Unwarranted Temperature Adjustments and Al Gore's Unwarranted Call for Intellectual Tyranny

Guest essay by Jim Steele, Director emeritus Sierra Nevada Field Campus, San Francisco State University

For researchers like myself examining the effect of local microclimates on the ecology of local wildlife, the change in the global average is an absolutely useless measure. Although it is wise to think globally, wildlife only responds to local climate change. To understand how local climate change had affected wildlife in California’s Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains, I had examined data from stations that make up the US Historical Climate Network (USHCN).

I was quickly faced with a huge dilemma that began my personal journey toward climate skepticism. Do I trust the raw data, or do I trust the USHCN’s adjusted data?

For example the raw data for minimum temperatures at Mt Shasta suggested a slight cooling trend since the 1930s. In contrast the adjusted data suggested a 1 to 2°F warming trend. What to believe? The confusion resulting from skewing trends is summarized in a recent study that concluded their “results cast some doubts in the use of homogenization procedures and tend to indicate that the global temperature increase during the last century is between 0.4°C and 0.7°C, where these two values are the estimates derived from raw and adjusted data, respectively.” 13.

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I began exploring data at other USHCN stations from around the country and realized that a very large percentage of the stations had been adjusted very similarly. The warm peaks from the 1930s and 40s had been adjusted downward by 3 to 4°F and these adjustments created dubious local warming trends as seen in examples from other USHCN stations at Reading, Massachusetts and Socorro, New Mexico.

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Because these adjustments were so widespread, many skeptics have suspected there has been some sort of conspiracy. Although scientific papers are often retracted for fraudulent data, I found it very hard to believe climate scientists would allow such blatant falsification. Data correction in all scientific disciplines is often needed and well justified. Wherever there are documented changes to a weather station such as a change in instrumentation, then an adjustment is justified. However unwitting systematic biases in their adjustment procedure could readily fabricate such a trend, and these dramatic adjustments were typically based on “undocumented changes” when climate scientists attempted to “homogenize” the regional data. The rationale for homogenization is based on the dubious assumption that all neighboring weather stations should display the same climate trends. However due to the effects of landscape changes and differently vegetated surfaces,1,2 local temperatures often respond very differently and the minimum temperatures are especially sensitive to different surface conditions.

For example even in relatively undisturbed regions, Yosemite’s varied landscapes respond in very contrary ways to a weakening of the westerly winds. Over a 10-year period, one section of Yosemite National Park cooled by 1.1°F, another rose by 0.72°F, while in a third location temperatures did not change at all.16 Depending on the location of a weather station, very different trends are generated. The homogenization process blends neighboring data and obliterates local differences and then fabricates an artificial trend.

Ecologists and scientists who assess regional climate variability must only use data that has been quality controlled but not homogenized. In a climate variability study, scientists computed the non-homogenized changes in maximum and minimum temperatures for the contiguous United States.12 The results seen in Figure A (their figure 1b) suggest recent climate change has been more cyclical. Those cyclical changes parallel the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). When climate scientists first began homogenizing temperature data, the PDO had yet to be named, so I would like to suggest instead of a deliberate climate science conspiracy, it was their ignorance of the PDO coupled with overwhelming urbanization effects that caused the unwarranted adjustments by causing “natural change points” that climate scientists had yet to comprehend. Let me explain.

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Homogenizing Contrasting Urban and Natural Landscape Trends

The closest USHCN weather station to my research was Tahoe City (below). Based on the trend in maximum temperatures, the region was not overheating nor accumulating heat. Otherwise the annual maximum temperature would be higher than the 1930s. My first question was why such a contrasting rise in minimum temperature? Here changing cloud cover was not an issue. Dr. Thomas Karl, who now serves as the director of the NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center partially answered the question when he reported that in over half of North America “the rise of the minimum temperature has occurred at a rate three times that of the maximum temperature during the period 1951-90 (1.5°F versus 0.5°F).”3 Rising minimum temperatures were driving the average but Karl never addressed the higher temperatures in the 1930s. Karl simply demonstrated as populations increased, so did minimum temperatures even though the maximums did not. A town of two million people experienced a whopping increase of 4.5°F in the minimum and was the sole cause of the 2.25°F increase in average temperature.4

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Although urban heat islands are undeniable, many CO2 advocates argue that growing urbanization has not contributed to recent climate trends because both urban and rural communities have experienced similar warming trends. However, those studies failed to account for the fact that even small population increases in designated rural areas generate high rates of warming. For example, in 1967 Columbia, Maryland was a newly established, planned community designed to end racial and social segregation. Climate researchers following the city’s development found that over a period of just three years, a heat island of up to 8.1°F appeared as the land filled with 10,000 residents.5 Although Columbia would be classified as a rural town, that small population raised local temperatures five times greater than a century’s worth of global warming. If we extrapolated that trend as so many climate studies do, growing populations in rural areas would cause a whopping warming trend of 26°F per decade.

