Validity of “A Reconstruction of Regional and Global Temperature for the Past 11,300 Years”

It seems that Marcott et al isn’t all that it is cracked up to be. Dr. Easterbrook takes a good hard look at the paper.

Guest post by Dr. Don J. Easterbrook

(Note: Because of the far-reaching implications of the conclusions in this paper and the nature of the data, this review will be broken into several segments. This is Part I).

The news media has exploded with extraordinary claims of ‘unprecedented global warming’ asserted in a paper “A Reconstruction of Regional and Global Temperature for the Past 11,300 Years” by Marcott, Shakun, Clark, and Mix in Science. A NY Times headline reads “Global Temperatures Highest in 4,000 Years,” and proclaims that global warming will “surpass levels not seen on the planet since before the last ice age.”

Here are some of the truly extraordinary assertions in the paper:

1. “Current global temperatures of the past decade … are warmer than during ~75% of the Holocene temperature history.”

2. “Global mean temperature for the decade 2000–2009 …. are, however, warmer than 82% of the Holocene”

3. ~0.6°Cof warming from the early Holocene (11,300 yr B.P.) to a temperature plateau extending from 9500 to 5500 yr B.P.. This warm interval is followed by a long-term 0.7°C cooling from 5500 to~100 yr B.P. (Fig. 1B).

4. Early Holocene (10,000 to 5000 years ago) warmth is followed by ~0.7°C cooling through the middle to late Holocene (<5000 years ago), culminating in the coolest temperatures of the Holocene during the Little Ice Age, about 200 years ago.

5. “Global temperatures are warmer than at any time in at least 4,000 years.”

6. “Over the coming decades are likely to surpass levels not seen on the planet since before the last ice age.”

7. “Surface temperature reconstructions of the past 1500 years suggest that recent warming is unprecedented in that time.”

8. Our global temperature reconstruction for the past 1500 years is indistinguishable within uncertainty from the Mann et al. (2) reconstruction

9. A cooling trend from a warm interval (~1500 to 1000 yr B.P.) to a cold interval (~500 to 100 yr B.P.), which is approximately equivalent to the Little Ice Age (Fig.1A). This similarity confirms that published temperature reconstructions of the past two millennia capture long-term variability, despite their short time span (3, 12, 13).

10. “Global temperature of the early20th century (1900–1909) was cooler than>95% of the Holocene.”

11. “Global temperature….. has risen from near the coldest to the warmest levels of the Holocene within the past century.”

12. A heat spike like this has never happened before, at least not in the last 11,300 years. “If any period in time had a sustained temperature change similar to what we have today we would have certainly seen that in our record. ” It is a good indicator of just how fast made-climate change has progressed. (Marcott quoted on CNN)

They arrived at these conclusions by “reconstructing regional and global temperature anomalies for the past 11,300 years from 73 globally distributed records” “largely derived from marine archives (~80%),” including paleoclimate temperature proxies such as alkenone, planktonic foraminifera Mg/Ca 23, fossil pollen, ice-core stable isotopes, and Mann et al. (2008) tree ring reconstructions. Although a list of sources of the data from the 73 sites is provided in an appendix, nowhere is any real data presented, so assessing the validity or accuracy of the original data is not possible without digging out all of the source papers. Just how accurate are these marine temperature reconstructions? We really can’t tell without any original data for specific sites. There are two issues here: (1) How accurately can the paleotemperatures be measured, and (2) how accurate is the dating of the material? The accuracy of the paleotemperature measurement depends on the method used and since multiple methods were used, the results are a mixture of varying accuracies. Dating marine fossils (80% of the samples used in the study) depends on radiocarbon measurements, and the marine lag effect. Radiocarbon in marine organisms is generally 400-800 years older than land organisms, so correction factors must be used, and this affects the accuracy of dates.

Eighty percent of the source data sites were marine, so temperatures from 80% of the data set used in this paper record ocean water temperatures, not atmospheric temperatures. Thus, they may reflect temperature changes from ocean upwelling, changes in ocean currents, or any one of a number of ocean variations not related to atmospheric climates. This in itself means that the Marcott et al. temperatures are not a reliable measure of changing atmospheric climate.

