Guest essay by Frank Lansner

Presentation of the Original Temperatures project.
Contents:
1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Adjustments of temperature data
3.1. Adjustments: HISTALP – by the Austrian ZAMG
3.2. Adjustments: ECA&D – by the Dutch KNMI
3.3. Adjustments: The BEST project
3.3.1 BEST / Austria
3.3.2 BEST / Denmark
3.3.3 BEST / Hungary
3.3.4 BEST / UHI
3.3.5 BEST prefer unadjusted data
4. Results from original temperature data
1. Introduction
The number of adjustments of temperature data appears overwhelming and often undocumented. Are we facing homogenization of temperature data? Or is it “pasteurization” (= warm treatment) of temperature data?
As a sceptic it is my opinion that we need to know for sure. I therefore started out 18 months ago collecting original temperature data and now I have started presenting the results on www.hidethedecline.eu
I experienced a lack of will from the national meteorological institutes to freely share the tax paid data I asked for. I even had assistance from a large Danish Newspaper to ask the questions for me, send mails etc. I asked for raw data from datasets beginning before 1950, especially the non-coastal stations:

In my analysis of the Czech Republic today I use around 50 stations. The national Czech meteorological institute wanted 3450 EUR for 10 longer datasets (just yearly values).

Data sources: Meteorological yearbooks, statistical yearbooks, World Weather Records, national archives, books, different databases (NACD, NORDKLIM etc.), web sites Tutiempo and more.
The number of existing longer temperature series is large. Even smaller European countries often has around 50-70 longer datasets available. And for example already in 1945 Spain collected temperatures from 500 stations.
In the following I will try to answer these questions:
1) What does original temperature data tell about the climate now?
2) What does original temperature data tell about adjustments in climate science?

Fig 2: You will need some patience if you want to collect original temperature data.
2. Methods
OAS and OAA locations – how geography determines temperature trends.
For all areas analysed (almost 20 countries by now) we see a large group of stations with warm temperatures trends after 1930 (“OAA” stations) but also a large group of stations with very little or no warm trend after around 1930 (“OAS” stations).
The classification of OAA versus OAS simply depends on geographical surroundings.

Fig 3
In the writing “RUTI Coastal stations” (based on GHCN V2 raw) I found that Non-coastal temperatures (blue graph) were much more cold trended from around 1930 than the Coastal trends (red). http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/ruti/coastal-temperature-stations.php

Fig 4
But Non-coastal stations can be divided further into Ocean Air Affected stations (“OAA”, marked yellow) and then Ocean Air Shelter stations (“OAS”, marked blue).
OAS areas thus have some similarities with valleys in general, but as illustrated above, the OAS areas cover a slightly different area than the valleys.
In general I have aimed to find average OAA temperature trends and average OAS temperature trends for the areas analysed. For each country analysed I have made comparison between national temperature trends as published by the “BEST” project and then the OAA and OAS temperature trends from original data. I want to know if BEST data use both the warm trended OAA data and the more cold trended OAS data. In addition, I have made comparisons of ECA&D data versus original for many countries and also HISTALP data versus original.
More info can be found on:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-introduction-267.php
3. Results: Adjustments of temperature data
3.1. Adjustments: HISTALP – by the Austrian ZAMG

Fig 5 The Austrian ZAMG website “HISTALPS” (http://www.zamg.ac.at/histalp) presents their versions of Alpine temperature data online for Austria and several nearby areas. All datasets seem to show a clear warming trend.