CO2 advocates also downplay urbanization, arguing it only represents a small fraction of the earth’s land surface and therefore urbanization contributes very little to the overall warming. However arbitrary designations of urban versus rural does not address the effects of growing population on the landscape. California climatologist James Goodridge found the average rate of 20th century warming for weather stations located in a whole county that exceeded one million people was 3.14°F per century, which is twice the rate of the global average. In contrast, the average warming rate for stations situated in a county with less than 100,000 people was a paltry 0.04°F per century.6 The warming rate of sparsely populated counties was 35 times less than the global average.

Furthermore results similar to Goodridge’s have been suggested by tree ring studies far from urban areas. Tree ring temperatures are better indicators of “natural climate trends” and can help disentangle distortions caused by increasing human populations. Not surprisingly, most tree-ring studies reveal lower temperatures than the urbanized instrumental data. A 2007 paper by 10 leading tree-ring scientists reported, “No current tree ring based reconstruction of extratropical Northern Hemisphere temperatures that extends into the 1990s captures the full range of late 20th century warming observed in the instrumental record.”8

Because tree ring temperatures disagree with a sharply rising instrumental average, climate scientists officially dubbed this the “divergence problem.”9 However when studies compared tree ring temperatures with only maximum temperatures (instead of the average temperatures that are typically inflated by urbanized minimum temperatures) they found no disagreement and no divergence.10 Similarly a collaboration of German, Swiss, and Finnish scientists found that where average instrumental temperatures were minimally affected by population growth in remote rural stations of northern Scandinavia, tree ring temperatures agreed with instrumental average temperatures.11 As illustrated in Figure B, the 20th century temperature trend in the wilds of northern Scandinavia is strikingly similar to maximum temperature trends of the Sierra Nevada and the contiguous 48 states. All those regions experienced peak temperatures in the 1940s and the recent rise since the 1990s has never exceed that peak.

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Figure B. 2000 year summer temperature reconstruction of northern Scandinavia. Warmest 30 year periods are highlighted in by light gray bars (i.e. 27-56, or 1918-1947) and coldest 30 year periods are highlighted by dark gray bars (i.e. 1453-1482) Reprinted from Global and Planetary Change, vol. 88-89, Esper, J. et al, Variability and extremes of northern Scandinavian summer temperatures over the past two millennia.(REF11)

How Homogenizing Urbanized Warming Has Obliterated Natural Oscillations

It soon became obvious that the homogenization process was unwittingly blending rising minimum temperatures caused by population growth with temperatures from more natural landscapes. Climate scientists cloistered in their offices have no way of knowing to what degree urbanization or other landscape factors have distorted each weather station’s data. So they developed an armchair statistical method that blended trends amongst several neighboring stations,17 using what I term the “blind majority rules” method. The most commonly shared trend among neighboring stations became the computer’s reference, and temperatures from “deviant stations” were adjusted to create a chimeric climate smoothie. Wherever there was a growth in population, this unintentionally allows urbanization warming effects to alter the adjusted trend.

Climate computers had been programmed to seek unusual “change-points” as a sign of “undocumented” station modifications. Any natural change‑points caused by cycles like the Pacific Decadal Oscillation looked like deviations relative to steadily rising trends of an increasingly populated region like Columbia, Maryland or Tahoe City. And the widespread adjustments to minimum temperatures reveal this erroneous process.

I first stumbled onto Anthony Watts’ surface station efforts when investigating climate factors that controlled the upslope migration of birds in the Sierra Nevada. To understand the population declines in high-elevation meadows on the Tahoe National Forest, I surveyed birds at several low-elevation breeding sites and examined the climate data from foothill weather stations.

