Many Climate Reconstructions Incorrectly Attributed to Temperature Change.

Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) set climate research back thirty years, mostly by focusing world attention on CO2 and higher temperature. It was a classic misdirection that required planning. The IPCC was created for this purpose and pursued it relentlessly. Through the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) they controlled national weather offices so global climate policies and research funding were similarly directed.

IPCC’s definition of climate change narrowed the focus to human causes, but they exacerbated it by ignoring, downgrading or misusing variables. Most important and critical was water in all its forms and functions. The obsession restricted focus to higher temperatures and increased CO2, which directed funding of impact analyses, whether economic or environmental to cost only, instead of cost/benefit. Climate studies only considered temperature, usually and incorrectly attributing changes caused by precipitation to temperature. This practice was most evident in paleoclimate reconstructions, either done by IPCC participants or chosen for inclusion in the IPCC Reports.

It is almost a maxim that if the people at the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), who effectively controlled IPCC science, were looking at a topic it was because it posed a threat to their predetermined hypothesis.

Tom Wigley took over from Hubert Lamb as Director of the CRU and guided much of the early research and then remained the major influence as the leaked emails revealed. He completely redirected CRU from Lamb’s objective, which was the need for data before any understanding could occur;

“the first and greatest need was to establish the facts of the past record of the natural climate in times before any side effects of human activities could well be important.”

Lamb was at odds with and appears to regret hiring Wigley and wrote about the different direction Wigley took the Unit. He wrote,

“Professor Tom Wigley, was chiefly interested in the prospect of world climates being changed as a result of human activities, primarily through the burning of wood, coal, oil and gas reserves…”

That became the focus of the CRU and subsequently of the IPCC. It was a predetermined hypothesis that led to manipulated climate science. The leaked CRU emails disclose Wigley as the eminence gris to whom all his old pupils and colleagues at CRU turn to for advice and direction.

A classic danger in climate research and an early threat to claims of a human signal was that they could be dismissed as a result of auto-correlation. The issue was identified in 1944 in Conrad’s classic Methods in Climatology. A 1999 article The Autocorrelation Function and Human Influences on Climate by Tsonis and Elsner commented on Wigley’s attempt to prove a human influence was not due to autocorrelation. They note,

This (Wigley’s) result is impressive, and there may indeed be a human influence on climate. However, the use of the autocorrelation function as a tool for such comparisons presents a problem. Climate models, whether forced or unforced, constitute dynamical systems. If these models faithfully represent the dynamics of the climate system, then a comparison between an observation and a model simulation should address whether or not these two results have the same dynamical foundation.

In Quantitative approaches in climate change ecology Brown et al., identify the issues.

We provide a list of issues that need to be addressed to make inferences more defensible, including the consideration of (i) data limitations and the comparability of data sets; (ii) alternative mechanisms for change; (iii) appropriate response variables; (iv) a suitable model for the process under study; (v) temporal autocorrelation; (vi) spatial autocorrelation and patterns; and (vii) the reporting of rates of change. While the focus of our review was marine studies, these suggestions are equally applicable to terrestrial studies. Consideration of these suggestions will help advance global knowledge of climate impacts and understanding of the processes driving ecological change.

The two lead items in Brown et als list for resolving problems of auto-correlation are also central to understanding the corruption and misdirection of the IPCC.

(i) data limitations.

As Lamb identified, lack of data was and remains the most serious limitation. The situation is completely inadequate for temperature, supposedly the best measured variable. How can two major agencies HadCRUT and GISS produce such different results,

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supposedly from the same data set? Paul Homewood produced the following Table comparing results for four data sources for the period 2002 to 2011.

GISS and UAH differ by 0.36°C, which is enormous in nine years. Compare it to the 0.6°C increase over 140 years, a change the 2001 IPCC claimed was dramatic and unnatural.

Data is even worse spatially and temporally for water in all its forms, especially precipitation. In a classic understatement the 2007 IPCC Report says,

Difficulties in the measurement of precipitation remain an area of concern in quantifying the extent to which global- and regional-scale precipitation has changed.

