Marcott's proxies – 10% fail their own criteria for inclusion

Note: Steve McIntyre is also quite baffled by the Marcott et al paper, finding it currently unreproducible given the current information available. I’ve added some comments from him at the bottom of this post – Anthony

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I don’t know what it is about proxies that makes normal scientists lose their senses. The recent paper in Science (paywalled of course) entitled A Reconstruction of Regional and Global Temperature for the Past 11,300 Years” (hereinafter M2012) is a good example. It has been touted as the latest hockeystick paper. It is similar to the previous ones … but as far as I can see it’s only similar in how bizarre the proxies are.

Nowhere in the paper do they show you the raw data, although it’s available in their Supplement. I hate it when people don’t show me their starting point. So let me start by remedying that oversight:

all marcott proxies

Figure 1. All of the proxies from M2012. The colors are only to distinguish individual records, they have no meaning otherwise. 

I do love the fact that from that collection of temperature records they draw the conclusion that:

Current global temperatures of the past decade have not yet exceeded peak interglacial values but are warmer than during ~75% of the Holocene temperature history.

Really? Current global temperature is about 14°C … and from those proxies they can say what the past and present global average temperatures are? Well, let’s let that claim go for a moment and take a look at the individual records.

Here’s the first 25 of them:

marcott proxies 1 to 25Figure 2. M2012 proxies 1 to 25. Colors as in Figure 1. Note that each panel has its own vertical axis. Numbers to the left of each title are row/column.

Well … I’d start by saying that it seems doubtful that all of those are measuring the same thing. Panel 3/1 (row 3, column 1) shows the temperature decreasing for the last ten thousand years. Panels 4/4 and 4/5 show the opposite, warming for the last ten thousand years. Panel 4/3 shows four thousand years of warming and the remainder cooling.

Let’s move on to the next 25 contestants:

marcott proxies 26 to 50Figure 3. M2012 proxies 26 to 50. Colors as in Figure 1. Note that each panel has its own vertical axis. Numbers to the left of each title are row/column.

Here we see the same thing. Panels 1/1 and 4/1 show five thousand years of warming followed by five thousand years of cooling. Panel 1/5 shows the exact opposite, five thousand cooling years followed by five thousand of warming. Panel 4/5 show steady warming, panel 5/2 shows steady cooling, and panel 2/2 has something badly wrong near the start. Panel 2/4 also contains visible bad data.

Onwards, we near the finish line …

marcott proxies 51 to 73Figure 4. M2012 proxies 51 to 73. Colors as in Figure 1. Note that each panel has its own vertical axis. Numbers to the left of each title are row/column.

Panel 2/1 shows steadily rising temperatures for ten thousand years, as does panel 3/4. Panels 4/1 and 5/1, on the other hand, show steadily decreasing temperatures. Panel 4/2 has a hump in the middle. but panel 1/2 shows a valley in the middle.

Finally, here’s all the proxies, with each one shown as anomalies about the average of its last 2,000 years of data:

all marcott proxies anomalies

Figure 5. All Marcott proxies, expressed as anomalies about their most recent 2,000 years of record. Black line shows 401-point Gaussian average. N=9,288.

A fine example of their choice of proxies can be seen in the fact that they’ve included a proxy which claims a cooling about nine degrees in the last 10,000 years … although to be fair, they’ve also included some proxies that show seven degrees of warming over the same period

I’m sorry, guys, but I’m simply not buying the claim that we can tell anything at all about the global temperatures from these proxies. We’re deep into the GIGO range here. When one proxy shows rising temperatures for ten thousand years and another shows dropping temperatures for ten thousand years, what does any kind of average of those two tell us? That the temperature was rising seven degrees while it was falling nine degrees?

And finally, their claim of turning that dogs breakfast shown in Figure 1 into an absolute global temperature and comparing it to the current 14°C average temperature estimate?

Don’t make me laugh.

I say the reviewers of this paper didn’t use their Mark I eyeball. The first thing to do when dealing with a multi-proxy study is to establish ex-ante criteria for the selection of the proxies (“ex-ante” meaning choose your criteria before looking at the proxies). Here are their claimed criteria …

This study is based on the following data selection criteria:

• Sampling resolution is typically better than ~300 yr.

• At least four age-control points span or closely bracket the full measured interval.

• Chronological control is derived from the site itself and not primarily based on tuning to other sites. Layer counting is permitted if annual resolution is plausibly confirmed (e.g., ice-core chronologies). Core tops are assumed to be 1950 AD unless otherwise indicated in original publication.

