Richard S. Courtney writes in comments on the Mann and misrepresentations thread…
Anthony:
In the same week as MBH98 was published I wrote an email on the ‘ClimateSkeptics’ circulation list. That email objected to the ‘hockeystick’ graph because the graph had an overlay of ‘thermometer’ data over the plotted ‘proxy’ data. This overlay was – I said – misleading because it was an ‘apples and oranges’ comparison: of course, I was not then aware of the ‘hide the decline’ (aka “Mike’s Nature trick”) issue.
Unknown to me, somebody copied my email to Michael Mann and he replied.
‘Climategate’ revealed that email from Michael Mann and it can be read here:
http://www.ecowho.com/foia.php?file=3046.txt&search=medieval
Mann’s response consists solely of personal abuse against me and, importantly, it does not address the issue which I had raised immediately upon seeing the ‘hockeystick’ graph. Hence, I am certain that the graphical malpractice of the ‘hockeystick’ was both witting and deliberate.
I’ve reproduced the email below, the redactions were in the linked content that Courtney cites. Mann’s claims about dataset splicing are laughable, as even the Muir Russell investigation (for the later version which appeared in the IPCC TAR) labeled it as such, as McIntyre notes:
Here are Muir Russell’s comments on the IPCC 2001 incident (of which Mann was Lead Author), which they somewhat conflated with the WMO 1999 incident of the “trick” email:
In relation to “hide the decline” we find that, given its subsequent iconic significance (not least the use of a similar figure in the TAR), the figure supplied for the WMO Report was misleading in not describing that one of the series was truncated post 1960 for the figure, and in not being clear on the fact that proxy and instrumental data were spliced together. We do not find that it is misleading to curtail reconstructions at some point per se, or to splice data, but we believe that both of these procedures should have been made plain – ideally in the figure but certainly clearly described in either the caption or the text.
Here is the email Courtney speaks of:
date: Tue, 18 Jul 2000 16:41:12 +010 ???
from: Phil Jones <???@uea.ac.uk>
subject: Re: Global Surface Record Must Be Wrong
to: ???@uea.ac.uk,???@uea.ac.uk
>X-Sender: ???@holocene.evsc.virginia.edu
>Date: Tue, 18 Jul 2000 10:29:15 -0400
>To: ???@lanl.gov
>From: “Michael E. Mann” <???@virginia.edu>
>Subject: Re: Global Surface Record Must Be Wrong
>Cc: ???@geo.umass.edu, ???@uea.ac.uk
>
>Chick,
>
>This guys email is intentional deceipt. Our method, as you know, doesn’t
>include any “splicing of two different datasets”-this is a myth perptuated
>by Singer and his band of hired guns, who haven’t bothered to read our
>papers or the captions of the figures they like to mis-represent…
>
>Phil Jones, Ray Bradley, and Malcolm Hughes dispelled much of the mythology
>expressed below years ago.
>
>This is intentional misrepresentation. For his sake, I hope does not go
>public w/ such comments!
>
>mike
>
>>Date: Tue, 18 Jul 2000 08:38:35 +0100 ???(BST)
>>X-Envelope-From: ???@courtney01.cix.co.uk
>>X-Sender: ???@mail.compulink.co.uk
>>To: Chick Keller <???@lanl.gov>
>>From: COURTNEY <???@courtney01.cix.co.uk>
>>Subject: Re: Global Surface Record Must Be Wrong
>>X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by
>holocene.evsc.virginia.edu id DAA27832
>>
>>Dear Chick:
>>
>>Your past performance demonstrates that your recent piece to Peter Dietze is
>>unworthy of you. Smears and inuendoes are not adequate substitutes for
>>evidence and reasoned argument. You say;
>>”As to Michael Mann’s “hocky stick” paleo-temperature graph, I realize why
>>many attack it for it puts the nail in the coffen of the argument that
>>recent natural variability is as large as what has been observed in the 20th
>>century.”
>>
>>No ! People attack the ‘hockey stick’ because it is uses an improper
>>procedure to assess inadequate data as a method to provide a desired result.
>>I have defended Mann et al. from accusations of scientific “fraud” because I
>>am willing to accept that this was done in naive stupidity, but I am not
>>willing to accept that is good science. As you say, “people like Mann,
>>Briffa, Jones, etc.” have conducted “careful work”, but doing the wrong
>>thing carefully does not make it right.
>>
>>The ‘hockey stick’ is obtained by splicing two different data sets. Similar
>>data to the earlier data set exists for up to near the present and could
>>have been spliced on, but this would not show the ‘hockey stick’ and was not
>>done.