They also concede that,

For models to simulate accurately the seasonally varying pattern of precipitation, they must correctly simulate a number of processes (e.g., evapotranspiration, condensation, transport) that are difficult to evaluate at a global scale.

The lack of data is worse than temperature and precipitation for all other weather variables. There is insufficient data to determine inferences of auto-correlation.

(ii) alternative mechanisms for change.

Ability to determine mechanisms and their implications is impossible without adequate data. Besides, we don’t understand most mechanisms now so considering alternatives is difficult. Many mechanisms are identified but there are many more still unknown. Donald Rumsfeld’s quote is appropriate.

“… there are known knowns; there are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns; that is to say, there are things that we now know we don’t know. But there are also unknown unknowns – there are things we do not know we don’t know.”

Contradiction between results from different authorities, such as the temperature data, proves the point. The IPCC bypassed the problems with a limited definition that allowed them to ignore most mechanisms. Often the excuse was quite bizarre, such as this from Chap

ter 8 of the 2007 report.

Due to the computational cost associated with the requirement of a well-resolved stratosphere, the models employed for the current assessment do not generally include the QBO.

IPCC did what Einstein warned against. Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.

Beyond Auto-correlation?

Autocorrelation is a danger in climatology but what has happened in IPCC goes beyond. In major reconstructions of past climates, temperature series are created from data and processes that are primarily due to precipitation.

Dendroclimatology

Many of them began as chronologic reconstructions. Tree rings began as dendrochronology; an absolute dating method that assumed a new ring is created every year. Age of the Bristlecone Pine made them valuable for this purpose at least. A. E. Douglass founded the discipline of dendrochronology in 1894 and later used tree ring to reconstruct solar cycles and precipitation; the latter became the purpose of all early climate reconstructions.

Available moisture explains most plant growth as farmers and gardeners know. Koppen recognized this in his climate classification system that required classification first on precipitation (B Climate) then on temperature (A,C, and D Climates).

Gross misuse of tree rings to argue the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) didn’t exist was exposed because of inappropriate statistical manipulation. The conclusion used in the 2001 IPCC Science Report claimed the tree rings (the effect) showed no increase in temperature (the cause). In reality with climate change there is a change in all weather variables, hence the auto-correlation problem.

The degree of change to each variable is a function of the latitude as major weather mechanisms migrate toward or away from the poles. For example, during the Ice Ages the Polar climate region expanded primarily at the expense of the middle and low latitude climates, particularly in the desert zone, approximately between 15 and 30° latitude. The low latitude deserts become wet regions in what was traditionally called Pluvials. In the early days it was thought there was no evidence of the Ice Age in the tropical region associated with the Hadley Cell circulation.

Moisture is a controlling factor even in harsh temperature conditions at the tree line. Research at Churchill, Manitoba showed the major predictors of growth were rainfall in the Fall of the preceding year and winter snow amount.

The spruce tree in the photo (Figure 1) is at the tree line at Churchill. It is approximately 100 years old. The lower branches are larger and are on all sides because they are protected from desiccating winter winds by snow; above that powerful persistent arid northeast winds prevent branches growing. Local humor says you cut three trees and tie them together for a complete Christmas tree.

Tree growth, especially annual, is primarily about moisture not temperature. The amount of moisture required by the plant and the amount available both vary with wind speed. At the tree line the ability to trap snow is critical to survival. Small clumps or outliers exist beyond the tree limit as long as they trap snow. Similarly, an open area within the tree limit will remain treeless if denuded of snow by the wind.

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Figure 1: Spruce Tree at Churchill Manitoba (Source: The Author)

Speleology (Stalactites/ Stalagmites)

Stalactites (ceiling) and stalagmites (ground) are another example of precipitation created features claimed to represent temperature. They are created by rainwater, which is a mild carbonic acid because of dissolved atmospheric CO2 that absorbs calcium as it filters through limestone. As the water drips from the ceiling calcium deposits accumulate to create the stalactite. Where it hits the floor more calcium accumulates to create a stalagmite. Growth of both features is a direct result of changes in precipitation at the surface.

