusted data, which according to this graph from Steve Goddard, suggests there’s been a whole lot of adjusting going on.

The graph below shows the almost two degree US upwards adjustment trend being applied by USHCN between the raw thermometer data and the published monthly data.

The adjustments they are making are greater than the claimed trend, meaning that all man made US warming is occurring inside ORNL and GISS computers.

Speaking of adjustments, I recalled the GISS Y2K debacle in 2007 where McIntyre discovered a mistake in GISTEMP. I’ve recovered the graphs from Hansen’s 1999 press release. This was originally part of “Lights Out Upstairs”a guest post by Steve McIntyre on my old original blog. Just look at how much warmer 1934 was in 1999 than it is now. Much of this can be attributed to NCDC’s USHCNv2 adjustments.

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Steve McIntyre wrote then:

In the NASA press release in 1999 , Hansen was very strongly for 1934. He said then:

The U.S. has warmed during the past century, but the warming hardly exceeds year-to-year variability.Indeed, in the U.S. the warmest decade was the 1930s and the warmest year was 1934.

This was illustrated with the following depiction of US temperature history, showing that 1934 was almost 0.6 deg C warmer than 1998.

From a Hansen 1999 News Release: http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/hansen_07/fig1x.gif

However within only two years, this relationship had changed dramatically. In Hansen et al 2001 (referred to in the Lights On letter), 1934 and 1998 were in a virtual dead heat with 1934 in a slight lead. Hansen et al 2001 said

The U.S. annual (January-December) mean temperature is slightly warmer in 1934 than in 1998 in the GISS analysis (Plate 6)… the difference between 1934 and 1998 mean temperatures is a few hundredths of a degree.

From Hansen et al 2001 Plate 2. Note the change in relationship between 1934 and 1998.

Between 2001 and 2007, for some reason, as noted above, the ranks changed slightly with 1998 creeping into a slight lead.

The main reason for the changes were the incorporation of an additional layer of USHCN adjustments by Karl et al overlaying the time-of-observation adjustments already incorporated into Hansen et al 1999. Indeed, the validity and statistical justification of these USHCN adjustments is an important outstanding issue.

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I’ve prepared a before and after graph using the CONUS values from GISS in 1999 and in 2011 (today).

GISS writes now of the bottom figure:

Annual Mean Temperature Change in the United States

Annual and five-year running mean surface air temperature in the contiguous 48 United States (1.6% of the Earth’s surface) relative to the 1951-1980 mean. [This is an update of Figure 6 in Hansen et al. (1999).]

Also available as PDF, or Postscript. Also available are tabular data.

So clearly, the two graphs are linked, and 1998 and 1934 have swapped positions for the “warmest year”. 1934 went down by about 0.3°C while 1998 went up by about 0.4°C for a total of about 0.7°C.

And they wonder why we don’t trust the surface temperature data.

In fairness, most of this is the fault of NCDC’s Karl, Menne, and Peterson, who have applied new adjustments in the form of USHCN2 (for US data) and GHCN3 (to global data). These adjustments are the primary source of this revisionism. As Steve McIntyre often says: “You have to watch the pea under the thimble with these guys”.

So the real question is: which 1934 and 1936 is NCDC and Seth Borenstein comparing to? It looks to me like we might not be comparing real temperatures to real temperatures, but rather adjusted ones to highly adjusted ones.

Finally, remember this statement from the AP July 2012 “hottest ever” story:

The average temperature last month was 77.6 degrees.

I have a way to apply a sanity check to this. but I’ll need some crowd-sourcing help. Stay tuned.

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UPDATE: Dr. Roy Spencer makes an interesting plot, which I’ve annotated to show a color key and years 1934, 1936, and 2012.

He writes in: July 2012 Hottest Ever in the U.S.? Hmmm….I Doubt It

Using NCDC’s own data (USHCN, Version 2), and computing area averages for the last 100 years of Julys over the 48 contiguous states, here’s what I get for the daily High temps, Low temps, and daily Averages (click for large version):

As far as daily HIGH temperatures go, 1936 was the clear winner. But because daily LOW temperatures have risen so much, the daily AVERAGE July temperature in 2012 barely edged out 1936.

So, all things considered (including unresolved issues about urban heat island effects and other large corrections made to the USHCN data), I would say July was unusually warm. But the long-term integrity of the USHCN dataset depends upon so many uncertain factors, I would say it’s a stretch to to call July 2012 a “record”.

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Allan
August 9, 2012 11:47 am

If you want an accessible read on draught and paluvials, a paper by Richard Seager, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, “Climate and Draught: The State of Science 2010” gives a historical perpspective of climate in the contiguous United States and trashes our notion of drought in the last 100 years. In his words “the past was scary”.

August 9, 2012 11:49 am

[SNIP: Valeria, the site rules are here. I was going to approve your idiotic post until you went off the rails with that last paragraph. -REP]

Dave Dodd
August 9, 2012 12:26 pm

Will someone kindly explain why (Tmax+Tmin)/2=Tavg even yields a valid datum in the first place? I have lived in areas where the diurnal temperature swing can be 50F or more during the summer (7000′ above sea level), yet where I currently live, the daytime Tmax might be equal to my old digs, but the diurnal swing might be only 10F. The above math yields a higher Tavg for here, yet says nothing about the fact that Tmax in both locations is the same. I certainly do not believe it to be “warmer” here than there, yet relying on Tavg it “must” be warmer (to use warmist logic.) Why would not a measurement of local heat content integrated over 24 hours or even better, 30 days, be a better way to track any perceived “global warming” and which month-year is actually hottest? I know those old white boxes were “supposed” to record humidity and barometric pressure as well as Tmax and Tmin.