>>
>>Also, it is not true to say, as you have;
>>”But, it’s going to take more than rhetoric about Europe’s Little Ice Age
>>and Medieval Warming to get around the careful work of people like Mann,
>>Briffa, Jones, etc.”
>>Nobody in their right mind is going to place more trust in the proxy data of
>>”Mann, Briffa, Jones, etc.” than in the careful – and taxed – tabulations in
>>the Doomesday Book. The Medieval Warm Period is documented from places
>>distributed around the globe, and it is not adequate to assert that it was
>>”not global” because it did not happen everywhere at exactly the same time:
>>the claimed present day global warming is not happening everywhere at the
>>exactly the same time. Indeed, you say;
>>”recent temperature anomalies show that, while the tropics is cooler than
>>usual due to La Niña, the rest of the world is pretty much still as warm as
>>in 1998.”
>>
>>It is historical revisionism to assert that the Little Ice Age and Medieval
>>Warming did not happen or were not globally significant. It will take much,
>>much more than analyses of sparse and debatable proxy data to achieve such a
>>dramatic overturning of all the historical and archaelogical evidence for
>>the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Warm Period. Those who wish to make
>>such assertions should explain why all the historical and archaelogical
>>evidence is wrong or – failing that – they should expect to be ridiculed.
>>
>>All the best
>>
>>Richard
>>
>>>Dear Peter,
>>>
>>>In a recent message to Tom Wigley you wrote:
>>>
>>>>”Nowadays, what is measured is mostly quite correct. This holds for the
>>>>counts of frogs, butterflies and for the MSU measurements as well as for
>>>>the ground station readings. What is seriously flawed, are the biased
>>>>*interpretations*. So the surface record may be not wrong at all and
>>>>part of the warming is indeed anthropogenic. Wrong is only the paradigm
>>>>that ground warming is mostly caused by CO2 – and that this warming has
>>>>to show up in the lower troposphere as well. It is striking how the
>>>>ground warming grid pattern coincides with winter heating (Vincent Gray)
>>>>- if the warming was caused by CO2 it should rather be evenly
>>>>distributed over the globe, MSU-detected and only being modified by
>>>>meteorological conditions. Note that this energy caused warming only
>>>>depends on our energy demand and does hardly increase with CO2
>>>>concentration. So this warming should neither be allocated to the CO2
>>>>increment nor be misused with future CO2 projections.”
>>>
>>>I have been looking at NCDC plots of global temperature anomalis divided
>>>into three regions- tropics (20N–20S) and the rest of the
>>>globe–(20N–90N) and (20S–90S). When looked at that way, recent
>>>temperature anomalies show that, while the tropics is cooler than usual due
>>>to La Niña, the rest of the world is pretty much still as warm as in 1998.
>>>This is particularly true of northern subtropics and southern subtropical
>>>oceans. The most recent data in fact show the following: for the period
>>>March-May 2000, the northern subtropics are the warmest march-may ever, and
>>>the southern subtropics are essentially as warm as in 1998. Note that this
>>>is not in the winter for either hemisphere. Thus, it would seem to be
>>>important not to make too much of the winter-only observations.
>>>
>>>As to Michael Mann’s “hocky stick” paleo-temperature graph, I realize why
>>>many attack it for it puts the nail in the coffen of the argument that
>>>recent natural variability is as large as what has been observed in the
>>>20th century. Gene Parker in the most recent Physics Today just pushed
>>>that point of view citing 20 year-old work as his only support. But, it’s
>>>going to take more than rhetoric about Europe’s Little Ice Age and Medieval
>>>Warming to get around the careful work of people like Mann, Briffa, Jones,
>>>etc. And more recently , Tom Crowley’s article in last week’s Science!!!
>>>Their work includes those acknowledged regional events (LIA and MWP) and
>>>still shows the 20th cent. to be anomalous. (I might add here that it also
>>>calls into question suggestions that solar variability has an additional
>>>indirect forcing amplification since that should have come out of the data.
>>>Instead most published studies show a significant solar influence but a
>>>moderate one.) And so the only way around recent thousand year paleo
>>>studies is for more comprehensive hemispheric and global studies that fill
>>>in acknowledged gaps and in addition show that climate variability is
>>>larger than recent studies show.
>>>
>>> Perhaps a more fruitful approach would be to ask what the magnitude
>>>of regional variations has been in the past 150 years. If there are no
>>>regions whose temperature variations were very far from the global average,
>>>then one could legitimately ask how clear anomalies such as the little ice
>>>age could have been sustained in the face of the larger hemispheric
>>>climate. As one example I might cite the eastern United States and perhaps
>>>a large region to the north east since 1940. It clearly has not
>>>participated in the global trend, so much so that urban heat island fans
>>>cite it as an example of how good records (the US) don’t show as much
>>>warming as bad records (the rest of the world).