The paper consists entirely of complicated computer manipulations of data (definitely not light reading for anyone but computer modelers) and conclusions. As Andy Revkin (Dot Earth) points out, This work is complicated, involving lots of statistical methods in extrapolating from scattered sites to a global picture, which means that there’s abundant uncertainty.”

Without any original data to assess, how can we evaluate the validity of the conclusions? The only way is to check the conclusions against well-established data from other sources. As Richard Feynman eloquently described the scientific method, once hypotheses (conclusions) are set out, their consequences can be checked against experiments or observations. If a hypothesis (conclusion) disagrees with observations or experiments, it is wrong. It doesn’t make any difference how beautiful the hypothesis (conclusion) is, how smart the author is, or what the author’s name is, if it disagrees with data, experiments, or observations, it is wrong. Period. So let us apply this method to the conclusions of this paper and test them to see if they are right or wrong.

First, let’s test the Marcott et al. 11,300 year temperature curve against the GISP2 Greenland ice core oxygen isotope record (Alley, 2000) (Figure 1 below). The Greenland ice core data is widely considered to be the ‘gold standard’ of quantitative paleo-temperature measurements with thousands of accurately dated analyses covering many thousands of years. From the Alley (2000) curve, it is readily apparent that temperatures during virtually all of the period from 10,000 to 1,500 years ago were warmer than at present and 85% of the past 10,000 years were warmer than present. The curve extends to 95 years ago, but even if we add 0.7°C for warming over the past century (dashed line), temperatures were still dominantly warmer than present.

clip_image002

Figure 1. Comparison of Greenland ice core temperatures and Marcott et al. temperatures for the past 10,000 years. (Top curve modified from Alley, 2000 based on data from Cuffy and Clow; bottom curve modified from Marcott et al., 2013)

Let’s compare this to the Marcott et al. conclusion “Current global temperatures of the past decade … are warmer than during ~75% of the Holocene temperature history” and “Global mean temperature for the decade 2000-2009 ….are warmer than 82% of the Holocene”(lower curve, Figure 1). The Marcott et al. conclusion is totally at odds with the Greenland ice core data. But why should we believe the ice core data rather than the Marcott et al. computer generated curve? Well, the ice core curve is based on thousands of isotope measurements that reflect paleotemperatures and the chronology is accurate to within about 1-3 years, whereas the Marcott et al. curve is essentially based on computer-manipulated data with multiple data types using different technologies with varying accuracy and chronology accurate only within hundreds of years. Marcott et al. assert that this doesn’t matter over a period as long as 10,000 years. But, of course, the accuracy of a body of data depends on the sum of the accuracies of its individual components, e.g. you can’t claim microscopic accuracy from a bulldozer, no matter how you manipulate the data.

What about the global implications of the Greenland ice core data? The cores come from specific sites on the Greenland ice sheet, so doesn’t the data pertain just to those particular places? That’s true, but the real question is does it mirror the global climate? The answer to that is definitely yes—correlation of temperatures from the ice cores with global glacial fluctuations is clear and unequivocal. Even small fluctuations of ice core paleo-temperatues can be accurately correlated with advance and retreat of glaciers globally (this topic will be expanded later). In addition, modern Greenland temperatures mimic global temperatures—comparison of temperature records from weather stations in Greenland with global temperatures confirm that Greenland marches in lock step with global climate (Figure 2). Thus, we can conclude that paleo-temperatures in Greenland ice cores are representative of global temperatures.

clip_image004 clip_image006

Figure 2. Comparison of Greenland temperatures

Let’s look at some specific features of the Marcott et al. curve. As shown in more than 3,000 publications, the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) is widely recognized to have been somewhat warmer than present Figure 1). In the past 10,000 years, at least six other warm periods of magnitude equal to the MWP occurred; nine other warm periods that were 0.5°C warmer than the MWP occurred; two warm periods that were 1°C warmer than the MWP occurred; and three warm periods that were 1.5°C warmer than the MWP occurred. All of these periods warmer than the MWP clearly contradict the Marcott et al. conclusions.

The Marcott et al. conclusions that “Current global temperatures of the past decade … are warmer than during ~75% of the Holocene temperature history” and “Global mean temperature for the decade 2000-2009 ….are warmer than 82% of the Holocene” are clearly contrary to measured, accurate, real-time data and thus fail the Feynman test, i.e., they are wrong.

