Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
As Anthony discussed here, some Australian climate scientists think that there was an “angry summer” in 2012. Inspired by the necromantic incantations in support of the Aussie claims coming from the irrepressible Racehorse Nick Stokes, I went to take a look at the Australian temperature data. I found out that in response to hosts of complaints about their prior work, in March of 2012 the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) released a new temperature database called ACORN-SAT. This clumsy acronym stands for the Australian Climate Observations Reference Network (overview here, data here)
It’s a daily dataset, which I like. And they seem to have learned something from Anthony Watts and the Surfacestation project, they have photos and descriptions and metadata for each individual station. Plus the data is well error-checked and vetted. The site says:
Expert review
All scientific work at the Bureau is subject to expert peer review. Recognising public interest in ACORN-SAT as the basis for climate change analysis, the Bureau initiated an additional international peer review of its processes and methodologies.
A panel of world-leading experts convened in Melbourne in 2011 to review the methods used in developing ACORN-SAT. It ranked the Bureau’s procedures and data analysis as amongst the best in the world.
and
Methods and development
Creating a modern homogenised Australian temperature record requires extensive scientific knowledge – such as understanding how changes in technology and station moves affect data consistency over time.
The Bureau of Meteorology’s climate data experts have carefully analysed the digitised data to create a consistent – or homogeneous – record of daily temperatures over the last 100 years.
As a result, I was stoked to find the collection of temperature records. So I wrote an R program and downloaded the data so I could investigate it. But when I had just gotten all the data downloaded started my investigation, in the finest climate science tradition, everything suddenly went pear-shaped.
What happened was that while researching the ACORN-SAT dataset, I chanced across a website with a post from July 2012, about four months after the ACORN-SAT dataset was released. The author made the surprising claim that on a number of days in various records in the ACORN-SAT dataset, the minimum temperature for the day was HIGHER than the maximum temperature for the day … oooogh. Not pretty, no.
Well, I figured that new datasets have teething problems, and since this post was from almost a year ago and was from just after the release of the dataset, I reckoned that the issue must’ve been fixed …
…
…
… but then I came to my senses, and I remembered that this was the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), and I knew I’d be a fool not to check. Their reputation is not sterling, in fact it is pewter … so I wrote a program to search through all the stations to find all of the days with that particular error. Here’s what I found:
Out of the 112 ACORN-SAT stations, no less than 69 of them have at least one day in the record with a minimum temperature greater than the maximum temperature for the same day. In the entire dataset, there are 917 days where the min exceeds the max temperature …
I absolutely hate findings like this. By itself the finding likely make almost no difference for most applications. These are daily datasets, with each station having around 100 years of data, 365 days per year, that means the whole dataset has about 4 million records, so the 917 errors are 0.02% if the data … but it means that I simply can’t trust the results when I use the data. It means whoever put the dataset out there didn’t do their homework.
And sadly, that means that we don’t know what else they might not have done.
Once again, the issue is not that the ACORN-SAT dataset had these problems. All new datasets have things wrong with them.
The issue is that the authors and curators of the dataset have abdicated their responsibilities. They have had a year to fix this most simple of all the possible problems, and near as I can tell, they’ve done nothing about it. They’re not paying attention, so we don’t know whether their data is valid or not. Bad Australians, no Vegemite for them …
I must confess … this kind of shabby, “phone it in” climate science is getting kinda old …
w.
THE RESULTS
Station, Bad days in record (w/ min. temperature exceeding the max. temp)
Adelaide, 1
Albany, 2
Alice Springs, 36
Birdsville, 1
Bourke, 12
Burketown, 6
Cabramurra, 212
Cairns, 2
Canberra, 4
Cape Borda, 4
Cape Leeuwin, 2
Cape Otway Lighthouse, 63
Charleville, 30
Charters Towers, 8
Dubbo, 8
Esperance, 1
Eucla, 5
Forrest, 1
Gabo Island, 1
Gayndah, 3
Georgetown, 15
Giles, 3
Grove, 1
Halls Creek, 21
Hobart, 7
Inverell, 11
Kalgoorlie-Boulder, 11
Kalumburu, 1
Katanning, 1
Kerang, 1
Kyancutta, 2
Larapuna (Eddystone Point), 4
Longreach, 24
Low Head, 39
Mackay, 61
Marble Bar, 11
Marree, 2
Meekatharra, 12
Melbourne Regional Office, 7
Merredin, 1
Mildura, 1
Miles, 5
Morawa, 7
Moree, 3
Mount Gambier, 12
Nhill, 4
Normanton, 3
Nowra, 2
Orbost, 48
Palmerville, 1
Port Hedland, 2
Port Lincoln, 8
Rabbit Flat, 3
Richmond (NSW), 1
Richmond (Qld), 9
Robe, 2
St George, 2
Sydney, 12
Tarcoola, 4
Tennant Creek, 40
Thargomindah, 5
Tibooburra, 15
Wagga Wagga, 1
Walgett, 3
Wilcannia, 1
Wilsons Promontory, 79
Wittenoom, 4
Wyalong, 2
Yamba, 1

The BOM clicks on to a new “day” at 9am (presumably when the sleepyheads roll into the office). It is quite possible, but quite misleading, for minima to exceed maxima for a 24 hour period given this. All it takes is a fast moving weather system, of which we get plenty on this vast continent.