David Cage
August 9, 2012 12:48 pm

Valeria Rogers says:
““Yikes! We’re gonna roast!” Not funny. We are. …..
August 9, 2012 at 11:49 am
Here in the UK we can feel the cold, the wet, the total cloud cover for all but a few days over the last six months. The AGW camp is always telling us that local is irrelevant and it is weather not climate. Just answer the question why not at least give equal publicity to the new network that says the claim for record temperatures is far from true and why make spurious claims if the intent is not to deceive? Without calling them criminals I am not sure what description fits a group that deliberately falsifies claims. One cannot help wondering if it is like the Case of Nick Leeson who made dodgy trades and then dug himself in deeper and deeper trying to cover up the errors.
Incidentally using an unshaded thermometer of the right type placed in direct sunlight can give an answer nearly 100 degrees c above the real one so your example is totally misleading rather than just irrelevant.
I know it is hard for Americans to believe but the USA is only a small part of the world and Russia is having the same sort of weather we are.

Gail Combs
August 9, 2012 3:38 pm

JohnH says:
August 8, 2012 at 2:46 pm
To be fair to the GISS folks, how do they justify their adjustments?
_____________________________
In England they use “The Dog Ate My Home Work” (After refusing to honor FOIA) link
In New Zealand the use “The Goat Ate My Home Work” however a citizens group with the tenacity of a bulldog has dragged them kicking and screaming into court after FOIA did not work. The update is at Jo’s Don’t mention the Peer Review! New Zealand’s NIWA bury the Australian review
And in Australia, They use “Lets toss it out and start over” Threat of ANAO Audit means Australia’s BOM throws out temperature set, starts again, gets same results
Now don’t those explanations that make you feel comfortable with the data?

judyp
August 9, 2012 9:07 pm

It was the second year without a 90 deg. day in July for Portland OR, and it was downright chilly through July on the central Oregon coast until the last few days. The weather guy kept telling us temperatures were running several degrees below normal. When the east sizzles, we usually have to wear our sweaters.

Reg Nelson
August 9, 2012 9:52 pm

David says:
August 9, 2012 at 7:39 am
Can anyone show the simple math on TOBS over a two week period for one station? Please show how, when your thermometer records the high and the low in the past 24 hours, how changing the time you read it changes that recording other then for the one day you make the switch.
====
This has puzzled me as well. It’s like going back and looking at a past F1 race and saying, “You know, if the start/finish line was a half a kilometer back, Coulthard would have had the fastest lap and therefore he should be adjusted up and declared the winner.”
It doesn’t make any sense. And In the long run it has to even out — by definition. As long as a day is still 24 hours, a week 7 days and a year 365 (and a bit) days, there can be no long term bias.
I’ve come to the conclusion that TOBS adjustment stands for There’s Our Bull Shit adjustment.

Gail Combs
August 10, 2012 3:39 am

Disko Troop says:
August 9, 2012 at 3:45 am
As an ex seafaring gentleman and ex operator of a maritime mobile weather station….
________________________________
I agree.
The claim Climastrologists make that they know the temperature of the earth to 0.01C more than a hundred years ago despite the fact that in Australia for example Around 30% of all readings in the Fahrenheit era (before 1972) were whole numbers, and about 18% afterwards. (It should have been 10% if the observers were following the rule book). This effect shows us that the measurements were much more slap dash than the BOM would like us to believe… just does not past the smell test. The precision and accuracy claims are complete and utter weasel feces and that is why they can get away with all the “Corrections” to the data.
Take a look at these GISS records (Contiguous 48 U.S. Surface Air Temperature Anomaly (C)) and see what happened to the 1931 and 1934 temperature . Also notice the annual mean data for 1880 is reported as -.47 then -.41 then -.27 and then -.26.
These are John Daly’s “snap shots of the data”
as of June 2000: http://www.john-daly.com/GISSUSAT.006
as of March 2001: http://www.john-daly.com/GISSUSAT.103
as of February 2007: http://www.john-daly.com/GISSUSAT.702
as of this morning (08/08/2007): http://www.john-daly.com/GISSUSAT.708
This is from comment by JerryB at the above linked 2007 ClimateAudit http://climateaudit.org/2007/08/08/a-new-leaderboard-at-the-us-open/ mentioned by Caleb
August 8, 2012 at 6:08 pm.

JimmyJ
August 11, 2012 3:02 pm

“one state in 1936 had below normal temperatures, Texas.”
Uh, …what happenned to New England?
According to the map, there are 5 States with below normal temperatures.
And, …. could you go over how this (i.e. some states being colder than normal) make the average U.S. temp warmer, again?

August 11, 2012 8:00 pm

Do they ever have the Unajusted data anymore or did they SHTCAN it LIKE the CRU did

August 13, 2012 8:14 pm

Maybe off subject but has anyone else noticed that in the summer when it is hot they call it global warming and in the winter when it is colder than normal they call it climate change?

August 15, 2012 4:50 am

Roanoke Times, AP And NOAA Debunk Man-made Global Warming AGW
http://roanokeslant.blogspot.com/2012/08/roanoke-times-ap-and-noaa-debunk-man.html