Fig6
However, the valley stations in best possible shelter against ocean air (OAS) have all been adjusted by ZAMG to show warm temperature trends.
From Original data we can see, that the cold trended stations (OAS) are in fact in a comfortable majority in the Alpine area and I believe ZAMG should explain themselves.
More examples of HISTALP/ZAMG adjustments from many countries:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-histalp-264.php
More on original Alpine temperature data:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-the-alps-273.php
3.2. Adjustments: ECA&D – by the Dutch KNMI
To evaluate ECA&D temperature data I have so far mostly studied the differences between temperature data from Tutiempo and ECA&D. Tutiempo do not change data after they first publish it. I have this from mail correspondence.
On the other hand, ECA&D frequently adjust their datasets and thus normally, ECA&D represents newer versions than Tutiempo. Therefore the difference ECA&D minus Tutiempo often tells us about the adjustments done lately to the data represented by ECA&D:

Fig 7
ECA&D temperature versions versus Tutiempo versions averaged for each nation.
For most countries analysed, ECA&D temperature data versions have warmer values for temperatures than Tutiempo in recent years. Especially for the years 2010-2012 ECA&D seems to add a lot of heat to data when they adjust.
I will ask some of you to download ECA data from these locations:
http://eca.knmi.nl/indicesextremes/customquerytimeseriesplots.php
http://www.tutiempo.net/en/Climate/europe.htm
Online data can change or disappear any minute…
More on the ECA&D adjusted data:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-ecad-263.php
3.3 Adjustments: The BEST project
The BEST project collects data from different sources often already related to NOAA and NCDC. BEST often present multiple versions/copies of the same longer datasets already used repeatedly in climate science. BEST have not required the large bulk of existing temperature data from the national Meteorological institutes.

Fig 8
For all countries analysed so far, the BEST national data is nearly identical with the coastal trends and the Ocean Air Affected (“OAA”) locations. The data from the Ocean Air Shelter (“OAS”) stations appears to be completely ignored by the BEST project country after country after country. Just as we saw for HISTALP.
3.3.1 BEST / AUSTRIA

Fig 9
Also for Austria BEST closely follow the OAA area station temperature trends; it’s impossible to see that the majority of Austrian stations – the OAS valley stations – have had any impact on the national result from BEST.
3.3.2 BEST / DENMARK

Fig 10 Danish temperature stations used in the “Original Temperatures” analysis.
Red arrows: The BEST project only use longer data series from coastal stations.
In fact, DMI (the Danish meteorological institute) will not share any other long temperature sets with even the Danish population, and DMI claimed not to have the older data we asked for on digital format. I had to dig data up myself. (So now i hold tonnes of Danish climate data in digital format that DMI dont have?)
Blue areas on the graphic above are best sheltered against the dominating western winds of ocean air and they are labelled “OAS” below.

Fig 11
Average of Danish coastal temperature series from original data and then the 5 longer temperature series made available by DMI for the public and climate science including BEST. The blue graph is an average of all Danish OAS areas (all blue areas in fig 9) created from original data.
More on Denmark and South Sweden:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-denmark-and-south-sweden-270.php
3.3.3 BEST / HUNGARY
Fig 12
For the Hungarian Valley (one of the largest OAS area in Europe), the BEST team has used an OAS temperature station “Pecs”. Above, the Pecs temperature trend is shown together with other Hungarian stations. These original data do seem rather homogenous?

Fig 13
None the less, the BEST team adds around 0.7 K of warming to the Pecs data. BEST use a so called “Regional Expectation” for all countries i have analysed, and change original data so they approach these expectations. Best also claim that Hungary as a nation has experienced this warming trend.
More examples of how data from OAS stations has been avoided by BEST, see for example from fig 22 and onwards for German OAS stations:
Erfurt, Halle, Fulda, Kassel, Kaiserslautern, Mannheim, Bamberg, Hamburg, Kiel, Lubeck, Magdeburg, Nurnberg, Ulm, Augsburg, Leipzig, Arnsburg, Torgau, Bayreuth, Brausnchweig, Regenburg, Stuttgart and Darmstadt. (Ok, Hamburg is not an OAS station, but BEST can change data from these too…)
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-germany-276.php
I cannot document the fate of all temperature stations used by BEST and this is why I primarily aim to document the adjustments country for country, see more:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/original-temperatures-best-265.php
3.3.4 BEST / UHI:
Best claim that UHI plays no role. But remember results for all 11 countries analysed; First BEST first avoids the cold trended stations (by deselecting or warm-adjusting OAS stations) and THEN they compare the remaining warm trended OAA stations with city stations. It is on this basis that BEST concludes that UHI is not an issue in climate data.
Here is how UHI affects “climate” data in real life:

Fig 14. Some Rhein-Ruhr stations illustrated together with some nearby stations. Base period 1900-1920. What flavour of Urban heat warm trend do we want?
3.3.5 BEST prefer unadjusted data
BEST also claim that they prefer unadjusted data over adjusted. So why did they not require the large bulk of unadjusted longer datasets from national meteorological institutes and year books like I did?