• Each time series spans greater than 6500 years in duration and spans the entire 4500 – 5500 yr B.P. reference period.

• Established, quantitative temperature proxies

• Data are publicly available (PANGAEA, NOAA-Paleoclimate) or were provided directly by the original authors in non-proprietary form.

• All datasets included the original sampling depth and proxy measurement for complete error analysis and for consistent calibration of age models (Calib 6.0.1 using INTCAL09 (1)).

Now, that sounds all very reasonable … except that unfortunately, more than ten percent of the proxies don’t meet the very first criterion, they don’t have sampling resolution that is better than one sample per 300 years. Nice try, but eight of the proxies fail their own test.

I must say … when a study puts up its ex-ante proxy criteria and 10% of their own proxies fail the very first test … well, I must say, I don’t know what to say.

In any case, then you need to LOOK AT EACH AND EVERY PROXY. Only then can you begin to see if the choices make any sense at all. And in this case … not so much. Some of them are obviously bogus. Others, well, you’d have to check them one by one.

Final summary?

Bad proxies, bad scientists, no cookies for anyone.

Regards,

w.

==============================================================

Steve McIntyre writes in a post at CA today:

Marcott et al 2013 has received lots of publicity, mainly because of its supposed vindication of the Stick. A number of commenters have observed that they are unable to figure out how Marcott got the Stick portion of his graph from his data set. Add me to that group.

The uptick occurs in the final plot-point of his graphic (1940) and is a singleton. I wrote to Marcott asking him for further details of how he actually obtained the uptick, noting that the enormous 1920-to-1940 uptick is not characteristic of the underlying data. Marcott’s response was unhelpful: instead of explaining how he got the result, Marcott stated that they had “clearly” stated that the 1890-on portion of their reconstruction was “not robust”. I agree that the 20th century portion of their reconstruction is “not robust”, but do not feel that merely describing the recent portion as “not robust” does full justice to the issues. Nor does it provide an explanation.

Read Steve’s preliminary analysis here:

Marcott Mystery #1

[UPDATE] In the comments, Steve McIntyre suggested dividing the proxies by latitude bands. Here are those results:

marcott proxies by latitude

Note that there may be some interesting things buried in there … just not what Marcott says.

Also, regarding the reliability of his recent data, he describes it as “not robust”. It is also scarce. Only 0.6% of the data points are post 1900, for example. This raises the question of how he compared modern temperatures to the proxies, since there is so little overlap.

Finally, about a fifth of the proxies (14 of 73) have the most recent date as exactly 1950 … they said:

Core tops are assumed to be 1950 AD unless otherwise indicated in original publication.

Seems like an assumption that is almost assuredly wrong. I don’t know if that’s a difference that makes a difference, depends on how wrong it is. If we take the error as half the distance to the next data point for each affected proxy, it averages about ninety years … pushing 1950 back to 1860 … yeah, I’ll go with “not robust” for that.

[UPDATE 2] Yes, I am shoveling gravel, one ton down, six to go … and I do get to take breaks. Here’s the result of my break, the Marcott proxies by type:

marcott proxies by typeAnd here’s a picture of yr. unbending author playing what we used to call the “Swedish Banjo”.

swedish banjo

Best to all,

w.

 

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Chris Wright
March 14, 2013 5:43 am

So they didn’t include the individual proxy data in their paper? I wonder why?
It looks like climate science is plumbing new depths…..
Chris

Jim Johnson
March 14, 2013 5:49 am

One wonders…
If they used all these proxies, and got a drop off in the final century, whether they would still have published a paper saying that no evidence exists of global warming. I think they would. Right? Wouldn’t they?

March 14, 2013 5:49 am

“Marcott’s response was unhelpful: instead of explaining how he got the result, Marcott stated that they had “clearly” stated that the 1890-on portion of their reconstruction was “not robust”.”
NOT ROBUST! It might not be correct, or at least not able to be proven to be correct!
How is this not simply a bald statement admitting the lack of validity of the very data he is providing to back up someone else? In fact to back up the whole CAGW premise?
In other words, from his own mouth/keyboard, an admission of the virtual worthlessness of his hypothesis.
And this is the sort of data/evidence upon which the carbon trading schemes are built???
On which people are building and staking their careers. On which the media risk their reputation.
On which the public and “global warming” supporters have placed their faith.
Geez!