>>>
>>>Regards,
>>>Charles. “Chick” F. Keller,
>>>Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics/University of California
>>>Mail Stop MS C-305
>>>Los Alamos National Laboratory
>>>Los Alamos, New Mexico, 87545
>>>???@lanl.gov
>>>Phone: (505)???
>>>FAX: (505)???
>>>http://www.igpp.lanl.gov/climate.html
>>>
>>>Every thoughtful man who hopes for the creation of a contemporary culture
>>>knows that this hinges on one central problem: to find a coherent relation
>>>between science and the humanities. –Jacob Bronowski
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>_________________________________________
> Professor Michael E. Mann
> Department of Environmental Sciences, Clark Hall
> University of Virginia
> Charlottesville, VA 22903
>_________________________________________
>e-mail: ???@virginia.edu Phone: (804)??? FAX: (804)???
> http://www.evsc.virginia.edu/faculty/people/mann.html
>
>
Prof. Phil Jones
Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 ???
School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 ???
University of East Anglia
Norwich Email ???@uea.ac.uk
NR4 7TJ
UK
============================================================
UPDATE: Steve McIntyre responded in comments, saying he didn’t think the “splicing” issue in MBH98 was a substantial issue for him, and I responded to him, giving my reasons for why I disagree.
For the sake of completeness to discussing this issue, I’m elevating his comment and my response to the body of the post. – Anthony
Anthony, this post has numerous errors, none of which should be made by people interested in this topic. It is very disappointing to read such material.
In Mann et al 1998 (as Jean S first figured out), to calculate the smooth, Mann padded the MBH98 proxy reconstruction after its 1980 end point with instrumental data. Mann only used the smooth up to 1980. This was “Mike’s Nature trick”. Jean S observed the irony of this procedure, given Mann’s protestations against splicing, but the effect was relatively subtle. Contra Courtney’s conflation of “hide the decline aka Mike’s Nature trick, Mike’s Nature trick applied in Mann et al 1998 had NOTHING to do with “hide the decline” – which was an issue with the Briffa reconstruction.
Further, in Courtney’s 1998 email, he said:
The ‘hockey stick’ is obtained by splicing two different data sets. Similar data to the earlier data set exists for up to near the present and could have been spliced on, but this would not show the ‘hockey stick’ and was not done.
In the Mann et al 1998 diagram criticized in Courtney’s email, the proxy reconstruction and the observed data are distinguished by being plotted in different colors or different line type. In other words, they were not “spliced” in the diagram. In Courtney’s recent email to Anthony, he says that the above email “objected to the ‘hockeystick’ graph because the graph had an overlay of ‘thermometer’ data over the plotted ‘proxy’ data. This overlay was – I said – misleading because it was an ‘apples and oranges’ comparison: of course,” I, for one, would never have guessed that this was the criticism being made in the original email. While Mann’s response was marred by his all-too-typical invective, I can well understand why he rejected the allegation in Courtney’s email.
In Courtney’s recent covering email to Anthony, he now characterizes his earlier objection as an objection to proxy reconstructions being plotted on the same graph as observations as follows:
That email objected to the ‘hockeystick’ graph because the graph had an overlay of ‘thermometer’ data over the plotted ‘proxy’ data. This overlay was – I said – misleading because it was an ‘apples and oranges’ comparison: of course, I was not then aware of the ‘hide the decline’ (aka “Mike’s Nature trick”) issue.
While, as noted above, it would have been very difficult, if not impossible, for a contemporary reader to discern this meaning, this criticism is equally invalid in my opinion. I, for one, absolutely do not take issue with plotting a proxy reconstruction on the same scale as observations. I and others take issue with the “divergence problem” precisely because when one plots the Briffa reconstruction against observed temperatures in the 20th century, the two plots diverge. According to Courtney’s criticism, it would be invalid to do such a plot. This is absurd. This does not mean that I endorse the muddiness of Mann’s graphics or other defects. Only that I, for one, do not take issue with plotting a reconstruction and observations on the same scale. On the contrary, it is something that I’ve done on many occasions. As I said to Courtney at CA on this point, if I’m unconvinced on this issue, I can’t imagine why a judge or jury would be convinced.
In the WMO 1999 graphic, Jones deleted values of the Briffa reconstruction after 1950 or so (the decline), spliced instrumental temperature to the end of the record, smoothed the combination and plotted the spliced version (without peeling back to 1950 as in Mike’s Nature trick.)
Muir Russell criticized the truncation and splicing of data in WMO1999 as follows:
the figure supplied for the WMO Report was misleading in not describing that one of the series was truncated post 1960 for the figure, and in not being clear on the fact that proxy and instrumental data were spliced together.
