UPDATE: 7/12/13 1045 PDT DMI concedes the record may not be valid, see here
I’ve been working on this one for a week, and I finally confirmed my hunch about where the weather station is located. The story begins with Jason Samenow at the Washington Post, who made a big deal out of a new temperature record in Maniitsoq, Greenland:
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/wp/2013/08/01/greenland-soars-to-highest-temperature-ever-recorded/
Any time I read about new record temperatures in the Arctic or Antarctic, I tend to think of this simple truth: In near polar settlements, temperature is measured close to that small human island of warmth , and since most such towns are completely dependent on aviation, the measurement is often done at the airport, since weather there is a go/no go factor of primary importance.
It turns out I was correct. What was surprising was just how correct my hunch turned out to be.
First, the Maniitsoq, Greenland data for July 30th, courtesy of Weather Underground:
Source: http://www.wunderground.com/history/airport/BGMQ/2013/7/30/DailyHistory.html?req_city=NA&req_state=NA&req_statename=NA&MR=1
Note the yellow highlights for the Tmax. This confirms Samenow’s story, though I find it curious that Weather Underground didn’t round up to 79F based on Samenow’s reported value of 78.6F (which he likes to say is nearly 80F). No matter, there are other issues that I was suspicious of.
First, this is a weather event, it doesn’t have anything to do with climate, as DMI indicated on their weather map for the day, strong warm winds behind a warm front washed over southwest Greenland, where Maniitsoq is located:
Weather pattern responsible for record warmth in southwest Greenland (Danish Meteorological Institute)
Samenow was correct in noting:
It adds the warmth may have been enhanced by a phenomenon known as the Foehn Effect, in which air flows over nearby elevated terrain and compresses and heats on its way down. In this case, DMI believes the air may have passed over the elevated Sugar Loaf ice cap and then dried and warmed up as it descended (or downsloped) on its leeward side into Maniitsoq.
But then falls back into the “it must somehow be related to global warming” position saying:
The DMI says the warmth was not “unnatural”, but explains it fits into a long-term pattern of climate warming.
“[T]here is an indisputable gradual increase in temperature in Greenland,” DMI writes. “Along the way, any ‘warm event’ thus have a higher probability of being slightly warmer than the previous one.”
As I pointed out at the beginning of this article, the temperature was measured at the airport. But how good is that weather station location? Is it biased by its placement at the airport? It took me a week to find it, but find it I did.
First, an overview from Google Earth of the town and the airport. You can clearly see the “nearby elevated terrain” near the airport.
The winds were out of the Northeast at the time of the high reading after 5PM, note yellow highlights:
Next, from aerial closeup and my experience with spotting hundreds of weather stations for the SurfaceStations project, this is where I thought the Stevenson Screen might be at the airport. try as I might though, I couldn’t find a photo of it.
It turned out that a video shot by a tourist (Bart Rietveld) confirmed my suspicion, I found it this morning during a bout of insomnia. Here’s the screencap from the video, looking Northwest from the tarmac at BGMQ aka Maniitsoq airport.
Source: @ 0:15 into this video:
Here is what I conclude about the station placement:
- Maniitsoq airport is a recent development in the history of the area, it has been settled for almost 4000 years. It is an anomaly carved out of the landscape (see first Google Earth image).
- The weather station is surrounded by the airport runway and tarmac, which is unnatural ground cover. Note how dark it is in the tourist video.
- The dark albedo there is enough to melt snow in the winter, in fact they count on it to help keep the airport open. Just like I showed in Svalbard, they have to keep the runway open even after snowfall, and it becomes an albedo anomaly surrounded by snow.
- The local siting effects likely added to the temperature record on July 30th because the easterly wind would also have picked up some of the heat from the terminal building and tarmac and transported it to the weather station.
- For these reasons, it isn’t a good place to measure temperature for climate, but it is the best place to measure weather/temperature for aviation purposes: right next to the runway.
It seems that DMI agrees that this temperature is artificially elevated at the Maniitsoq airport, because according to this story in Nunatsiaq Online, DMI has discarded the record in favor of one in the town. They added this footnote to their story about record heat in Greenland:
[Note: the DMI later rescinded the claim that the July 30 temperature was a record-breaker, saying that the lower temperature recorded at another station in the community — 24 C — stands for that day. That’s 1.9 C lower than the record, which is still to be broken]
Note also that DMI had this to say in the original report on the event:
Whether the 25.9 ° C later elevated to a new record for Greenland will first be decided after further climatological study of the situation.