Fig15. From the BEST FAQ web site.
BEST adjustments leads to the ignoring of the cold trended stations, the stations from valleys (OAS areas). So is it true when BEST claim not to use adjusted data? The red box above is my suggestion to an update of their FAQ-text. See more in “Original temperature: BEST”.
4. RESULTS FROM ORIGINAL DATA

Fig16
Observed original temperature trends from some stronger European OAS areas. The areas in shelter of ocean air show little or no heating I Europe from around 1940.

Fig 17
By using base period 1961-1990, we see that the OAS temperature datasets shown in fig 16 from different countries in Europe are in fact rather similar. That is, valleys not disturbed much by ocean air winds in different areas of Europe show almost the same signal, the same story.
In general, the warmer years in recent decades appear to have temperatures that resemble the warmer years before 1962.

Fig 18
Recent decades of coastal areas are 0,5-1 K warmer than the 1920-50 warm period.

Fig 19
European Coastal trends versus Land trend from Ocean Shelter Areas.

Fig 20. Land stations in shelter against ocean air show that the warming 1930-60 was rather similar to the warming 1990-2010.
What does the missing warming of areas not much affected by ocean air temperature trends indicate?
My thoughts:

Or alternatively, perhaps the CO2-theory suggests a pattern where land areas with little noise from ocean air trends show no heating after around 1930? Or can the climate “science” very fast produce a paper with such a conclusion?

Fig 21
In the writing “Original temperatures: The Hungarian Valley”, the area in the red circle above was examined. This area is one of the largest and best Ocean Air Shelter areas in Europe. For Astronomic purposes you would put your antenna on a mountain peak, but for observing climate signals as pure and strong as possible you should consider using the valleys or “Ocean Air Shelter” areas to get the strongest and purest climate signal.
Let’s take a look at similar areas in other areas of the world:

Fig 22
In all cases GHCN raw V2 temperature data (shown in RUTI articles) do not show recent temperatures warmer than for example the 1930´ies. In all cases these specific areas represents some of the most cold-trended areas of the respective continents.
For the US MIDWEST, the air masses from the Pacific first have to pass more than a thousand kilometres of mountains and thus the temperature trends in the US Midwest have unusually little noise from ocean air temperature trends.