However, he did not take issue with plotting proxy reconstructions and observations on the same graphic. (Not that Muir Russell would be definitive on this.)
There are important issues in connection with the Mann corpus. This is not one of them. Too often, Mann’s opponents make irrelevant and easily rebutted criticisms. Unfortunately, this makes it easier for Mann to avoid more substantive criticisms. For a full explication of the differences between the various incidents, I refer people to the following CA post: http://climateaudit.org/2011/03/29/keiths-science-trick-mikes-nature-trick-and-phils-combo/
========================================================================
REPLY: Thanks for your opinion and clarifications Steve. Bear in mind that Courtney wrote this before the “trick” and truncation was known. While I often defer to your superior knowledge on the subject of MBH98 it is my respectfully differing opinion that plotting the two datasets together (proxy reconstruction and instrumental temperatures) is indeed problematic and misleading in that both techniques have different samplings and sensitivities to temperature.
Instrumental temperature is much more sensitive than tree ring derived proxy temperature, which has a long time domain and is not exclusively a representation of temperature, due to equal if not greater sensitivity to other variables, as I pointed out here: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/09/28/a-look-at-treemometers-and-tree-ring-growth/
While Courtney’s complaint is most certainly incomplete in today’s perspective, we shouldn’t just say that plotting two dissimilar datasets on the same chart without proper caveats is a proper practice.
An analog to the spliced combination plot of Mann’s MBH98 graph in today’s climate arena might be this: suppose somebody wants to argue that hurricanes in the NH are becoming more frequent, and they are the more frequent now than in the last 1000 years.
One way to do this is to look at historical reports of hurricanes in literature, newspapers, magazines and other historical writings. These would be a “proxy” for the actual frequency of hurricanes in a given year. Suppose that the researcher was able to find enough reports to to make what looks like a viable dataset, but that instead of using historical writings to determine frequency of hurricanes in the 20th century, the actual record of named hurricanes (essentially observations) was used, such as this graph, which has a nice “hockey stick” shape implying that hurricanes frequency had increased dramatically in the late 20th century.

Arguably, that’s incomplete, showing only the Atlantic, but it’s the best I can do on short notice before I head to work this morning.
The combination of the two datasets, historical literature accounts, plus named storms in the north Atlantic might very well look much like Mann’s flat section of the hockey stick up to about 1925…mostly flat, maybe a slight increasing trend. It would likely look a lot like this graph you plotted in the CA discussion of Besonen et al 2008 (which has other issues independent of this discussion, I’m only using it as an example of what such a graph for this discussion might look like).

To the layman and even to some scientists, they might take such a construct of hurricane historical accounts (proxy) and named storms (observations) as being proof that hurricane frequency is indeed dramatically increasing in the 20th century.
But the issue is sampling and sensitivity. As you’ve pointed out many times, low sampling and/or selected sampling of proxies leads to spurious results when extrapolated to a larger scale (regional to global for example).
From a sensitivity standpoint, since human literature is less frequent as a we go back in time, we’d expect any dataset of historical hurricane accounts to have lower sensitivity to the actual number of hurricanes in any given year simply due to population density and the lack of communications. Many storms would go unreported.
Even in the 20th century data, as shown in the Pew graph above, this effect is likely, due to the early part of the century having lower population, and less ability to observe hurricanes due to a lower level of technology. I talk about this effect in the reporting bias of “extreme weather” here: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/04/19/why-it-seems-that-severe-weather-is-getting-worse-when-the-data-shows-otherwise-a-historical-perspective/ So even the Pew graph would almost certainly have a lower representation for named storms in the pre-satellite era.
So, for the purposes of my exercise, knowing that the two datasets for hurricane frequency would have different samplings and sensitivities to actual hurricane frequency in the NH, would it be proper to put these two datasets together into a single graph to argue that hurricane frequency in the NH is the “highest ever” at the endpoint of the graph?
From my viewpoint it would not be, because these two datasets have significantly different samplings and sensitivities to actual hurricanes. The layman doesn’t likely know this, and many of the media that might seize on such a graph probably wouldn’t note this as they often work from press releases. A press release about this hurricane frequency “paper” probably wouldn’t trumpet the fact that the two datasets are greatly dissimilar, and that as you go back in time, the sampling is less, and the sensitivity in the last part of the graph to hurricanes is dramatically higher than any part of the record.
And that’s why I see the splicing in MBH98 as another “trick”. Putting the two dissimilar datasets together implied they have equal sampling and sensitivity to temperature, when they clearly don’t, and the public and the media ran with that visual almost entirely without questioning it, because even though the colors were different, many newspapers back then didn’t reproduce in color, and many people simply take the graph’s “total shape” at face value, without realizing the differences between the two datasets.