I guess whatever cutoff point they choose will introduce anomalies, but it also matters – in terms of real descriptions of the weather – that sunrise/sunset times vary by over four hours (cumulatively) where I live between seasons. In summer, at 9am the sun has been beating down for nearly four hours. In winter, it is just hitting the frost on the lawn with weak, slanting rays – although it has technically been risen for a couple of hours. I realise that it doesn’t affect the statistics if consistently applied, but it does provide a warped picture of actual temperature patterns throughout the day, across the seasons.
As for the BOM’s reliability, I hope that Geoff Sherrington and a few other hardy souls who have been working on the data for a long time on their own dime drop by to comment. All that rhetoric about state-of-the-art, peer reviewed, bla bla bla is just self-congratulatory nonsense. It is on a par with statements about the IPCC being a source of “gold plated” science. They have adjusted data (without explanation), changed goalposts, ignored evidence of obvious errors and campaigned relentlessly for CAGW for many years.
Ed Zuiderwijk says: June 29, 2013 at 2:05 am
“That strikes me as curious in the extreme. I wonder if the error is a timing error: the minimum actually belonging to the next or the previous day.”
That is the convention. From Blair Trewin’s Tech Note:
“The current Bureau of Meteorology standard for daily maximum and minimum temperatures is for both to be measured for the 24 hours ending at 0900 local time, with the maximum temperature being attributed to the previous day. This standard has been in place since 1 January 1964”
The idea is that when you read at 9 am, the min is probably today and the max yesterday. It may happen that the previously read min is greater than that max. There is discussion as to how to incorporate the 9am reading to rationalize that, but there isn’t always a 9am reading recorded. Trewin’s note also describes various other min-max reading practices by non-BOM managed sites. I see that the big deviant here was Cabramurra, which was probably managed by the Snowy Mountains Authority. Two others are lighthouses.
Yep. One thing is just about certain. If one finds that many totally blatant errors, there will be multiple numbers of other errors lurking which are not so obvious. Almost a law of nature! This is just the tip of the iceberg. The dataset is probably unfixable. Sad.
The ACORN record has been adjusted so much that it makes it almost useless. This is the record for Bourke in Jan 1939 showing raw temperatures v ACORN temperature data. Note all of the higher temps (above 30C) have been adjusted downwards, some by 0.9C.
Temps below 30C have been adjusted upwards by 0.1C.
Can anyone see any reason/logic for this?
Jan raw ACORN
1st 38.9 38.4
2nd 40.0 39.1
3rd 42.2 41.9
4th 38.1 37.9
5th 38.9 38.4
6th 41.7 41.5
7th 41.7 41.5
8th 43.4 43.0
9th 46.1 45.7
10th 48.3 47.9
11th 47.2 46.8
12th 46.2 45.8
13th 45.7 45.3
14th 46.1 45.7
15th 47.2 46.8
16th 46.7 46.3
17th 40.0 39.1
18th 40.1 39.1
19th 40.0 39.1
20th 41.9 41.7
21st 42.5 42.1
22nd44.2 43.8
23rd 36.7 36.5
24th 40.3 39.2
25th 36.6 36.5
26th 29.4 29.5
27th 29.3 29.4
28th 28.8 28.9
29th 30.6 30.5
30th 35.6 35.4
31st 38.6 38.3
Oh great mayte, yeah o allright right mate….so says Nick Stokes. A O KAAAAAAAAY.
Because at 9am the high is yesterdays and the low is todays….eeerrrrrrrrr uhhhhhhhhhhh on only 917 records. Whoooowwhhaaaaattttt!?!?!?! So, the weather stations are then wrong for all of the other records?
Okay okay…what are they correct for then nick stokes….they are either correct only 917 times or they are completely incorrect. And, if they are only correct 917 times or they are completely incorrect why haven’t they been fixed yet?
Australian science mate. Gooooooday
Can I ask the obvious question and suggest that perhaps those are days when the temperature fell during the day/24 hour period, so that the maximum temperature was recorded before the minimum, rather than the more common other way around. Someone forgot to correct for this.
This would make sense since some of the sites where this occurs more often are generally located near the sea, where it is known southerly changes come in and drop temperatures rapidly, espcially on warm days.
eg Wilsons Promontory 79, (southerly changes often)
Cape Otway lighthouse 63 ditto.
I grew up in Sydney where it is known you can get a southerly to drop temperatures 12 C in ~20 minutes.
Hottest summer or not, the facts are that not a single state recorded their hottest.
http://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2013/03/01/hottest-australian-summer-not-quite-what-it-seems/
“thingodonta says:
June 29, 2013 at 3:49 am”
Good point. From my own experience, Christmas Day, 1998, Melbourne. I don’t recall what the temperature was at 9am that day (If that is when the TMin is measured) but by 12noon-ish, lunchtime, it was ~36c. By 2pm, it was ~12c simply due to a change in wind direction. While this may be nothing to note for a Melbournite, I recall it because it was my first Aussie summer (Having previously lived in Wellington, New Zealand). I had just got used to 35c+ days (Dry heat is OK, the humidity kills me), only to shiver, literally shiver, that afternoon and night.