This rebuttal addresses only part of the Marcott et al. paper. To include analyses of all the issues would take a much longer response, so this is just Part 1. The next part will consider some or all of the remaining conclusions listed at the beginning.

References

Alley, R.B., 2000, The Younger Dryas cold interval as viewed from central Greenland: Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 19, p.213-226.

Cuffey, K.M. and Clow, G.D, 1997, Temperature, accumulation, and ice sheet elevation in central Greenland through the last deglacial transition: Journal of Geophysical Research 102:26383-26396

Marcott, S.A, Shakun, J.D., Clark, P.U., and Mix, A.C., A Reconstruction of Regional and Global Temperature for the Past 11,300 Years: Science, vol. 339, p. 1198-1201.

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Geologist Dr. Don J. Easterbrook, Emeritus Professor at Western Washington University, who has authored eight books and 150 journal publications. His CV is here

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Manfred
March 11, 2013 6:47 pm

Reich.Eschhaus says:
March 11, 2013 at 5:29 pm
…“2. “Global mean temperature for the decade 2000–2009 …. are, however, warmer than 82% of the Holocene” ”
…seems right on spot (by means of eye-balling 😉 )…
—————————————–
Figure 1 still shows low frequency data averaged over multiple years. Shorter climate variations, particularly due to AMO, would be flattened out there and be invisible. That inflates the current temperature reading in the context of figure 1.
From the 1940s and 2000s maxima and the minimum in between in Svaalgard’s plot, I would roughly estimate an AMO contribution of approx. 0.7 deg currently.
http://www.australianclimatemadness.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/greenland_temps.png
So comparing apples with apples, and therefore AMO removed from the current value, I would use a value of around -30.6 deg in figure 1, which is, by the way, close to Easterborrk’s “current temperature” line.

Reich.Eschhaus
Reply to  Manfred
March 11, 2013 8:04 pm

Manfred says:
March 11, 2013 at 6:47 pm
Nothing of that changes anything about the shoddy logic applied above the line.
You are not trying to change goal posts, are you?
You came up with -29.9, now you change it (and that’s me thinking I graciously accept the former number, now to be confronted with another number). Bringing up AMO? Who cares? Do you know anything about AMO in paleological record?
Whataboutery! The article above the line is still lacking in substance….
p.s. what do you mean with Figure 1? the upper or the lower part?

AndyG55
March 11, 2013 6:55 pm

ps.. My main point was that Gisp2 is a land temperature, so naturally shows up all the warm points quite well (Holocene optimum, Mayan WP, Roman WP, Medieval WP etc.
This little bit of fakery uses lots of ocean based proxies, so it would be understandable if the warm period were actually smoothed out quite a bit.
Without their little instrumental land temp tail, it shows the TRUTH , being that we are still WELL BELOW the the average temperature for the whole of the Holocene.
Seems they may have stumble over the truth, but quickly picked themselves up and carried on as if nothing had happened. Then by putting the fake tail on, have spun it into a CAGW piece of fiction.

March 11, 2013 7:03 pm

Matthew R Marler says:
March 11, 2013 at 10:36 am
The paper itself is good.
===========
You failed to note the obvious flaw. They combined data with different frequency resolution, but did not correct for the difference. The result is statistical nonsense all dressed up in a filly dress with plenty of lipstick.
So what did the authors do? They grafted apples to oranges and called it pears. The blade is high resolution temperature data, while the lower resolution shaft is what we are getting.

Martin H. Katchen
March 11, 2013 10:39 pm

Ok Dr. Estabrooks. I get you . I have just one question. If the Medieval Warm Period is warmer than our own and the Eurasian Arctic Sea Route is almost clear for shipping, why don’t we have any evidence for travel to East Asia by the Vikings via the Kara and Laptev Seas and the Yensei and Lena Rivers at the very least? If not all the way around the Bering Strait to Japan? Why no comparable trade and travel between Han China and Europe via Siberian rivers (or Han conquest of Siberia for that matter) during the Roman Warm Period? And if these warm periods did not affect the polar ice cap and the circumpolar region , what is the climatic difference between those warm periods and the one we are living through that is affecting the polar ice pack? Obviously more research is necessary.