Fig23
From RUTI USA: The number in each 5×5 grid tells how much warmer or colder the decade 1998-2008 is compared to 1930-40. In many cases, the recent decade is half a Kelvin colder than the 1930´ies.
This illustration is taken from “RUTI: USA”.
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/ruti/north-america/usa-part-1.php
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/ruti/south-america.php
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/ruti/australia.php
I think all in all on the described basis it is fair to conclude that the missing warming in areas in shelter of ocean air is likely to be a global phenomenon. Any protests?
Is it fair then to call the missing warming after around 1930-1940 of areas in shelter of ocean air a global problem for the CO2-theory?
Or do CO2-theory explain why temperature stations in best possible shelter against ocean air winds cannot really show warming after 1930-40?
PS: Please let me know if you have access to original temperature data, we need to expand the database of original temperature data.
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Hi Frank.
As promised I went to the Met Office library today and spent about three hours there. The met office library is vast. They have been collecting information on many different aspects of the weather for many decades. The result is that there is too MUCH data to readily identify what you require. There are many different series of data which have been summarised in a variety of ways.
According to the librarian there is no such thing as a ‘Met Office annual year book’ that he has seen in the library. I strongly suspect this lies in the digital data, which I will come to in a minute.
Some of the hundreds of different series I came across were as follows;
‘Daily weather report and summary’ which lists specific places and is collated. This took up many shelves and I suspect is far too detailed.
Also old bound books covering 6 monthly periods of daily weather reports from 1877. This seems to have become quarterly reports in 1920 and stopped in 2008 when it became box files. This seems to be a better collation of the items in 1)
‘London weather centre uk monthly weather summary’ covers 38 uk stations and lists mean max, mean min and differences from normal temperatures . One book 1988-1991 and a box file with same title 1985-1991
Also box files of ‘weekly data’ starting 1993 and going up to 2011 (suspect it will be updated to end of 2013)
This next series was interesting with many books of;
Meteorological observations of stations of the second order from 1873 to 1920 and includes daily readings –summarised each month for barometer, wind, temperature etc and covering minor stations instead of the large stations. (much less likely to have been amended)
Met office quarterly weather reports 1865 to 1904
this series seems to have then become;
British meteorological and magnetic year book from 1905 to 1911
Weekly and monthly weather reports from 1869 to 1996
Hourly readings from the self recording instruments of the seven observatories 1974-1900
There were some potentially very interesting books from ;
University of Birmingham department of geography monthly climatological summary
Straightforward listing of each months temperatures wind etc. Earliest book was 1983 and the last book was 1993.
There was a similar series in 10 books from 1962 ‘Durham university daily met.obs. again from the dept of Geography
Another interesting series
UK climatological observers link 1977 to 2011 (20 box files) much of this summarised in the book
Climatological averages for 1981 -2010 and 2001-2010
Isbn 978-0-9569485-0-2. As well as a book there were also two documents with the same titles that had been bound in an office
1961 to 1990 averages and extremes
And 1971-2000 averages
Several digital suggestions;
A great deal of data is online-I suspect routinely with new data from around 1993 although this doesn’t mean the older less important data has been digitised . However I would be amazed if the key information you want isn’t available in a digital format. To access it
Go to ;
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/
insert ‘monthly data’ (or other search terms) in top right hand box and in that instance you will arrive here;
http://search.metoffice.gov.uk/kb5/metoffice/metoffice/results.page?qt=monthly+data&button=Search
I suggest you register for ‘data point.’ If you need to be resident in the UK I will register on your behalf but you will have to tell me EXACTLY what you want.
Alternatively, Met office researchers will find information for you and either photocopy or scan it for you, but you need to be specific. I have always found them very helpful but there is a limit as to the amount of material they can provide. Their email is;
metlib@metoffice.gov.uk
The first obvious question is to ask them if there are UK weather year books.
Also, I think the data from both the Universities sounds worthwhile and contacting them directly might be useful as it is likely they will have digitised their old records.
If it goes back far enough the UK climatological observers link also seemed interesting.
As I say Frank, there is FAR too much information to easily find exactly what you want, so I suggest your first port of call should be the met office web site and to ask at metlib.
It strikes me that it would be interesting if you could get the current digitised data and I could then double check specific periods from the original books.
Let me know how you want to proceed.
With best regards
Tonyb
Dear Tony!! Thank you so much for your enquiry!
Even countries like Uganda, Angola, Bolivia and Costa Rica have published meteorological year books from at least from around 1930-40. But supposedly not the UK??
What makes your findings look even more dodgy is, that you do find something around 1870-1910 then… pretty much nothing? … And then again something from around 1980.