(added, here is what a newsprint version of MBH98 might look like…note the dataset delineations disappear, laymen and politicians certainly wouldn’t be able to see beyond the total graph shape in B&W))

To me, that’s just as wrong as the truncation and the overlay issues.
Plotting/splicing two similar datasets of equal sampling and sensitivity in my mind is not an issue. Plotting two greatly dissimilar datasets with unequal sampling and sensitivity, is an issue.
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Jeff Norman says:
“Given his response was written in 2000 about a criticism written in 1998 about a paper published in 1998 I am not clear on the reference to “years ago”.”
Please remind me: exactly when was this paper published? It was included in the IPCC report improperly on the promise that I was going to be published very soon, which turned out not to be the case, not so? They were fishing around for someone willing to say they would print it late in ’97 or early ’98.
In short it was called MBH98 before it was published, and caught up later. Was it really in print in ’98?
Sorry for not remembering.
Now at the level of “fly dung” or “pepper” on the white papers presented by Mann.
If “fly dung” fraud.
If “pepper” meaningless.
@PiperPaul
I am continuously surprised by how many people think that carefully repeating a test of an inherently variable device provides a ‘more accurate’ performance rating.
Anth0ny:
Sincere thanks for your ‘hurricane illustration’ with associated graphs. People need an ability to understand what I am saying if they are to reach valid agreement or valid disagreement with my statemernts.
I was starting to think only tonyb understood my point about dis-similar methods providing ‘apples and oranges’ data sets. The analogy of your ‘hurricane illustration’ provides an elegant explanation without need to use maths. And I ask all who are having difficulty understanding my point to please read your analogy.
Again, thankyou.
Richard
HELP! Definitely off topic, but I am in a battle with the editor of the local Gannet paper. I responded to a letter headlined ‘Deniers are Motivated by Money” (and used AR5 as his reference for our “errors”). The editor cut off the last sentence of EACH of my paragraphs (presumably for brevity) which eliminated each of my summary points!
My very last paragraph, the money one :), said skeptics believe in the Scientific Method…. …..not appeals to authority, consensus, ….nor ad hominems (like the label “denier” used to associate skeptics with ignorant holocaust deniers). The phrase in parenthesis was snipped.
I will respond with a very short letter reasserting the deleted portions of my letter as self standing bullet points.
The help I need is documenting the origin of the term global warming “denier”. I am aware of the Ellen Goodman Boston Globe editorial which popularized the term (11/28/07) but I believe there was an earlier reference by a former Al Gore PR man who wrote an article in (maybe) the Atlantic specifically on how to win the communications war on global warming and channeling Saul Alinsky’s advice to demonize the enemy; the first to suggest the tactic of associating skeptics with Holocaust deniers.
That person later contributed to An Inconvenient Truth. Name begins with a “G”?
Did I dream this one (of course Google is no help)?
(Ironically, my letter appeared directly below a 5 panel cartoon displaying how skeptics are incapable of listening to facts or reason.)
Mann did not attend college as an earth/climate/physical scientist. He attended as a Mathematician. He only became engaged in “climate” at the end of his education by an activist mentor. The hockeystick paper was his first public venture into the climate debate. Is that why the terminology and methods seem so UN scientific method?
Yes, the two different data sets were clearly shown in two different colors. The problem is that by overlaying them in a point where they “match up”, and then continuing on with only ONE of the sets, it automatically leads the viewer to assume that the FIRST data set either ENDED at that moment, OR that it continued to match the second data after that, so that essentially, the SECOND set “picks up where the last one left off”. Using the word “updated” in the caption to the original chart is also meant to lead the viewer to conclude that the second data set is just a newer, better, reflection of the first set.
If the first data had continued on, it would not have shown a hockeystick. The second data set didn’t go back far enough to be reliable. It was a match made in heaven ONLY for someone with an agenda, and the fact that they “matched” for only a split second in scientific time, was all they needed to shove this chart, this newborn “climate scientist”, and the AGW theory to the forefront of the climate debate.
That was 16 years ago. NOW we know. NOW we have better records, more accurate proxies, more detailed studies. That Mann is still defending a flawed, disproven, illogical paper indicates he is either completely incompetent, deluded, or so invested in a known lie that he simply cannot let go. Maybe its money. Maybe its ego. Or maybe he (and his groupies) know if they fess up, the whole argument falls apart. It would be a death blow to the movement. A movement they very much believe in. All they have to do is hang on long enough for conclusive proof (they firmly believe will arrive any day now) to show up and then they can just wave off the Hockey Stick as “what we believed then..that has been proven to be true anyways by something else.” Maybe he views that as his burden to carry…maybe hes been threatened not to put it down.