Glacial Stratigraphy and Ice Cores

Seasonal or annual records in stratigraphic form are collectively called rhythmites. An early use of rhythmites in climate reconstruction was a specific form called varves and related to annual sedimentary layers in proglacial lakes. In 1910 Swedish scientist Gerard de Geer provided an important chronology for glacial sequences of the Holocene. The thickness of the sediment layer is a result of temperature, but also how much rain fell during the summer that changed the melt rate of the snow and ice.

Seasonal layers in a glacier often reflect temperature change, but are also modified by precipitation. Glacier movement is used as a measure of temperature change, but it is also about precipitation change. Thickness of each layer varies with the amount of snow. (Yes, droughts also occur in winter). When sufficient layers form to about 50 m depth the ice becomes plastic under pressure and flows. Ice is always flowing toward the snout within the glacier. Amount of advance or retreat of the glacier snout is as much about snow accumulation above the permanent snowline as temperature. A snout can advance or retreat without a change in temperature.

Meltwater from a glacier is a function of temperature, but also precipitation. When rain falls on the glacier it increases the melt rate of snow and ice dramatically. This is likely a major explanation for the rapid melt and vast proglacial lakes associated with melt of the ice during the Holocene Optimum. Dynamics of a continental glacier are a slow build up as snow layers accumulate, followed by a relatively rapid melt as snow turns to rain.

The amount of CO2 in the ice crystals varies with the temperature of the water droplet and raindrop, just as seawater CO2 capacity varies. This means glacier meltwater has a higher concentration of CO2 and as it trickles down through the ice layers modifies the ice bubbles as Jaworowski explained in his presentation to the US Senate Committee (March 2004).

This is because the ice cores do not fulfill the essential closed system criteria. One of them is a lack of liquid water in ice, which could dramatically change the chemical composition the air bubbles trapped between the ice crystals. This criterion, is not met, as even the coldest Antarctic ice (down to -73°C) contains liquid water[2]. More than 20 physico-chemical processes, mostly related to the presence of liquid water, contribute to the alteration of the original chemical composition of the air inclusions in polar ice[3].

IPCC maintained focus on the Carbon Cycle, but the Water Cycle is more important, especially as it relates to the dynamics of change. Put a dehydrated rock in a chamber and vary the temperature as much as possible and little happens. Add a few drops of water and the breakdown (weathering) of the rock is dramatic. Any climate experiment or research that excludes water, such as the list of greenhouse gases in dry air, is meaningless. Water exists everywhere on the planet.

Precipitation occurs over the oceans but we have virtually no measures so we cannot determine the diluting effect on the salinity and gaseous content of the critical surface layer. How much does precipitation as a 10 percent carbonic acid solution affect the CO2 measures of that layer? Snowmelt has a higher percentage of CO2 concentration.

Wind speed and direct

ion are major determinant of water distribution in the atmosphere and therefore across the world. It alters the impact of temperature, as we know from wind chill or heat index measures. What is the effect of a small increase in regional, hemispheric or global wind speed on the weather and climate?

Atmospheric pressure varies with temperature that determines the weight of the atmosphere pushing on the surface. How much do these changes affect sea level? We know it is considerable because of storm surges that accompany intense low-pressure systems.

The list of variables unmeasured, unknown or excluded from official IPCC science invalidates their models and their claims. Water in all its forms and functions is the most egregious. It also illustrates the degree of auto-correlation confronting climate research and understanding. It appears Wigley and therefore the IPCC knew of the problems but chose to sidestep them by carefully directing the focus – a scientific sleight of hand.

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December 27, 2013 5:03 pm

Excellent article. Globaloneywarming is not science but a whole lot of stupid and fraud.