RACookPE1978
Editor
March 11, 2013 11:09 pm

The Vikings traded, raided, and established a presence deep into central Russia. Whether they would have gone “up” those rivers you mentioned depends whether there was “anything” to “go viking” INTO those rivers and “get” (plunder, rape, and steal) …… Deep into an uncharted wilderness? No prize at the end? No trade? No prize money except more trees? Why go there?
Why not raid easier (and warmer!) simpler/richer villages in France, Normandy, Germany, England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, Newfoundland, etc? There WERE riches and goods to take going west. Nothing to the east.
The “Spice Road” went south across deserts and mountains to China. When was it running trade? When did the Chinese accept trade, and when did their bureaucrats deny it? You really cannot get from Siberia (across thousands of kilometers of tundra, trees, taiga and mosquito-infested wastelands pulling …. what? There were no roads, no food, no supplies. You want to pull sleds across Siberia, Manchuria, and THEN China just to load them up and pull them back across China, Manchuria, and Siberia just to load them on a open-top rowboat and go back around the Murmansk cargo trip to Norway? ??????
Our merchant marine WWII didn’t even like that run – and it was 1/4 as far.

John
March 12, 2013 2:42 am

Six thousand years ago Northern Africa rapidly devolved from a verdant South America like Savannah into what is now the Sahara Desert. This begs the question, what anthropogenic vector caused this to happen?

Ryan
March 12, 2013 2:44 am

Celebrities stuck in heavy snow here in old England. Has to be one of the longest and coldest winters I can remember.
Scientists talking about this decade being the hottest in 10,000 years are starting to sound decidedly loony tunes. They are really not doing themselves any favours. Now would be a good time for them to keep quiet until we have another drought or heatwave but they just can’t help themselves. I don’t think anybody is listening to them anymore. People are just starting to ask themselves “what has happened to our society when scientists, politicians, health experts and economists are talking the kind of nonsense that not even a highly suggestible moron could be convinced to believe?”

DirkH
March 12, 2013 3:11 am

It is scientific misconduct to splice together two measurement series with a factor of 600 difference in frequency resolution. The authors of that study are not fit for publishing scientific work.
The NYT thinks that this drives a stake through the heart of skepticism. That is so unfathomable stupid one should prohibit them from ever publishing anything again, as they work actively to make the electorate incapable of making rational decisions.

DirkH
March 12, 2013 3:12 am

Martin H. Katchen says:
March 11, 2013 at 10:39 pm
“Ok Dr. Estabrooks. I get you . I have just one question. If the Medieval Warm Period is warmer than our own and the Eurasian Arctic Sea Route ”
Interesting question but not related to the quality of the bogus study.

johnmarshall
March 12, 2013 3:46 am

Thanks for the effort. Rubbish is still rubbish however it is dressed.
We now need to debunk the GHE theory. Easy to do but difficult to get the alarmists to listen.

George
March 12, 2013 3:48 am

The Holocene is a very short period of time, and 11,300 years is not even all of the Holocene. The last advance of continental glaciation ended, and the ice began to recede, about 18,000 years ago. Over this brief time the globe necessarily warmed, and the period referred to is part of that warming trend. Is this relationship worthy of a “research” paper? It just re-states information known to geologist for well over 100 years.
Can we please start dealing with significant time spans?

March 12, 2013 7:26 am

Martin, who in their right mind would want to invade Siberia 1000 years ago?

Hugh K
March 12, 2013 8:15 am

Caution!!! Pop-culture climate science at work–
Paper suggests unprecedented global warming – check
Far-reaching implications of the conclusions in this paper – check
Nowhere in the paper is any real data presented – check
Computer-manipulated data – check
Issue attention grabbing press release replete with alarmism and advocacy – check
Assassinate character of those that will/would challenge paper – in the works…
Anything else is irrelevant.