Marysville, CA was one of those stations, but its warming trend sparked my curiosity because it was one of the few stations where the minimum was not adjusted markedly. I later found a picture of the Marysville’s weather station at SurfaceStations.org website. The Marysville weather station was Watts’ poster child for a bad site; he compared it to the less-disturbed surface conditions at a neighboring weather station in Orland, CA. The Marysville station was located on an asphalt parking lot just a few feet from air conditioning exhaust fans.

The proximity to buildings also altered the winds, and added heat radiating from the walls. These urbanization effects at Marysville created a rising trend that CO2 advocate scientists expect. In contrast, the minimum temperatures at nearby Orland showed the cyclic behavior we would expect the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) to cause. Orland’s data was not overwhelmed by urbanization and thus more sensitive to cyclical temperature changes brought by the PDO. Yet it was Orland’s data that was markedly adjusted- not Marysville! (Figure C)

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Figure C. Raw and adjusted minimum temperature for Marysville and Orland California.

Several scientists have warned against homogenization for just this reason. Dr. Xiaolan Wang of Meteorological Service of Canada wrote, “a trend-type change in climate data series should only be adjusted if there is sufficient evidence showing that it is related to a change at the observing station, such as a change in the exposure or location of the station, or in its instrumentation or observing procedures.” 14

That waning went unheeded. In the good old days, weather stations such as the one in Orland, CA (pictured above) would have been a perfect candidate to serve as a reference station. It was well sited, away from pavement and buildings, and its location and thermometers had not changed throughout its history. Clearly Orland did not warrant an adjustment but the data revealed several “change points.” Although those change points were naturally caused by the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), it attracted the computer’s attention that an “undocumented change” had occurred.

To understand the PDO’s effect, it is useful to see the PDO as a period of more frequent El Niños that ventilate heat and raise the global average temperature, alternating with a period of more frequent La Niñas that absorb heat and lower global temperatures. For example heat ventilated during the 1997 El Nino raised global temperatures by ~1.6°F. During the following La Niña, temperatures dropped by ~1.6°F. California’s climate is extremely sensitive to El Niño and the PDO. Reversal in thr Pacific Decadal Oscillation caused natural temperature change-points around the 1940s and 1970s. The rural station of Orland was minimally affected by urbanization, and thus more sensitive to the rise and fall of the PDO. Similarly, the raw data for other well-sited rural stations like the Cuyamaca in southern California also exhibited the cyclical temperatures predicted by the PDO (see Figure D, lower panel). But in each case those cyclical temperature trends were homogenized to look like the linear urbanized trend at Marysville.

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Figure D. Upper panel PDO Index. Lower Panel Cuyamaca CA raw versus adjusted minimum temperatures.

Marysville however was overwhelmed by California’s growing urbanization and less sensitive to the PDO. Thus it exhibited a steady rising trend. Ironically, a computer program seeking any and all change-points dramatically adjusted the natural variations of rural stations to make them conform to the steady trend of more urbanized stations. Around the country, very similar adjustments lowered the peak warming of the 1930s and 1940s in the original data. Those homogenization adjustments now distort our perceptions, and affect our interpretations of climate change. Cyclical temperature trends were unwittingly transformed into rapidly rising warming trends, suggesting a climate on “CO2 steroids”. However the unadjusted average for the United States suggests the natural climate is much more sensitive to cycles such as the PDO. Climate fears have been exaggerated due to urbanization and homogenization adjustments on steroids.

Skeptics have highlighted the climate effects of the PDO for over a decade but CO2 advocates dismissed this alternative climate viewpoint. As recently as 2009, Kevin Trenberth emailed Michael Mannand other advocates regards the PDO’s effect on natural climate variability writing “there is a LOT of nonsense about the PDO. People like CPC are tracking PDO on a monthly basis but it is highly correlated with ENSO. Most of what they are seeing is the change in ENSO not real PDO. It surely isn’t decadal. The PDO is already reversing with the switch to El Nino. The PDO index became positive in September for first time since Sept 2007.”

However contrary to Trenberth’s email rant, the PDO continued trending to its cool phase and global warming continued its “hiatus.” Now forced to explain the warming hiatus, Trenberth has flipped flopped about the PDO’s importance writing “One of the things emerging from several lines is that the IPCC has not paid enough attention to natural variability, on several time scales,” “especially El Niños and La Niñas, the Pacific Ocean phenomena that are not yet captured by climate models, and the longer term Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) which have cycle lengths of about 60 years.”18 No longer is CO2 overwelming natural systems, they must argue natural systems are overwhelming CO2 warming. Will they also rethink their unwarranted homogenization adjustments?