William Astley
December 27, 2013 5:06 pm

If observations do not agree with the warmists’ agenda, they change the data, with no explanation, with no scientific logic to justify the change in the data. Science is by definition, the process of working to explain anomalies and paradoxes (a paradox is an anomaly which invalidates a theory or hypothesis and indicates there either fundamental theory errors or there is something that has been missed in the controlling variables.) Anomalies and paradoxes disappear when the science is corrected. The discovery of anomalies and paradoxes is the catalyst, often a necessary step in the process to solve the scientific puzzle.
http://icecap.us/images/uploads/NCDC_MaturityDiagramSince20080517.gif
The warmists are in denial, reality Vs their models. The plateau with no warming, the latitudinal paradox, the almost complete lack the predicted and required (if AGW forcing works as per theory) warming in the upper tropical troposphere, the fact that there are cycles of warming and cooling that match the same latitudinal warming observed in the last 100 years that we are observing now that correlate with solar magnetic cycle changes and that do not correlate in any manner with CO2 changes, and so on.
The observations support the assertion that roughly 90% of the warming in the last 100 years was due to solar magnetic cycle changes, rather than the increase in atmospheric CO2. The papers that allege to show the sun did not cause the warming in the last 100 years did not try to understand how the sun caused the warming. Something did cause the warming and the observations do not support the assertion that forcing mechanism was CO2.
The observations support the assertion that the sun has changed cycle to cycle, that there are multiple fundamental assumptions about the sun that are incorrect.
Likewise the observations support the assertion that the AGW forcing saturates due to a missing parameter in the upper troposphere. i.e. The laws of physics still work for greenhouse gases the reason why there is no tropospheric warming in the tropics is due to the missing parameter.

Craig Hamilton
December 27, 2013 5:08 pm

Its good to see some of the assumptions of dendroclimatology being checked. But if water is a controlling variable at the tree-line, so should the other two factors of photosynthesis: sunlight and CO2. Temperature has never been shown to affect growth other than a miniscule effect on growing season length. However, sunny days are warmer in summer, which would tend to confound any efforts to correlate temperature and growth. Ambient levels of CO2 were climbing throughout the proxy calibration period of the early 20th century. It seems impossible to disentangle the effects of this CO2 enrichment from those of higher temperatures. In the latter part of the century, tree growth diverged from both, suggesting that some limit had been reached and trees were no longer starving for CO2.

dp
December 27, 2013 5:09 pm

Regards climate science, discovery, analysis, accuracy, repeatability, thoroughness, and with a critical eye to minimizing uncertainty, we find this endeavor to be hard. Therefore we have elected to do it wrong.
Regards, the IPCC
/humor

December 27, 2013 5:11 pm

Ball doesnt even know how to put different series on the same basis period and doesnt even know that giss and uah measure fundamentally different things.
Finally the human cause of climate change was identified in 1850 and the first prediction that more co2 would raise temps was made in the 1890s. It wasn’t wigly or cru or the ippc
REPLY: You might want to calm down, wipe your monitor clean of spittle, and resubmit with all your points spelled correctly – Anthony

bw
December 27, 2013 5:28 pm

Understanding the “Global Climate” is not possible using traditional science. This is due to the requirement that any scientific hypothesis must be tested against a control.
Physicists, engineers, geologists are reduced to “modeling” the Earth with computational based tools that amount to drawing cartoons.
Biologists are more experienced at understanding biological systems at the planetary scale, ie “Ecosystems” with their uniquely non-linear behavior patterns.
The Earth is a biological system, built upon billions of years of biochemical evolution.
I doubt there is a physicist anywhere that could describe how planetary albedo responds to surface biology over long time scales.

December 27, 2013 5:29 pm

Dr. Ball;
Perhaps your best yet. Very well written, to the point. Carry on carrying on!