They believe they are saving the world. There is no more noble a cause! There is no more urgent a message! Everyone who does not join them is either suicidal or genocidal. No tool or lie can be viewed in a negative light if it saves us all!
@Aphan
Or that he was merely “highlighting” the blade. Without a legend, what the readers were to think was suggestive of the narrative, which did not mention the grafting.
Crispin in Waterloo but really in Yogyakarta:
At May 12, 2014 at 9:56 am you ask
Yes. It was published in Nature 392, 779-787 on 23 April 1998.
It was received by Nature on 9 May 1997 and accepted on 27 February 1998.
See here.
Richard
Steven Mosher works with a proven liar, Richard Muller, paid by the Koch brothers no less. Muller created headline news about being a skeptic who bashed Mann but then suddenly was enlightened to become an climate model supporter, despite old quotes that showed Muller never was a skeptic whatsoever, but he had in fact resigned from the Sierra Club in the 1980s for their lack of support of low emissions nuclear power. What obviously happened was that Muller was envious of Mann’s fame and stepped in with his own hockey stick as he simultaneously bashed Mann in seminars, trying to steal Mann’s thunder and start tapping the funding (and fame) well. So the Berkeley Earth crew have a vested interest in a surgical and sealed Mann bashing narrative, as they hope their highly tweak-able auto slicing and dicing black box of adjustments will garner more support of emergency level funding in climate “science” minus all that *former* controversy.
One more note….Mann seems to swim in a very small pool that contains an inordinate number of psychology students/professors/”experts”. People known to prey on, manipulate the “science” and use fear and labeling to control the debate. Does that amuse, alarm, or bother anyone else or is it just me wondering why someone whose work is so solid that it must be augmented with social manipulation?
“I and others take issue with the “divergence problem” precisely because when one plots the Briffa reconstruction against observed temperatures in the 20th century, the two plots diverge.”
Absolutely, Mr. McIntyre. But please add the additional information that Briffa had discovered that his evidence had turned against him and, as a genuine scientist, he had a duty to report that indisputable fact. Perhaps the most important finding of Briffa’s work was that the tree ring proxies in question are not reliable proxies for temperature.
One thing for sure is that Steyn should definitely have Briffa deposed, despite the expense of a transatlantic trip. Hey, Jones too while they’re there.
It’s impossible for me to see the hockey stick graph as anything other than intentional.
Michael Mann obviously knew how it would be received and what the contrast was to the countless, much different historical accounts of the Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice Age that existed before the hockey stick.
That is just repeating what is well known. After warming of the 1980’s/90’s, the effect of doing this, could almost be justified by some based on empirical data from thermometers that confirmed global warming was happening during those 2 decades.
Since that warming has stalled, however global temperatures have been unable to keep up with the end of the hockey stick. So, with time, the hockey stick will look less and less like a hockey stick, as more and more thermometer readings get greater and greater weight.
In essence, this disparity from the shape the hockey stick took initially and the shape that is being carved out now, exposes the errors.
The hockey stick graph was all above unprecedented, upward accelerating temperatures. Unprecedented because of it wiped out previous natural temperature deviations.
The value that was placed on it was proportional to the weight it was given with respect to a powerful indicator for the direction of global temperatures in a future world with increasing greenhouse gases.
However, as time marches on and global temperatures diverge more and more from the hockey stick shape and more and more from global climate models using mathematical equations to represent the physics of a hockey stick based atmosphere, the value of the hockey stick graph as a tool for one side making its case for unprecedented warming rates continues to weaken.
In a world where global temperatures have violated hockey stick shaped warming for a significant period, it is also easier to accept the lack of authentic science that originally went into creating it.
As always, truth/theories in science are either validated or falsified by how they stand up in the real world.
There has been no hockey stick warming for over 15 years now with CO2 levels going higher. Objective scientists would not be stating “the science is settled” “the debate is over” referring to a theory based on hockey stick warming.
If anything, it’s hard not to conclude that hockey stick warming has been falsified. An El Nino this year and next, causing new highs in global temps would at best, show less than hockey stick warming.
Should a new trend that breaks out of the 15 year global temperature pause and continues for the rest of this decade occur, then I for one, will adjust my ideas regarding the effects of increasing CO2 on global temperatures. Why not wait that long? Why is it that one side must act NOW?
The reason for Obama to go into a “full court press” with the rhetoric and push for aggressive, costly and economy stifling regulations at a time when his science is being falsified, has to do with the time table of his current term.
It will take 2 years to get the regulations he plans to unveil in June in place. He has less than 3 years left in office. Also, the longer he/they wait, the less the global temperature graph looks like a hockey stick. He is also losing support as weather events like severe Winters and high heating bills sink into brainwashed minds.