Skeptics highlighting natural cycles were ahead of the climate science curve and provided a much needed alternative viewpoint. Still to keep the focus on CO2, Al Gore is stepping up his attacks against all skeptical thinking. In a recent speech, rightfully took pride that we no longer accept intolerance and abuse against people of different races or with different sexual preferences. Then totally contradicting his examples of tolerance and open mindedness, he asked his audience to make people “pay a price for denial”.

Instead of promoting more respectful public debate, he in essence suggests Americans should hate “deniers” for thinking differently than Gore and his fellow CO2 advocates. He and his ilk are fomenting a new intellectual tyranny. Yet his “hockey stick beliefs” are based on adjusted data that are not supported by the raw temperature data and unsupported by natural tree ring data. So who is in denial? Whether or not Gore’s orchestrated call to squash all skeptical thought is based solely on ignorance of natural cycles, his rant against skeptics is far more frightening than the climate change evidenced by the unadjusted data and the trees.

Literature cited

1. Mildrexler,D.J. et al., (2011) Satellite Finds Highest Land Skin Temperatures on Earth. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

2. Lim,Y-K, et al., (2012) Observational evidence of sensitivity of surface climate changes to land types and urbanization,

3. Karl, T.R. et al., (1993) Asymmetric Trends of Daily Maximum and Minimum Temperature. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, vol. 74

4. Karl, T., et al., (1988), Urbanization: Its Detection and Effect in the United States Climate Record. Journal of Climate, vol. 1, 1099-1123.

5. Erella, E., and Williamson, T, (2007) Intra-urban differences in canopy layer air temperature at a mid-latitude city. Int. J. Climatol. 27: 1243–1255

6. Goodridge, J., (1996) Comments on Regional Simulations of Greenhouse Warming Including Natural Variability. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. Vol.77, p.188.

7. Fall, S., et al., (2011) Analysis of the impacts of station exposure on the U.S. Historical Climatology Network temperatures and temperature trends. Journal Of Geophysical Research, Vol. 116

8. Wilson R., et al., (2007) Matter of divergence: tracking recent warming at hemispheric scales using tree-ring data. Journal of Geophysical Research–A, 112, D17103, doi: 10.1029/2006JD008318.

9. D’Arrigo, R., et al., (2008) On the ‘Divergence Problem’ in Northern Forests: A review of the tree-ring evidence and possible causes. Global and Planetary Change, vol. 60, p. 289–305

10. Youngblut, D., and Luckman, B., (2008) Maximum June–July temperatures in the southwest Yukon region over the last three hundred years reconstructed from tree-rings. Dendrochronologia, vol. 25, p.153–166.

11. Esper, J. et al. (2012) Variability and extremes of northern Scandinavian summer temperatures over the past two millennia. Global and Planetary Change 88–89 (2012) 1–9.

12. Shen, S., et al., (2011) The twentieth century contiguous US temperature changes indicated by daily data and higher statistical moments. Climatic Change Volume 109, Issue 3-4, pp 287-317.

13. Steirou, E., and Koutsoyiannis, D. (2012) Investigation of methods for hydroclimatic data homogenization. Geophysical Research Abstracts, vol. 14, EGU2012-956-1

14. Wang, X., (2003) Comments on ‘‘Detection of Undocumented Changepoints: A Revision of the Two-Phase Regression Model’’. Journal of Climate; Oct2003, Vol. 16 Issue 20, p. 3383-3385.

15. Nelson, T., (2011) Email conversations between climate scientists. ClimateGate 2.0: This is a very large pile of “smoking guns.” http://tomnelson.blogspot.com/

16. Lundquist, J. and Cayan, D. (2007) Surface temperature patterns in complex terrain: Daily variations and long-term change in the central Sierra Nevada, California. Journal of Geophysical Research, vol. 112, D11124, doi:10.1029/2006JD007561.

