From the University of Hawaii at Manoa:
El Nino unusually active in the late 20th century

Spawning droughts, floods, and other weather disturbances world-wide, the El Niño – Southern Oscillation (ENSO) impacts the daily life of millions of people. During El Niño, Atlantic hurricane activity wanes and rainfall in Hawaii decreases while Pacific winter storms shift southward, elevating the risk of floods in California.
The ability to forecast how ENSO will respond to global warming thus matters greatly to society. Providing accurate predictions, though, is challenging because ENSO varies naturally over decades and centuries. Instrumental records are too short to determine whether any changes seen recently are simply natural or attributable to man-made greenhouse gases. Reconstructions of ENSO behavior are usually missing adequate records for the tropics where ENSO develops.
Help is now underway in the form of a tree-ring record reflecting ENSO activity over the past seven centuries. Tree-rings have been shown to be very good proxies for temperature and rainfall measurements. An international team of scientists spearheaded by Jinbao Li and Shang-Ping Xie, while working at the International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, has compiled 2,222 tree-ring chronologies of the past seven centuries from both the tropics and mid-latitudes in both hemispheres. Their work is published in the June 30, 2013 online issue of Nature Climate Change.
The inclusion of tropical tree-ring records enabled the team to generate an archive of ENSO activity of unprecedented accuracy, as attested by the close correspondence with records from equatorial Pacific corals and with an independent Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstruction that captures well-known teleconnection climate patterns.
These proxy records all indicate that ENSO was unusually active in the late 20th century compared to the past seven centuries, implying that this climate phenomenon is responding to ongoing global warming.
“In the year after a large tropical volcanic eruption, our record shows that the east-central tropical Pacific is unusually cool, followed by unusual warming one year later. Like greenhouse gases, volcanic aerosols perturb the Earth’s radiation balance. This supports the idea that the unusually high ENSO activity in the late 20th century is a footprint of global warming” explains lead author Jinbao Li.
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“Many climate models do not reflect the strong ENSO response to global warming that we found,” says co-author Shang-Ping Xie, meteorology professor at the International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa and Roger Revelle Professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California at San Diego. “This suggests that many models underestimate the sensitivity to radiative perturbations in greenhouse gases. Our results now provide a guide to improve the accuracy of climate models and their projections of future ENSO activity. If this trend of increasing ENSO activity continues, we expect to see more weather extremes such as floods and droughts.”
Citation: Li, J., S.-P. Xie, E. R. Cook, M. Morales, D. Christie, N. Johnson, F. Chen, R. D’Arrigo, A. Fowler, X. Gou, and K. Fang (2013): El Niño modulations over the past seven centuries. Nature Climate Change. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nclimate1936
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Basic Research Program of China (2012CB955600), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, FONDECYT (No.1120965), CONICYT/FONDAP/15110009, CONICET and IAI (CRN2047).

So you’ll have no problem linking to a graph of integrated sunspot numbers departing from the mean made prior to my first development of the technique in 2009 then?
tallbloke says:
July 3, 2013 at 11:13 pm
So you’ll have no problem linking to a graph of integrated sunspot numbers
Some examples:
http://www.earthdoc.org/publication/download/?publication=4410
by D Martini – 2001 –
quasi lowpass filter, besides we found that the integrated sunspot numbers … and the integrated sunspot numbers (marked with circles) are shown in Fig. 1.
The Global Solar Magnetic Field Through a Full Sunspot Cycle …
soi.stanford.edu/~yliu/papers/schrijver08.pdf
by CJ Schrijver – 2008 – Cited by 43 – Related articles
For example, the cycle-to-cycle variation of the integrated sunspot number would be expected to cause substantial variations in the behavior of the field over the …
Hemispheric Sunspot Numbers R_n and R_s: Catalogue and NS …
arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0208436
by M Temmer – 2002 – Cited by 108 – Related articles
Aug 23, 2002 – graph of the cumulative Sunspot Numbers (Fig. 5). The calculated t values with 95% significance are overplotted at each specific month signed …
A cumulative method of presentation of solar activity secular changes
adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1988BAICz..39..355B
by V Bumba – 1988 – Related articles
The Cumulative Curves for Other Indices of Solar Activity In the same way we used the mean yearly values of the observed sunspot relative number for …
Appendix G – Analytical methods for water resource development …
http://www.droughtsandfloods.com/Appendix%20G%20-%20Long%20range…
by WJR Alexander – 1978
and negative sunspot numbers in Figure 2A and the dates of zero cumulative departure in. Figure 2B. The straight lines drawn through these points in Figure 2A …
Geological Survey Professional Paper – Volumes 372-373 – Page A-37 – Google Books Result
books.google.com/books?id=NuwqAQAAIAAJ
1963 – Geology
RELATIVE SUNSPOT NUMBER, ZURICH OBSERVATORY TULARE LAKE, … The trends in cumulative departures from this mean are similar to those shown by …
A typical mark of a pseudo-scientist is ignorance of the literature and self-adoration.
tallbloke says:
July 3, 2013 at 11:13 pm
So you’ll have no problem linking to a graph of integrated sunspot numbers
Some more examples:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15584306
In the early days of data verification, engineers paid much attention to the mean and
changes in the mean of a time series. Until 1937, plotting and analyzing the cumulative
departures from the mean were the principle methods of verifying the consistency
and homogeneity of hydrometeorological data.
http://ncsd.ca.gov/Library/Groundwater%20Information/PAPADOPULOS%20REPORT.pdf
http://trs-new.jpl.nasa.gov/dspace/bitstream/2014/35550/1/93-1255.pdf
Related to the calculation of the Hurst exponent
Even discussed here at WUWT
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2007/10/07/california-climate-pdo-lod-and-sunspot-departure/
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1993JATP…55..155T
Rome rainfall and sunspot numbers. Thomas, R. G.
Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Vol. 55, No. 2, p. 155 – 164, 02/1993
“The accumulated departure from mean (ADM) of the 208 yr Rome rainfall strongly inversely resembles the ADM of sunspot numbers.”
Perhaps this last one is the clearest refutation of your claim.
Thanks Leif, I’ll pick my way through those. I wonder why pseudo-scientists such as yourself have been ignoring the implications all these years.
tallbloke says:
July 4, 2013 at 11:42 am
Thanks Leif, I’ll pick my way through those.
You can start with this one:
Rome rainfall and sunspot numbers. Thomas, R. G.
Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics, Vol. 55, No. 2, p. 155 – 164, 02/1993
“The accumulated departure from mean (ADM) of the 208 yr Rome rainfall strongly inversely resembles the ADM of sunspot numbers.”
Perhaps this last one is the clearest refutation of your claim.
I wonder why pseudo-scientists such as yourself have been ignoring the implications all these years.
You snide remarks tell more about you. Since all those ‘correlations’ are spurious there are no implications to ignore.
You may benefit from these papers [specifically about ENSO – to stay on topic]
http://www.leif.org/EOS/No-Solar-Decadal-Forcing.pdf
http://www.leif.org/EOS/Is-there-Evidence-for-Solar-Forcing.pdf
http://www.leif.org/EOS/Causality-SSN-Climate.pdf