While I could not find the rescinding announcement at DMI, likely due to me being unable to effectively interpret the language on the DMI website, I can confirm that as of today, 11 days after the event, the old record still stands:
Source: http://www.dmi.dk/groenland/arkiver/vejrekstremer/
It looks like Mr. Samenow at the Washington Post will need to issue a retraction. Ditto for Dr. Jason Box and who also bought into the event without questioning it or following up on it.
And these news articles need corrections (readers can help by sending notes to them):
Related articles
- Greenland soars to its highest temperature ever recorded, almost 80 degrees F. (washingtonpost.com)
- Greenland Hits Highest Temperature Ever Recorded (thesterlingroad.com)
- Global weirding 2013: same temp in Ojai as in Greenland (achangeinthewind.com)
- Record high temperature recorded in Greenland (summitcountyvoice.com)
- Greenland hottest ever (blogs.redding.com)
- Greenland experiences ‘record high’ temperatures (blueandgreentomorrow.com)
===================================================================
UPDATE Dr. Richard Keen adds in comments:
All this discussion of a degree or two is a moot point, since even the “nearly 80 degrees”, i.e. 79F, is still 7 degrees short of the record high for Greenland.
That honor belongs to Ivigtut, down on the southern tip of Greenland (probably not far from Maniitsoq), where it was 86F (30.1C) sometime before 1940. This record is published in:
Climates of the World, in Climate and Man – Yearbook of Agriculture, US Dept of Agriculture, 1941
reprinted in:
Climates of the World, US Dept. Commerce, 1969
and even in Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivittuut
So you know it’s valid.
I don’t know the exact date of the record, but suffice it to say it’s before 1940, which explains why the DMI chose to use records starting in 1958. After all, Greenland weather records go back to 1784 (Vinther et al., Extending Greenland temperature records into the late eighteenth century, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 111, D11105, doi:10.1029/2005JD006810, 2006). It’s a common ploy for the Warmers to act as though climate started in 1958, when Keeling starting recording CO2 on Mauna Loa, or 1947, when the PDO went cool, or 1970, when Arctic temperatures bottomed out, to get their upward trends.








Want to see an interesting record? This isn’t an “all time” record but an interesting record for the month of December: Kugluktuk, Nunavut, Canada. December record: 81.3F (27.4C)
And that 81.3F record occurred during a month with 0 hours of sunshine.
When I can’t sleep, I paint or draw. You must be the only person who when he can’t sleep goes hunting for pictures of weather stations at obscure airports.
Whatever happened to that big Watts et al paper on US temperature trends?
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/29/press-release-2/
It’s been over a year now, and not a peep. Most papers pass peer review in that time, if they’re going to pass at all….
Sedron L:
re your post at August 10, 2013 at 9:52 am.
Personal requests from anonymous trolls should not be answered. I trust that our host will do the proper thing and ignore yours.
Richard
People will remember this record. It does not matter if it is false or not. This is a record Hot temperature, caused by Global warming. Any retraction will not matter. The only thing that matters is the press releases, that is why the cAGW crowd are winning.
Well done on getting a correction Mr Watts, but I fear all of your work is in vain. They already got their message out. They always win with press releases, they can always apologise to an empty orchestra. 🙁
Richard: It’s a legitimate question.
I wonder what this site would say about another research group who put out a big noisy press release and then failed to deliver the goods. My guess: it wouldn’t be very nice.
DavidCobb says:
August 10, 2013 at 7:29 am
Does anybody have a picture of the Kugluktuk (Coppermine) weather station.
Weatherunderground show its location as a 50 sqft pad about 200 ft from the arctic ocean.
I have been watching it for a few days because its temperature is running 20 to 30 degrees above the rest of Canada. The odd thing is the temperature is tracking solar irradiance… exactly. Without regard for wind speed or direction. I can see that happening in the desert, but on a marshy beach near a less than 40 degree ocean? It doesn’t seem likely.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
David, at low angles, an ocean’s surface makes for an excellent mirror.
Methinks, the high daylight-temps at Kugluktuk reflect (pun intended) increased solar irradiation heating the station’s Stevenson Screen, due to the sea-surface reflecting sunlight on it.