17. Menne. M., (2009) The U.S. Historical Climatology Network Monthly Temperature Data, version 2. The Bulletin for the American Meterological Society. p. 993-1007

18. Appell, D. (2013) Whither Global Warming? Has It Slowed Down? The Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media. http://www.yaleclimatemediaforum.org/2013/05/wither-global-warming-has-it-slowed-down/

Adapted from the chapter Why Average Isn’t Good Enough in Landscapes & Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism

Read previous essays at landscapesandcycles.net

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Bill H
September 25, 2013 5:13 pm

Think about it. The CRU (supposed to be a repository for world climate records) adjusts the data and then dumps the raw data which is forever lost. Climate-gate exposed just what the game is. How can you go back and check what the raw data was if it no longer exists? Jim ,you give them the benefit of the doubt far greater than I ever would. I am old and cant throw them far so I dont trust them at all.

DocMartyn
September 25, 2013 5:15 pm

Steinbeck was a liar, the Okies were not fleeing the dust-bowl, they were trying to outrun glaciers.

Janice Moore
September 25, 2013 5:20 pm

“undocumented changes”
That there is a clear pattern of this makes the adjusters’ innocence implausible. Where there should be a paper trail — and there isn’t one? Something is almost certainly wrong.
Take heart, Mr. Stokes! At least it shows that those you support above are not incompetent.
****************
Another fine article, Mr. Steele — thank you for all you do for the truth.

OssQss
September 25, 2013 5:25 pm

Nice job!
Even a CO2 advocate can easily understand this.
Now, ,,,,,, could we integrate the influence of 1,200km smoothing and that infamous use of extrapolation for the “Paul Harvey” rest of the story on terrestrial based temperature data? Not SARC >
How many stations do we actually have above 80N, even 70N for that matter? Just curious……

Bill H
September 25, 2013 5:37 pm

Janice,
In my opinion what the globalists propaganda people have done (IPCC, Al Gore, etc) amounts to organized crime against humanity. Sadly it is not incompetence but blatant deception. Mr Steele shows just how badly muddled the mess is and just how the deception is being carried out.
I applaud you Mr Steele for showing just how easily deceived we have all been over the years. I am placing this one on my Facebook as this merits wide distribution.
Bill

milodonharlani
September 25, 2013 5:38 pm

Marcos says:
September 25, 2013 at 4:20 pm
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/far/wg_I/ipcc_far_wg_I_chapter_07.pdf
I don’t know how heavily Jones & Hansen had stepped on the raw data in IPCC’s First AR (1990), Figure 7.6, but it’s closer to reality than post-Hockey Stick manipulation. They seem to have played loose in smoothing the data, at any rate.
IIRC, which I may not, IMO Jones admitted in an interview after Climategate that the 1930s were warmer than the 1990s globally. Please correct me if wrong. The earlier decade definitely was hotter in the US.

Tom in Indy
September 25, 2013 6:13 pm

McComberBoy says:
September 25, 2013 at 5:12 pm


Nick,
STOP the handwaving and address the stations at Marysville and Orland only. Explain those two. Give us the rock solid reasons for those two stations only. I’m sure you can do it, but it will require a cessation of handwaving, walnut shell maneuvering and double speak. You know well that those stations deserve better, so hop to it. Then we can discuss the corruption of the rest of the data whether from ignorance, hubris, greed or patronizing arrogance.
pbh

Nick Stokes et. al.
Please reply to McComberBoy and provide a justification for the documented adjustments to Orland and Marysville in the manner described.

Nick Stokes
September 25, 2013 6:27 pm

jim Steele says: September 25, 2013 at 4:51 pm
” But Figure A for the contiguous USA is quality controlled GHCN data that accounts for all the documented changes that you mention.”

Really? It doesn’t say that it’s GHCN, and I don’t think it is. But it does say that it is non-homogenized.
McComberBoy says: September 25, 2013 at 5:12 pm
“STOP the handwaving and address the stations at Marysville and Orland only.”

I don’t have any particular knowledge of those two stations. I’m saying is that the adjustments were made, by stated algorithm, for reasons that have been extensively described, in numerous papers, and those reasons should be looked at.