This pattern resembles what I have seen here and there for other countries, the warm years 1930-50 are harder to dig up. As far as I can see, the helper at the library could not offer you data that continues from 1930 and foreward. I find this so odd that the word “dodgy” is on my tongue.
I will try to use the email address and hear what they have to say about this, thankyou verymuch!!!!
K.R, Frank
frank
I don’t believe in conspiracy theories. The UK has a huge amount of data which has been subdivided into a large number of categories. Perhaps the complete year books come under a completely different name.
Let me know what the researchers at that email address say. Alternatively try entering various terms into the web site.
I will email a couple of people and see if they can suggest anything.
tonyb
Hi frank
These may be worth looking at
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/climate-anomalies/#?tab=climateAnomalies
They are UK climate anomaly maps relative to 1961-1990 average from 1919 to 2013
This is taken from the above link
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climatechange/science/monitoring/ukcp09/
My surmise is that the Met Office is very long established and has produced a huge amount of material over the years which keeps hundreds of scientists in a job. I suspect they find it far more interesting to analyse obscure data in minute detail so consequently the basic and boring raw material of monthly temperatures takes a back seat!
tonyb
Tonyb,
I meant that IF actually there where no station data available, then it would be more than odd – and yes , that is my opinion, we dont have to agree on everything.
Anyways, the material we are looking fore is called:
MONTHLY WEATHER REPORT by Meteorological Office.
Here is a link:
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/archive/monthly-weather-report-1930s
I was very happy to se REAL PHOTOS OF ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS in pdfs !
But it seems that only front cover is available this way? You can see that the original data tables start on the next page, but…
Then they write about tables, with data, havent found it yet, but perhaps…
K.R. Frank
Better link:
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/archive/monthly-weather-report
It looks as if the did not make the content of the Monthly Weather reports public?
I think this is what we are looking for. And i would like Ireland too 🙂
K.R. Frank
And then there are some station data here…
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/stationdata/
K.R. Frank
Frank
Coincidentally earlier this evening I had asked someone formerly connected with the Met Office and they replied as follows;
‘I’m not immediately aware of year books but the Monthly Weather Report and British Rainfall were published throughout the period mentioned (1930-1950) and may contain all the necessary data.’
hopefully this will be available as digital information. Let me know.
tonyb
Hi Tony,
But here ..
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/archive/monthly-weather-report
– we can see that they exist 1884-1993.
They just only scanned the front page… no raw data… surprise…
K.R. Frank
Possible they use some other excessively verbose and “precise” terminology for “year books”?
Frank
I took 3 photos on my ipad. Unfortunately it refuses to send emails at present so I cant transmit them.
However, they are from the various series I mention above and clearly show such things as actual mean daily and max daily and mean temperatures for each month.
As Brian H says, perhaps the Met office use some other term for year books or perhaps they found it more useful to have monthly data as each section within the met office might then have utilised the data as was appropriate to their areas of interest.
There is a vast amount of highly detailed original raw data by day and by month in the records I saw.
Perhaps on Monday we might find out from metlib how to obtain the yearly data.
tonyb
Frank
If you have no luck looking through the Met Office web site or by contacting Met Lib on Monday I would contact;
philip.eden@bbc.co.ukphilip.eden@bbc.co.uk; (this is an email address in the public domain)
Philip is a very well known weather forecaster and takes a keen interest in British data. Here is his web site;
http://www.climate-uk.com/
tonyb
Great, Tony thanks for all the tips, I will let you know what I find out, and then im looking forward to hear about your monday-mission!!
K.R: Frank
Frank
Your English is good. When I said;
“Perhaps on Monday we might find out from metlib how to obtain the yearly data.” the ‘we’ meant ‘you’!
It will be intriguing to see what you find out and will help if I can by perhaps checking the paper copies against some of the digital data.
However. I go away next Saturday for two weeks. Coincidentally its to Bad Gastein and Bad Ischl which were the very stations you mentioned in your report. Do you know where the temperature station is supposed to be located at each location as it would be interesting to see if either is affected by external sources that might influence the temperature.
tonyb
Dear Tony, I will happily take over, but first I need to finish collecting and finishing “the Original Temperatures: Norway” writing, but I will pick up the inputs you have given as soon as I have a moment.
K.R. Frank
PS: Tony, I have some UK stuff already 😉
Dear Tony, I tried to mail to philip.eden@bbc.co.uk but my email was rejected by their system. I guess they will only allow emails from certain senders. Anyways, lets continue our dialog on normal email.
K.R. Frank
Frank;
“Writing” is not an English noun, except perhaps as an anachronism. Use “write-up” or “article” or some other term if you don’t want us to guess each time you use it.
PS;
It can be used as a gerund, to indicate an activity. But not for the result.
Thanks Brian, where are you from?
Canada, currently (last 30+ yrs) Vancouver.