Confusedandinfuriated says:
June 29, 2013 at 12:04 am
“They originally wanted to use “Cruel Summer” but Bananarama beat them to it. :)”
Fantastic! Best part is, I listened to the song 5 minutes ago! Crazy coincidence.
gaelan clark says: June 29, 2013 at 3:32 am
“Australian science mate. Gooooooday”
Australian science is fine. The people running ACORN have to deal, as would anyone doing it, with records as collected (not by scientists) in the past. I’m sure they would prefer that the thermometers were read at midnight, without fail. But the cycle was different and they have adopted a convention to adapt this to the calendar day. Sometimes this causes apparent inconsistency. They can’t re-do the readings.
I worked at Yeelirrie Station, a million acre Pastoral Station in the middle of WA. Records and BOM data had been collected for the last 80 years. In the winter if 2012 we were regularly the coldest or one of in the whole of WA, nightly news would have to read out Yeelirrie minus whatever. BOM contacted us about halfway through winter and informed us that our 6am temp readings would no longer be required. To me this seemed odd, but I guess they did not want regular minus readings in the middle of WA? What effect does this have on calculating mean temps?
Well, maximum, minimum, husbands, wives … what’s in a word?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/10147246/Men-can-be-wives-and-women-husbands-as-Government-overrules-the-dictionary.html
Nick Stokes says:
June 29, 2013 at 4:20 am
… They can’t re-do the readings.
——————————
They “redo” the readings every month. Making the past colder and the current temps warmer.
Everyone knows what a “day” is. If you miss a reading, it is missed. You do not make up the missed day with obviously incorrect data.
Sorry but I have two questions….
First (Nick)….why does it take an American, so disgusted with your “angry summer” crapola and so far removed from your entire operanda, to find inconsistencies, irregularities and just plain wierdisms within your very own network…which WAS supposed to be sterling?
Second (anyone)….this is the 21st century, not 1869, we can automate temperature readings and take measurements without human eyes…why dont we?
John Marshall
Meta is a prefix used in English (and other Greek-owing languages) to indicate a concept which is an abstraction from another concept, used to complete or add
Metadata is hence data about data
DirkH says:
June 29, 2013 at 4:19 am
Confusedandinfuriated says:
June 29, 2013 at 12:04 am
“They originally wanted to use “Cruel Summer” but Bananarama beat them to it. :)”
Fantastic! Best part is, I listened to the song 5 minutes ago! Crazy coincidence.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
For those who do not know this song: (one of several versions)
gaelan clark – there has been a whole team of Aussies (Kenskingdom above being one of them and Jo Nova another) that have been investigating the BoM and their methods. Prior to ACORN there was the HQ (High Quality) data yet when this team made an FOI request to BoM for the algorithms used to create the HQ data set the BoM initially ignored it but then replied that they no longer used the HQ set and now used the ACORN set so the algorithms weren’t necessary.
Such is the arrogance of the BoM senior management.
When the Melbourne Regional Office reports 7 topsy-turvy days I really don’t know what to say. This can’t be a mistake by rank amateurs.
“Nick Stokes says:
June 29, 2013 at 4:20 am”
You do not need to be a “scientist” to read a thermometer, wind, pressure or any other kind of gauge device what-have-you, that has some form of visible indicator (Like a speedometer) of what the current state is for that particular instrument. And it’s completely ridiculous to suggest otherwise!
Do you need to be a “scientist” to read a thermometer that has taken the body “temperature” of your child that indicates 42c to know that’s where the brain gets damaged?
So, on some days the minimum temperature for the day shows higher than the maximum for the day, and we should just go with it – it is just the way it is done and it is easy to isolate these “anomalies”.
But, what about all the other days when the minimum and maximums are also incorrect, just not “upside down”? How do we determine these “anomalies”? How does anyone know which days are accurate and which have some level of error from this collection/reporting methodology?
I see Nick is here defending the indefensible once again. At least that is consistent. 🙂
Try this trading quant-model global portfolios, and see how long you last.
Ian George said @ur momisugly June 29, 2013 at 3:24 am
It’s the temperature adjuster’s job to adjust the temperature readings. If the temperature adjuster failed to adjust the temperatures, then the temperature adjuster would be out of work! Simples, really 🙂
jeremyp99 said @ur momisugly June 29, 2013 at 4:30 am
The genesis of this was the perversion of using a grammatical term, “gender”, as a synonym for “sex”. The genders are masculine, feminine and neuter; the sexes are male and female. Gender and sex don’t even map 1:1. No wonder confusion reigns…
You not going to believe this but just as I had read down to the bananarama video, I became aware of the song playing on the radio (hadn’t been listening really) singing the ‘cruel summer’ part!!! Neil Galway Ireland Classic Hits 4FM 1.30pm
JohnWho said @ur momisugly June 29, 2013 at 5:11 am
So how would you suggest we go back and redo the readings? Enquiring minds…