Rob de Vos
March 12, 2013 11:08 am

I have read the publication, have seen the datasets in the appendix, and can still not imagine how and fro which datasets Marcott et al could destillate the ernormous uptick of temperature during the last 150 years. Nullius in Verba has posted 3 graphs on this blog that go without saying. See his graphs at http://www.klimaatgek.nl. Can anyone inform me about the uptick at the end? Is it a copy of Mann’s graph?
.

phlogiston
March 12, 2013 5:51 pm

Bill Illis has got to the heart of it, only one record, the Greenland Agassiz-Renland borehole with anomaloously wide swings, has the hockey stick up-tick. At the end of the record the number of proxies falls toward zero so such anomalies become dominant. further back, the larger number of proxies smooth out the swings, thus a smooth curve.
Here is a corresponding thought experiment. Start with a Holocene temperature curve looking like a computer mouse in profile, smooth curve with a maximum 8000 years ago and a smooth declining curve to today. Now make 73 exact copies of this curve. Add random noise to each of these copies, causing them to spike up and down. Then average all 73 together. The result will be a curve not significantly different from the initial curve – the same overall decline to the present.
However, what we now do is to thin out the number of proxies toward the right hand end of the curve – representing the present time, so that most of the proxies end 50-200 years before present. And up to the latest time point, the number declines further till just one or two are left at the very end.
Now you will see that the random up and down spikes of the few proxies left at the end of the reconstruction near the present time will cause much wider fluctuation at the end of the curve. This is a simple result of a catastrophic fall off in signal to noise at the end of the curve. With a 50% chance, you will get an upspike which can be trumpeted as a hockey stick.

March 12, 2013 6:56 pm

I think there is another cold period that is not expressed well in the Greenland series. Tracking back from the 8.2kyr event by 4627yrs was the start of the Younger Dryas, another 4627yrs back is the start of the Older Dryas. While 4627yrs forward from -8.2kyrs is ~3570 BP, there is a lot of glacial advance going on for a couple centuries either side of this date (1570 BC):
http://www.geo.arizona.edu/palynology/geos462/holobib.html

Martin H. Katchen
March 13, 2013 9:51 pm

Bemfommo, if the climate was warm enough, Siberia’s Yensei River would offer a quick trip to an ice free Kara Sea which in turn would take a ship to Norway and Britain. Under the right circumstances, Tang China could have been very interested in using that route. So once again, I ask the question: If the Medieval Warm Period or the Roman Warm Period or the Minoan Warm Period were warmer than our own , why did they not affect the Arctic sea ice the way this warm period is affecting Arctic sea ice? Is it because these other periods started from a base of more glacieated land to begin with the way the warming periods that initially ended the ice ages did? Or does CO2 driven warming affect the Jet Streamthat isolates polar air from warmer air differently than Mihailovich Cycle (Northern hemisphere winter at perihekion) warming does? Obviously, these are questions that Mann has not brought up, but I’m mentioning them because as the drawbacks in Mann’s hypothesis become apparent, the alarmists are going to raise these questions and we will need to have the answers to them before the alarmists do.

Martin H. Katchen
March 13, 2013 10:15 pm

Also, as of 4 days ago, in C3 Science, a Russian study from Kamchatka reported through the study of chromatids that the Medieval Warm Period was 1-s degrees warmer than our modern temps of -13 C (in Kamchatka) and a maximum of 3.8 degrees higher than -13 degrees C according to Larissa Nazarova et. al Quaternary Science Reviews 2013.

Lia, trying not be be chilled green on Saint Pat's Day in Toronto
March 15, 2013 2:33 am

The Marcott paper is worth the read. However, the claim by the journal Science that publications there are more valid than publications here because they are “peer reviewed” falls apart with this review and post by Dr. Easterbrook who is clearly a qualified “peer” who finds valid fault. Science journal apparently cherry picks its so-called peers. Further, the Marcott paper falls apart not just scientifically but also through legal logic — to win a legal argument it is quite valid for lawyers to “argue in the alternative,” so allow me, if you will, to quickly make two points in that line:
1) Scientifically, Easterbrook debunks scientist Marcott’s methods, but if Marcott’s trend plots are still possibly right accidentally rather than scientifically, then we move to argument 2:
2) Accept Marcott’s claim that global temperatures naturally fell for thousands of years to and through the human-killing farm-killing “Little Ice Age” that finally reversed around 1850. Then, aren’t we collectively darn glad that the natural trend toward a new genocidal glacial advance finally stopped 160 years ago? If humans indeed helped warm our home planet they kept it out of protracted cold storage, and they should be praised for doing so — they saved it, they saved you, they saved the forebears of both Marcott and Easterbrook,
Anyway you look at it Marcott should be glad he was not rolled into a snowman with leafless stick ears, eyes of coal and a carrot nose. Easterbrook did that metaphorically; it warmed my heart.

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