Latitude
September 25, 2013 6:45 pm

I can’t stand to see flat out lying and cheating….combined with sitting issues
They are not the same…
But ‘adjusting the past temps to show a warming that didn’t exist….more rapid warming
has been the downfall of every computer linear model that was tuned/backcast to those fake past temps
No wonder every computer game shows faster warming than really happened…
..they are all tuned to past temps that showed faster warming than really happened

Randy
September 25, 2013 6:48 pm

I dont buy that the confusion in climate science was accidental. All the discrepancies Im aware of, and there are many of them when looking at the raw data, go in ONE direction, supporting the claim co2 is a major climate driver. Even then with the adjusted data the claims have vast holes in them to the point its surprising the theory has any traction. The claimed dangers are also range from drastically inflated to outright lies. If this was all an accident it would have taken an amazing set of coincidences and completely incompetent scientists.
Then of course you have the way the mythology has been pushed onto the population, not only top down but with constant calls to authority and FEAR. We are told, all the skeptic arguments have been accounted for, but any skeptic who knows a decent amount on the topic knows this is a bold faced lie on the bulk of points one can raise. Why lie if the data supports your case? Why the need to block ANY debate right from the start of this mythology based 100% on cherry picked datasets that insists you must ignore raw and real world data. We have barely started the debate on this topic, and what part of it we have “debated” has been mostly on blogs like this rather then among those in the field. Any other field of science that is still debated you see both sides of the argument honestly portrayed in context as those in the field ferret it out. This isnt even remotely the case with cagw. In fact its worse then that, anytime any skeptic stance gains the slightest traction the mythology and story changes all without any real meaningful debate. Even in many cases with “studies” that claim to support the official stance and almost always with obvious extreme flaws in said “studies” . there isnt a chance this is all accidental imo.
At no juncture in the rise of the theory co2 is a major climate driver has this issue resembled anything like science, or the ways science proves itself to have merit. As a person who has studied the IMF and how it uses lies, media and politicians to crush and subvert as it concentrates power coupled with very real and pressing enviro issues such as those involving our oceans we also have the motive for all this as this was used to justify global taxation and essentially government right from the start. In fact in those same power centers a few years back as they failed to make goals set on advancing cagw, they proposed a global poverty tax literally while relating it to the fact they are unlikely to get their tax on a global level unless temps suddenly rise. You dont believe banksters could do such things? study the IMF in depth, their claims versus what happens, what our media says versus what happens in reality. This topic is drastically different them most realize. Much of the third world is such by design. Lots of conspiracy involved but I wouldnt call it theory when you can trace enough of it out to see it really clearly if you take the time.
I suspect most on this bandwagon are true believers, but there is no doubt in my mind in coming decades we will see very clearly this was agenda driven the entire time. Honestly it would be much scarier to me if this wasnt agenda driven. If this was agenda driven, then it makes sense, and humans are the greedy self serving beings most of us have always been. If this wasnt purposeful it says much worse things about our species.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 25, 2013 6:48 pm

From Nick Stokes on September 25, 2013 at 6:27 pm:

I don’t have any particular knowledge of those two stations. I’m saying is that the adjustments were made, by stated algorithm, for reasons that have been extensively described, in numerous papers, and those reasons should be looked at.

Translation: “I don’t know why! They’re the experts, they must have had their reasons! Look, just read their papers, they say it’s all in there. LEAVE ME ALONE!”

Allen63
September 25, 2013 6:54 pm

FWIW. I lived in the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 00s, 10s.
I remember the buds on the trees and short sleeve shirts in early March in the early 50s. Then, the falling temperatures of the 60s 70s. Magazines wrote about the coming Ice Age. Even in the early 90s, in our area, the last big snow was in early April. Now, the last snow tends to be in March — later than I remember from the early 50s.
Anecdotal I know. But, many of us who lived during the period in question do not think its warmer now than then. Problem is, perhaps most of us who personally experienced the changes from the 40s to now are “retired” and no longer relevant in the working/political world.

September 25, 2013 6:55 pm

Something happened where I live between April of 2012 and July of 2012 that “set” 7 new record high temperatures back in 2010.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/09/24/the-wuwt-hotsheet-for-tuesday-sept-24th-2013/#comment-1425465
(Just be glad I learned how to post a link to previous comments!8-)

Vlasta
September 25, 2013 7:07 pm

I know how to prove those worldwide temperatures adjustors of fraud . They adjust it so it shows same warming around the world , then write a paper about it and say , see this is the proof . That’s impossible , as we know that during PDO , AMO and ENSO cycles ( prolonged Nina and Nino ) some continents must be 0.2 – 0.3deg cooler or warmer , from 0deg anomaly . That gives us altogether 0.4 – 0.6deg difference there should be during 30 years cycles between continents . Do we see that currently ? No we don’t , that’s I would say is a deadly mistake .