JJB MKI
March 14, 2013 6:08 am

“Not robust?” What the..? Have these celebrity seeking third rate data-analysts-for-hire moved so far beyond any criticism of their own peer group that they are free to completely make stuff up now? Or are they all on crack? My new paper shows definitively that climatic fluctuations are linked to planetary orbits. The part that actually proves this claim isn’t robust – in fact it just consists of random clippings from the back of cereal packets along with a couple of extracts from Wikipedia, but the paper shows it anyway because it is called ‘climatic fluctuations linked to planetary orbits’ and contains a bit of real astronomical data – can I have some grant money and fame now?

JJB MKI
March 14, 2013 6:16 am

Thanks for your analysis Willis. Is there any way the proxy panels could be arranged by type of proxy, or even type of proxy / latitude? It would be interesting to see what kind of apples and oranges are being lumped together here.

bernie
March 14, 2013 6:18 am

Nick:
So what is your reaction to the profiles of the 73 proxies? If Willis’ graphs are accurate would you be willing to acknowledge a GIGO event?

Jim Clarke
March 14, 2013 6:31 am

I went to the bank yesterday and told them that, based on the relative wealth of my ancestors over the last 2000 years, I should have 150 million dollars more in my account than I currently do. (I am missing about 6 zeros.) When they asked how I came to such a conclusion, I simply responded that my calculations for the 20th Century were not robust, but that I fully suspected them to put the money in my account and announce my wealth to the media.
After signing myself out of the psych ward this morning, I found nothing in the papers about my new wealth and there was no additional money in my account! I wonder how Marcott et al, got away with that excuse?
sarc/off

March 14, 2013 6:50 am

Lew Skannen at 9:42 pm
Ah, man, that’s a beautiful analogy.
I have a 6 year old and having been down the path of various fairies (tooth etc…) and know what a slippery slope it is.
Well done, Sir!
P.S. As always, thanks to Sir Willis for his keen dissections.

Steve McIntyre
March 14, 2013 7:19 am

Willis, I agree 1000% that plotting the proxies is a necessary first step, but in this case, you need to plot them by latitudinal zone. Over the Holocene, the effect of orbital changes on tropics, NH and SH extratropics are going to be different. One “expects” NHX proxies to show a mid-Holocene maximum, but the same is not expected for SHX proxies. Better to replot this in three zones. One does see a difference between NHX and SHX results, which might or might not mean something. Having said that, you and I are very much on the same page about proxy inconsistency – an issue never squarely addressed in these papers. But your graphic here conflates the issues and leaves an excuse.

March 14, 2013 7:35 am

I couldn’t help but notice how much figures 2 through 4 look like bingo cards. Perhaps they could be made into scratch off lottery tickets. Find five MWP’s in a row and BINGO! Find a MBH hockey stick and win the grand prize!
Also, if they’re claiming a composite hockey stick, it seems like more of the individual proxies would look like one.

vigilantfish
March 14, 2013 7:41 am

Paul Matthews says:
March 14, 2013 at 2:28 am
Thank you Willis. This is a far better way to debunk the Marcott study than what Easterbrook was doing. You just need to look at their own data, as you’ve done here.
==================
Hear, hear! I’ve got very little time, unfortunately, to spend at WUWT lately. Your presentation highlights the flaws (understatement) of Marcott so succinctly that no one with Mark 1 eyeballs (or ‘average’ brains – not sure what ‘mark’ that would be?) and a few minutes to spare can miss the point. These authors have made a huge contribution to ‘climate science’ as the laughingstock of real science.

DirkH
March 14, 2013 7:42 am

Nick Stokes says:
March 14, 2013 at 2:22 am
“If you take the Dome F d180O, it lists a resolution of 500 years. But if you look at the raw data, you’ll see values listed every 250 yr. ”
So Marcott et al have not managed to declare the resolutions correctly in their table? And no peer reviewer has noticed? Understandable; given the rush to the IPCC publishing deadline and the meager funding for climate science these days. /sarc