@crosspatch
You wrote: “Want to see an interesting record? This isn’t an “all time” record but an interesting record for the month of December: Kugluktuk, Nunavut, Canada. December record: 81.3F (27.4C)”
I agree, that is an interesting record, given that the average December high for Kugluktuk is
-21.4C, -6.5F; and as you mentioned, this occurred when there was virtually no sunlight. I can see your figure verified here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kugluktuk#Climate
Perhaps there was a pocket of CO2 crowding the Kugluktuk airport at the time?
Preview is here.
Thanks Anthony – appreciated!
And, incidentally, an excellent bit of detective work.
My Danish is pretty non-existent, but I think that only three months’ records, as shown in your screencap of the DMI website, are not taken from airport [= Lufthavn (~ Heaven-haven or sky-port)] sites.
Auto
Sedron L:
As a courtesy I am writing to say your anonymous troll comment addressed to me has been read, noted and ignored.
This post can be taken as my courtesy response to all similar anonymous troll comments so I shall not be making an actual reply to them.
Richard
The dark albedo there is enough to melt snow in the winter, in fact they count on it to help keep the airport open. Just like I showed in Svalbard, they have to keep the runway open even after snowfall, and it becomes an albedo anomaly surrounded by snow.
Australia spent several $10s of millions building an ice air strip in Antarctica at a location where it never gets above zero, then found it wasn’t usable for several months a year because of melted water on the surface.
The reason was planes taking off and landing, sprayed black carbon on the ice surface causing melt at well below zero.
When the sun shines at temperatures below zero, albedo rules.
I note that the accepted record is at Kangerlussuaq. This is one of the two main Greenland entry points with regular flights from Copenhagen. I also note that two other monthly highs are also at Kangerlussuaq. It is essentially only a long runway with basic terminal buildings and lots of concrete/ tarmac and dark rock & gravel. (Been there).
Perhaps these ‘records’ could be suspect?
Thomas , Scotland
Sedron L says:
“It’s been over a year now, and not a peep. Most papers pass peer review in that time, if they’re going to pass at all….”
Most papers that are ‘Pal Reviewed’ pass review in a matter of weeks or months. Michael Mann recently got a paper reviewed in less tha two months, IIRC. But even if you are Prof Richard Lindzen with more than 200 publications, papers can easily take more than a year to be reviewed. Dr. Lindzen mentioned a while back that he was still waiting for a paper to be reviewed, and that it had been a year since it was submitted.
The problem is in the journal system, which in the climate field is controlled by people riding the grant gravy train, and they do not want any narrative other than their own to receive the imprimatur of peer review.
Best I can tell (by interpolation) is that the airport is at 65 north latitude.
The runway is going from the southeast to the northwest, right next to the sea, and Google Maps – for what that is worth – says the weather station is next to the runway, a few feet on the land side. This means that the weather station is – as noted above – completely exposed to sunlight reflecting “up” from the open water and flat runways to the south and west of the weather station box for all hours from from just before noon until the sun sets.
So, from the NOAA’s solar calculator website for this latitude for yesterday afternoon:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/grad/neubrew/SolarCalc.jsp
Year-MM-DD-HH Air Mass, Elevation Angle, Azimuth Angle
2013 08 09 04 17.86137 2.31772 55.27559
2013 08 09 05 7.09196 7.70643 68.63968
2013 08 09 06 4.13642 13.76555 81.95252
2013 08 09 07 2.89523 20.05800 95.52560
2013 08 09 08 2.25556 26.20817 109.73129
2013 08 09 09 1.89240 31.81040 124.95727
2013 08 09 10 1.68177 36.40690 141.50659
2013 08 09 11 1.56920 39.51574 159.41527
2013 08 09 12 1.53039 40.72981 178.25969
2013 08 09 13 1.55772 39.86648 197.18739
2013 08 09 14 1.65658 37.05514 215.30292
2013 08 09 15 1.84800 32.67355 232.09510
2013 08 09 16 2.17999 27.19909 247.53103
2013 08 09 17 2.76076 21.09680 261.88273
2013 08 09 18 3.86658 14.78063 275.53310
2013 08 09 19 6.40048 8.62839 288.86248
2013 08 09 20 14.96880 3.05267 302.19672
So, with air mass being relatively low, there is a lot of solar energy getting through the atmosphere to be reflected, and yes, that energy is at the right area to be reflected back up into the sides of the weather station “box” ….