Ken L.
September 25, 2013 7:12 pm

Excellent article that explains in more or less layman’s terms the temperature measurement issue beyond siting.
It was just such statistical manipulation, of devious intent or not, which alerted a mathematically astute friend of mine to the erroneous observations behind the whole warming theory, which he then passed on to me.

Tom G(ologist)
September 25, 2013 7:18 pm

He Bill H.
“This has always been a mean to the ends of total populace control through unsubstantiated fear-mongering. AL Gore is nothing more than a charlatan and snake oil salesman.”
You might enjoy: http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1264732903898024761#editor/target=post;postID=932560460295804210;onPublishedMenu=posts;onClosedMenu=posts;postNum=17;src=postname
Tom

September 25, 2013 7:32 pm

It appears you’ve addressed many of the adjustments Nick Stokes mentioned earlier but I didn’t see whether an adjustment for observation time or a change in thermometer was part of the reason for the original adjustment. Do you know if this was a factor in those adjustments?

Jquip
September 25, 2013 7:34 pm

Psh. The temperature data products are based on a true story. In the same way that the Texas Chainsaw Massacre is based on a true story.
Only heretics and apostates worry about True. It’s still got Truthiness.
/obligatory tag to indicate levity.

Nick Stokes
September 25, 2013 7:43 pm

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:September 25, 2013 at 6:48 pm
“They’re the experts, they must have had their reasons! Look, just read their papers, they say it’s all in there.”

If you don’t think they are experts, why look at their data? This post asked:
“Do I trust the raw data, or do I trust the USHCN’s adjusted data?”
If that’s a real question, then it can only be answered by finding out why they made the adjustments. They have said plenty about it.

Marlow Metcalf
September 25, 2013 7:47 pm

I would like to see these 600 stations compared to new NOAA wonderful high tech weather stations. http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/10/24/unadjusted-data-of-long-period-stations-in-giss-show-a-virtually-flat-century-scale-trend/

Brian H
September 25, 2013 7:48 pm

Edit:

Yet his “hockey stick beliefs” are based on adjusted data that are not unsupported by the raw temperature data and unsupported by natural tree ring data.

Contradicts the argument. Remove “not”.

Mark Luhman
September 25, 2013 7:49 pm

Nick Stokes & McComberBoy To put what I feel. in a simple earthy tone. here is what I think Jim is saying. If we have two buckets. one has water in it and the other has urine in it, and I mix the two are you two going to drink it? Obliviously, when it comes to climate measurements, you two will drink the “water” and do drink heartily. In my case, I prefer to keep my “water” uncontaminated. The problem I have with so-called climate scientists, is that they seem to think if you mix contaminated “water” with uncontaminated “water” you can end up with something drinkable. That might be true if you had one contaminated bucket for every hundred thousand buckets but it looks to me like the contaminated buckets outnumber the uncontaminated buckets two to one. In that case, I am not about to drink that water. If you are willing to drink do so, so be it but please do not ask or force me to join you. For the rest you skeptics, sorry that I am so crude stating how I feel. I do like to state things in plain down to earth statements of fact so that the intellectually challenged might grasp what I am saying..

September 25, 2013 7:50 pm

Excellent work JIm, thank you.
I posted this a week ago.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/09/16/what-people-will-read-and-see-with-the-ipccs-lead-off-illustration-from-the-ar5-spm/#comment-1419131
Allan MacRae says: September 17, 2013 at 3:01 am
I suggest that the Surface Temperature datasets exhibit a significant warming bias and should not be used as-is for rational discussions of global warming.
In the USA, it appears that the warmest years in the modern data record occurred in the 1930’s. This may be true globally as well. Hadcrut3 probably has a warming bias of about 0.2C since ~1980 and this warming bias may extend back several more decades.
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Neville
September 25, 2013 7:54 pm

McIntyre backs up Lucia and Curry etc in their pursuit of the BSh…ing IPCC cover up and excuses.
Some good graphs to look at and consider. VG comment ftom McKitrick as well in comments.
http://climateaudit.org/2013/09/24/two-minutes-to-midnight/#more-18392
Let’s hope that when this version 5 BS is officially released the blogger baseball bats are ready to smash it up quickly.
But the pre release efforts have been good so far. Go Steve, Judith, Lucia, Ross, Bob, Anthony etc.