DaveG
December 27, 2013 5:32 pm

Steven Mosher says:
December 27, 2013 at 5:11 pm
“Ball doesnt even know how to put different series on the same basis period and doesnt even know that giss and uah measure fundamentally different things. Finally the human cause of climate change was identified in 1850 and the first prediction that more co2 would raise temps was made in the 1890s. It wasn’t wigly or cru or the ippc”
Steven Mosher = Mr.Know nothing, can’t even spell. You don’t come up to Dr Ball’s knees, and he is a short guy.

RichardLH
December 27, 2013 5:40 pm

“How can two major agencies HadCRUT and GISS produce such different results,”
I think that it is remarkable that they do agree so well in some regards though.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/plot/hadcrut4gl/mean:220/mean:174/mean:144/plot/hadcrut4gl/mean:720
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/gistemp/plot/gistemp/mean:220/mean:174/mean:144/plot/gistemp/mean:720
If a 15 year Gaussian rather than a 10 year one had ben the analysis done early on then things may well have been looked at differently.

RichardLH
December 27, 2013 5:47 pm

Steven Mosher says:
December 27, 2013 at 5:11 pm
“Ball … doesnt even know that giss and uah measure fundamentally different things.”
And there I was thinking that they both measured Global temperature!

François GM
December 27, 2013 5:50 pm

Mosher says: the first prediction that more co2 would raise temps was made in the 1890s.
—————-
CO2 raises temps in closed systems i.e. in test tubes, but clearly not significantly in an open system such as our atmosphere.
As to GISS and UAH, you know very well that Tim wasn’t comparing these two, but HADCRUT with GISS.

Werner Brozek
December 27, 2013 5:59 pm

Table comparing results for four data sources for the period 2002 to 2011.
GISS and UAH differ by 0.36°C, which is enormous in nine years.

The actual difference in trend between GISS and UAH is extremely small from January 2002 to December 2011. They do have different base periods, and perhaps the base periods should be uniform across all data sets, but that is a different issue. See:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/uah/from:2002/to:2012/plot/uah/from:2002/to:2012/trend/plot/gistemp/from:2002/to:2012/plot/gistemp/from:2002/to:2012/trend

Genghis
December 27, 2013 6:01 pm

Water in all its forms is obviously the most important climate factor.
The dry lapse rate is 9.8 C/km. The moist lapse rate is 5 C/km. What that means is that a moist atmosphere is warmer than a dry atmosphere. Increased levels of CO2 tend to increase the lapse rate thereby cooling the atmosphere, relative to a moist atmosphere.
It appears that what isn’t said is more important than what is said by the warmers.

CRS, DrPH
December 27, 2013 6:23 pm

Great post, thanks!!

(i) data limitations.
As Lamb identified, lack of data was and remains the most serious limitation.

…this reminds me of one of my favorite Climategate email threads:

The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a
travesty that we can’t. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on
REDACTED shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our
observing system is inadequate.

http://foia2011.org/index.php?id=198

Policycritic
December 27, 2013 6:23 pm

the first prediction that more co2 would raise temps was made in the 1890s

Which was the same decade that an economist wrote that barter was the first money system (sea shells, rocks, wives, wampum, whatever) and everyone has believed it since as gospel truth. It was never corrected when in the 1950s the translation of the Sumerian tablets with their complex markings of debits and credits showed the highly sophisticated monetary system created 5,000 years ago to keep track of payments and transactions for harvests and trade over the period of a year. The tablets also displayed the financial ‘forward planning’ process used by the various Sumerian governments in the management of their agriculture, industry, and taxes. (History Begins at Sumer: Thirty-Nine Firsts in Recorded History by Samuel Noah Kramer.)

Schitzree
December 27, 2013 6:23 pm

“GISS and UAH differ by 0.36°C, which is enormous in nine years. Compare it to the 0.6°C increase over 140 years, a change the 2001 IPCC claimed was dramatic and unnatural.”
Hey, I’m with Mosh on this one. Comparing UAH Sat Lower Trop Temps against GISS Weather Station Surface Temps was way wrong. You might as well throw HADSST in as well, you’ll find a similar ‘difference’. We wouldn’t accept that kind of apples to oranges comparison from warmists, so we sure as hell shouldn’t be making them ourselves.