It’s the fact that Mann’s black and white dotted line exactly *lines* *up* with the end of the proxy data that represents the act of splicing, no matter how it is represented graphically. This automatically means any miscalibration is ignored and the full rise of the instrumental data from 1980 is added with much less averaging and smoothing out than the proxy data experiences.
George Daddis,
Poptech dug into material relating to this here. It’s a starting point anyway.
Steve McIntyre asserted: “I and others take issue with the “divergence problem” precisely because when one plots the Briffa reconstruction against observed temperatures in the 20th century, the two plots diverge.”
…while Steven Goddard points out that in fact if you use pre-alarm era temperature plots, there *is* no divergence problem, since those plots do show cooling, the likes of which create a new ice age scare:
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/02/07/motherlode-part-iii/
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/05/11/ushcn-it-is-worse-than-it-seems/
Corrected second link: http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/03/03/an-entire-science-wrecked-by-data-tampering/
Anthony, I do not regard (and do not know of any specialist) who would regard “plotting the two datasets (proxy reconstruction and instrumental temperatures)… with different samplings and sensitivities to temperature” on the same diagram but with different colors or line types as being equivalent to or a form of “splicing” the two datasets. If one wants to argue against the legitimacy of this form of diagram (and I am skeptical of the argument), then one shouldn’t use the term “splicing” if you’re objecting to plotting on the same scale.
Your first hurricane diagram shows two datasets that were spliced together. SImilarly the WMO 1999 diagram showed two datasets that were spliced together. That’s not the case with Mann’s 1998 diagram. It is not valid to adduce (Muir Russell) criticisms of an actual spliced diagram as support for prior criticism of a diagram which was not “spliced”. (Anthony, your point that the distinction could be lost in low-resolution diagrams is true enough, but not a valid criticism of the original article.)
Since the accusation as formulated in Courtney’s letter was incorrect, this gave Mann an opportunity to easily point out to Chick Keller that he hadn’t “spliced” the datasets in the diagram, but had graphically distinguished them.
If someone wanted to criticize PLOTTING a reconstruction and observations on the same diagram, then they should phrased their criticism precisely and correctly. Accusing Mann of something different – “splicing” datasets – gave Mann an easy out. Ironically, one can validly accuse Mann in Mann et al 2008 of splicing proxy and observed data, as he did this in Mann et al 2008. It seems foolish to me to instead make an untrue accusation about MBH98.
While I understand the frustration of many readers, I re-emphasize that precision of language is important.
Thanks Steve, your point is better understood now. What would be a more precise word for what occurred in MBH98?
Falsification of the hockey stick:
(A) The Central England longest real thermometer record of all that is a near perfectly matched proxy for the shorter global average temperature shows no abrupt trend change, no handle vs. blade:
http://s6.postimg.org/uv8srv94h/id_AOo_E.gif
These old records also falsify Mosher’s hockey stick. Recent variation shows no greenhouse signal.
(B) The blade abruptly breaks out of the historical trend half a century too early to afford emissions as a cause.
(C) It bizarrely shows temperatures *cooling* as we “recover” from the Little Ice Age which bottomed out around 1600.
(D) There are two cooling pauses that correlate with two bursts in emissions, first the postwar boom and now the Chinese one.
(E) Mann’s very *recent* enthusiastic support for the bladeless input data Marcott 2013 “super hockey stick”:
http://s6.postimg.org/jb6qe15rl/Marcott_2013_Eye_Candy.jpg
(F) Pre-alarm global average temperature showed the 1930s just as hot as today so the “pause” is likely fully half of the thermometer record after all, minus corrupted adjustments by activists.
Courtney.
As Steve mcintyre has demonstrated your analysis and your reframing of your mail is crap.
Like steve I do not see why Anthony dilutes steves, UCs and jean S, work by giving you ANY INK WHATSOEVER.
as steve wrote:
“Too often, Mann’s opponents make irrelevant and easily rebutted criticisms.”
Look at how many investigations were led astray by people like you making false claims, tangential claims, trivial claims. You want to know why the climategate investigations failed
to look at the hard questions? Simple, because people who never read the mails claimed they were about the temperature record. That allowed investigators to claim that the “issues” had been investigated.
You dont understand manns work, you dont understand the real problems. You drag out an old mail that isnt even relevant to the issues at hand. As Steve has argued Stynes lawyers will ignore anything you write. You have no history of writing on these issues, you have no familiarity with the data or the methods.
Now, anyone who wants to divert attention from the real issues ( which mcintyre raises ) can do so easily by focusing on your buffoonery. Go post at Goddards.