Rud Istvan
March 14, 2013 7:44 am

To several of the posters, it is almost certain that Marcott et. al. spliced in modern temperature records for the 73 proxy sites. They have the information, and use it in S14 to show that blended anomalies for the sites are representative of NCDC global temperature anomaly. Figure 1B shows an increase of about 0.7C from about 1850-1900 (hard to be exact) to about 2000 (again, hard to be exact, although ‘0’ is nominally 1950. It is proudly the same result as MANN 2008 (“statistically indistinguishable”). Mann 2008 used ‘Mike’s Nature trick’. Marcott et. al. is silent on the matter. It cannot be a matter of uncertainty, as Marcott said to Steve M. That would be to confound Figure S3 (a Monte Carlo generated uncertainty metric) with the actual proxy anomalies Willis plotted above. I note in passing that many on the misinformation highway have already made this mistake, since there is an ‘uncertainty’ hockey stick. Only 9 of the 73 proxies extend to or past 1950. 2 of the 9 show a slight uptick, and the simple mean is a downtick, requiring more ‘hide the decline’.
Some of the responses to my recent posting (rather heavily edited by Dr. Curry) at Climate Etc suggested Figure 1B is merely “illustrating” the abstract’s final sentence about all AR4 scenarios being above the Holocene optimum by 2100. That plainly cannot be, since 1B shows a rise about equal to what AR4 says has already happened, and the paper’s figure 3 shows how much more this would be by scenario.
The paper and the SI are silent on how this supposed ‘actual’ got generated to agree so perfectly with Mann 2008. The most likely answer is simple: just use Mike’s trick again.

Physics Major
March 14, 2013 7:47 am

Good work, Willis.
Can you tell me what software you use to produce the analysis and charts?

March 14, 2013 7:50 am

It has reached the point where even the premium scientific journals are engaged in little more than marketing regarding climate. Sure, they pick up short term PR in the secondary rags, but can’t they see that betting the ranch on Carbon dioxide will only hasten their inevitable demise?

March 14, 2013 8:15 am

“Well … I’d start by saying that it seems doubtful that all of those are measuring the same thing.”
A most elegant refutation. When looking at the original data it becomes obvious that the data is insuficiant to draw any conclusions about anything from. That anyone could go from these data to the conclusions speaks to a thought processess perverted beyond belief. I must admit though I have as much or perhaps more contempt for the reviewers than the authors.
I feel sorry for the taxpayers who paid for this junk and have zero effective recourse to address it.

Stu Miller
March 14, 2013 8:55 am

Willis, you have forgotten that, in climate science, you can use a proxy in whatever orientation is necessary to support your cause-as in upside down Mann. I think the breakthrough in this paper is in tilting the proxies to get the uptick at the end. (sarc)

AFPhys
March 14, 2013 9:06 am

This is a spectacular way to explain to even a complete layman the way that the claims of the “97% of climate scientists” are based more on simple religious faith instead of solid data.

Latimer Alder
March 14, 2013 9:09 am

My personal summary of this paper from he various analyses I have seen is
‘This is total crap’
Does anybody violently object?

March 14, 2013 9:20 am

Willis (and Brandon),
Thank you for making the proxies readily available. Talk about bizarre.
Some of these “temperature proxies” that extend back far enough do not reflect the recovery from the Younger Dryas(YD): 2/4 ODP.1084B; and 5/1 ME005A.43JC.
Some show a recovery from the YD but at the wrong time: 2/2 Hanging.Lake
Only a few suggest the 8.2 ka event: 1/5 N16P.905..UK37; 5/1 MR005A.43JS; 5/4 X74KL..TEX86; 3/4 Homestead.Scar; and 3/2 Flarken.Lake.
I am of the opinion that more than the surface temperature went into the blade. I suspect an IPCC non-forecast was also include. This from the Revkin interview.

Rud Istvan
March 14, 2013 9:22 am

One more observation strengthening the ‘Mike’s trick’ supposition. The paper’s figure 1H, which corresponds to 1B, shows that the number of proxies used for the average reconstruction “purple line” started at about 60 of the 73 back 11300 years ago, ran the full 73 for several thousand years, than began to drop off around 2000 years ago. By 1500 there were only about 50 (the figure is hard to read due to scaling). By about 1800 it was down to about 20, as would be expected if the average proxy resolution was 180 years and the median was 120. By 1920 (or maybe only for 1940) it was down to ZERO. Zero means you cannot plot anything. Yet a hockey stick blade was. But you could still plot thermometer temperatures, since those aren’t proxies.

March 14, 2013 9:35 am

I’m up and down on this one, so I would make a good proxy, if the price was right.

MT Geoff
March 14, 2013 9:53 am

When it comes to proxies, it seems like, if you’ve seen one, you’ve seen Yamal.