RACookPE1978
Editor
December 27, 2013 6:27 pm

Werner Brozek says:
December 27, 2013 at 5:59 pm (Edit)

Table comparing results for four data sources for the period 2002 to 2011.
GISS and UAH differ by 0.36°C, which is enormous in nine years.
The actual difference in trend between GISS and UAH is extremely small from January 2002 to December 2011. They do have different base periods, and perhaps the base periods should be uniform across all data sets, but that is a different issue. See:

OK.
So, remove that 0.4 baseline difference between GISS and UAH, and you get ???
(Hint: The two become nearly identical. But, if the other records were also re-zero’ed based on the last twelve years of monthly data, you also get a “uniform” identical record when the group is compared together. )
The last twelve years are different month-to-month only because of the baseline difference, which reinforces the idea that we getting consistent information from difference analytical data lists. Perhaps not independent data sources, but the difference methods are creating consistent monthly data.
ONLY the computer simulations are crashing and failing.

Alan Robertson
December 27, 2013 6:33 pm

Steven Mosher says:
December 27, 2013 at 5:11 pm
Ball doesnt even know how to put different series on the same basis period and doesnt even know that giss and uah measure fundamentally different things.
Finally the human cause of climate change was identified in 1850 and the first prediction that more co2 would raise temps was made in the 1890s.
____________________________
Ah, Steven- art thou in the cups?
Are you suggesting that Arrehenius prediction of 5-6C degrees/doubling of CO2 is anything but unfortunate (or laughable)? Catch up!

Alan Robertson
December 27, 2013 6:35 pm

I apologize to all- I responded to Mosher and further disrupted this thread, which i now understand was his intent all along, to distract from the truths put forth by Dr. Ball.
All apologies.

DR
December 27, 2013 6:42 pm

@Mosher
We were told for decades the greenhouse effect would boil the planet, that at the equator it would cause unprecedented temperatures throughout the lower atmosphere and all sorts of catastrophic “stuff” was going to happen.
Instead of personal attacks, perhaps you could explain why the surface is warming faster than the lower troposphere, which is not what we were told should happen. After all, it’s simple high school physics right?

schitzree
December 27, 2013 6:44 pm

Er, for the record, When I say “I’m with Mosh on this one”, I mean on the ‘don’t compare GISS to UAH’ part, not the ‘ human cause of climate change was identified 100 years before humans produced enough CO2 to possibly effect climate’ part. I can only assume that Mosher was worried about making an argument based on facts instead of snark, so handicapped himself by shooting himself in the foot.

DR
December 27, 2013 6:56 pm

Who else remembers the myriads of magazine articles such as this and countless TV specials and news reports about how the “greenhouse effect” was going to cause heat to be “trapped” in the troposphere back in the late 80’s and 90’s……and believing it? I mean, who wouldn’t believe NASA with all them super smart scientists; they surely had to be right.
Remember Mosher, this is all high school physics we were told back then. We’re still told it is basic high school physics today, but was there a new hypothesis constructed to replace the one we were indoctrinated with 25 years ago? Has the science changed?
http://is.gd/pZdujx

James of the West
December 27, 2013 6:57 pm

Mosher makes a valid point regarding baselines for comparison. Everyone makes typos on spelling from time to time.
I think people should be open to criticism and correction and respond each time on merit, avoiding personal attack. Stick to the science or we will reduce the value of the debate.

Climatologist
December 27, 2013 7:36 pm

Wigley, Hansen, and Schneider damaged climate research almost beyond repair.

Felix
December 27, 2013 8:01 pm

The WMO does not control national weather services. Funding for climate research in the U.S. is mainly from the NSF and many other major countries similar funding agencies. The idea the the WMO directs climate research funding is absurd. And the CRU does not control the IPCC. I’m afraid you all are going down the conspiracy theory path.
The IPCC reports give extensive discussion of the hydrologic (water) cycle.

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