Mosher said:
If we start ignoring third-rate thinkers we have to include you. Your great fault is you write as if you had solid knowledge of the sign and magnitude of the feedbacks regards downlevel radiation from CO2. You don’t know, you can’t know, nobody has calculated it, nobody can calculate it because all the components are not known and or understood. The very presumption of it is denied by nature and recorded in the observed data. Get past that before you feel too comfortable outing “third-rate thinkers”.
Let me illustrate my point with an example – and this was the sort of example that I was familiar with when I started in this field. From time to time, economists and business analysts construct models purporting to “explain” or “predict” the stock market, but very few/none work out of sample. If Ferson or some such economist did a plot in which their “reconstruction” was compared to observations, no one would criticize them for this. Indeed, I can’t imagine any such criticism being treated as anything other than a joke.
This doesn’t entail belief in or acceptance of the model. Only that no one reasonably takes issue with a plot comparing observations to “estimates” or with an analysis of the residuals. This is what statisticians do. It’s impossible to do statistics without analysing residuals.
Steve, thanks for the further clarification. In the case of plotting two dissimilar datasets, wouldn’t proper graphing convention direct the use of a “break” symbol for the data?

Typically data breaks are represented by a double slash in the line of data where dissimilar/non-contiguous data intersect. Or in some cases like this one, http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/85-002-x/2012001/article/11692/c-g/11692-chart12-eng.jpg a simple break in the line?
What if the MBH98 graph looked like this (my revision to illustrate a break):
Would that be proper convention, or is it your assertion that convention was adequately followed in the MBH98 graph?
NikFromNYC says:
May 12, 2014 at 10:40 am
It’s the fact that Mann’s black and white dotted line exactly *lines* *up* with the end of the proxy data that represents the act of splicing, no matter how it is represented graphically.
Exactly. I was about to make the same point myself, viz, Why does using different colours mean that joining up curves is not “splicing”? (Does this mean that if I had two pieces of real rope of different colour I couldn’t splice them?)
Plus, there are plenty of reproductions of this curve that don’t use different colours.
Steve McIntyre:
I leave it to Anth0ny to answer the points concerning his arguments in your post at May 12, 2014 at 11:26 am.
However, you conclude that post saying
I agree that “precision of language is important” and my “language” was precise in my post addressed to you at May 12, 2014 at 8:58 am where I wrote
Mann did NOT plot the data sets: he plotted selected parts of the data sets and as NikFromNYC says at May 12, 2014 at 10:40 am
Anybody who looks at the published MBH98 graph can see that it splices the selected parts of the data sets: the original published graph can be seen here.
So, I was merely stating fact when I wrote to Keller
And (as I explained in this thread at May 12, 2014 at 7:56 am to ferdberple and John Who): Mann was stating a series of blatant falsehoods when he wrote to Keller
In my opinion he lied because he understood the magnitude of what he had done. As I said in my post at May 12, 2014 at 6:21 am
Richard
Anthony asked: “What would be a more precise word for what occurred in MBH98?”
There are a huge number of MBH issues and not quickly summarized. The largest problem – and we didn’t articulate this at the time though it is latent – is the lack of consistency between proxies. The “proxies” are not temperature plus red noise -as required in Mannian and similar models. They are something else.
Otherwise, the most serious issues in MBH98 remain the issues raised in our 2005 articles (especially the EE article): overfitting in the calibration period; falsely claiming “statistical skill” without disclosing adverse verification statistics; falsely claiming “robustness” to presence/absence of dendro proxies while knowing that the reconstruction was not robust to bristlecones; lack of forthright disclosure that the HS shape derived from proxies (strip bark bristlecone) known to be problematic; questionable use of principal components methodology, including still undisclosed retention protocols; the arbitrary Mannkovitch adjustment; the still unknown confidence interval procedure of MBH99;…
In our 2005 articles, we pointed out that overfitted models typically failed out of sample. In tailored financial models, Ferson pointed out that out-of-sample testing tended to produce new “predictors” as old ones failed. In one of my earliest Op Eds, I urged that the proxy network be brought up to date. By this, I didn’t mean the development of new proxies, but bringing networks like MBH up to date. Have bristlecone ring widths continue to go to the stratosphere? Have Gaspe ring widths gone to the stratosphere? In the case of Gaspe, we know that an update was attempted and the results contradicted Hockey Stickness and were withheld. This was pointed out in early CA posts.
Of all people, I’ve been most skeptical of the likelihood of the Mann proxy network performing out of sample. Instead what we’ve seen is more or less what we predicted in 2005. As old proxies fail to live up out of sample, new “predictors” come into fashion: things like Kaufman’s varves.
There remains a lot to discuss. But “splicing” in MBH isn’t on the list.
Richard, looks like Mann will have to add you to his ‘to be sued’ list 😉