There have been a number of comments about the temperature at Kugluktuk. I do weather forecasting for the Northwest Territories in Canada. It has been extremely hot there for the past couple of weeks, and through most of the summer in fact. Many highs near 30C and above. Just a few days ago Fort MacPherson, not too far south of the Arctic coastline in the west NWT was 33C and a location just southeast of Norman Wells, (near Great Bear Lake) was also 33C. Quite a few record highs have been set in the last few days. A lot of these sites are at forestry stations well away from any airports.
Michael Mann recently got a paper reviewed in less tha two months, IIRC.
Watson and Crick’s took about six weeks.
climatereason says:
August 10, 2013 at 9:27 am
I wonder how the recent warm Greenland ice sheet summer temperatures were measured. Possibly with electric-powered digital thermometers?
morgamboguru
sea is to the north, sun is to the south.
Looks more like poor air flow around the sensor.
Aug 6 had a north breeze which kept the temperature down to just above sixty until it shifted and the temp rose to 75 in just a couple of hours. Historical temp data for month of August this year shows flat dew point but temps rise to around max at noon and stay there till around six or seven at night.
The problem is in the journal system, which in the climate field is controlled by people riding the grant gravy train…
Don’t contrariains like to pass around these lists of the hundreds of non-consensus peer-reviewed papers? Yes, I think they do.
PS: I made a simple requst for the status of a widely announced work. It’s a legitimate question. I don’t understand why a mere request annoys so many people.
Great work, Tony. Brilliant. Who needs professional meteorologists? Let us hear the reply when you write to John Cappelen (the article’s author – above link)
Could you please now debunk the recent ‘record’ temps in Austria and Shanghai?
Re: Kuglutuk in December.
I have a database of temperatures from the former Coppermine and now Kuglutuk airport that goes to 1997. The warmest December temperature I can find is 4.4C in 1934. I think Wikipedia has it wrong, or something amazing happened since 1997.
Sedron L:
Your post at August 10, 2013 at 10:59 am
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/08/10/how-not-to-measure-temperature-part-94-maniitsoq-greenland-all-time-high-temperature-rescinded/#comment-1386387
says
Of course you do!
Your question has no relevance of any kind to the subject of this thread.
It was clearly intended to deflect from the subject of the thread and – as such – was pure trolling provided with the intent of inhibiting discussion of the subject of this thread. And your pressing the matter with irrelevance (e.g. about publication time of a paper pertaining to biology decades ago) demonstrates that remains your purpose
Your original ;point was completely answered by dbstealey at August 10, 2013 at 10:52 am
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/08/10/how-not-to-measure-temperature-part-94-maniitsoq-greenland-all-time-high-temperature-rescinded/#comment-1386375
I strongly commend that everybody ignores any further posts from you unless they are clearly on topic. In other words, “Don’t feed the troll”.
Richard
ferd berple says:
August 10, 2013 at 7:23 am “sit on the beach and watch the waves. would you be surprised to find that the longer you watched, the more likely it became that you would see a wave bigger than anything previously? yet somehow we forget this simple truth when talking about temperature and climate. If you keep records long enough you will always see a new record high, or record storm, or record flood, or record drought, or record snowfall.”
Pareto distribution.
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ParetoDistribution.html
http://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php/Pareto_distribution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_distribution
All this discussion of a degree or two is a moot point, since even the “nearly 80 degrees”, i.e. 79F, is still 7 degrees short of the record high for Greenland. That honor belongs to Ivigtut, down on the southern tip of Greenland (probably not far from Maniitsoq), where it was 86F (30.1C) sometime before 1940. This record is published in:
Climates of the World, in Climate and Man – Yearbook of Agriculture, US Dept of Agriculture, 1941
reprinted in: climates of the World, US Dept. Commerce, 1969
and even in Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivittuut
So you know it’s valid.
I don’t know the exact date of the record, but suffice it to say it’s before 1940, which explains why the DMI chose to use records starting in 1958. After all, Greenland weather records go back to 1784 (Vinther et al., Extending Greenland temperature records into the late eighteenth century, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 111, D11105, doi:10.1029/2005JD006810, 2006). It’s a common ploy for the Warmers to act as though climate started in 1958, when Keeling starting recording CO2 on Mauna Loa, or 1947, when the PDO went cool, or 1970, when Arctic temperatures bottomed out, to get their upward trends. That’s so the Dust Bowl Deniers can avoid the Inconvenient Truth of all those heat records early in the past century (peruse Weather & Climate Extremes, http://wmo.asu.edu/ ). That includes the all-time global heat record of 134F at that other Greenland, Greenland Ranch, which was the focus of discussion at WUWT a month ago.