The specialized meaning of words in the 'Antarctic ice shelf collapse' and other climate alarm stories

DistortionGuest essay by Dr. Tom Sheahen

Q. On TV I saw that the ice in Antarctica is collapsing, and that will raise sea level and inundate cities. Others reports say this will take thousands of years. How serious is the problem?

What you are witnessing here is a result of confusion between the public perception of the ordinary meaning of words, and the very special definitions used in scientific discourse.

Geologists deal with changes in the earth that occur over epochs of millions of years. Anything that happens in less than 10,000 years is “sudden,” and something happening in only 1,000 years is “instantaneous.” To geologists, the word “collapse” is appropriate for a 10,000 year process.

A hot-topic in the media these days has to do with the West Antarctic Ice Shelf (WAIS), a region comprising about 8% of the ice covering Antarctica. Within that region, there are two glaciers that are sliding down to the sea at a steady pace, as glaciers always do. They comprise about 10% of the WAIS, less than 1% of Antarctic ice. This descent has been in progress for several thousand years, and is neither new nor man-caused. It will go on for a few thousand more, after which they’ll be gone. In the parlance of geology, those two glaciers are collapsing.

If that doesn’t sound to you like your usual meaning of the word “collapse,” you’re absolutely right. It’s a specialized geological term.

Unfortunately, the major media overlook the distinction of meanings, and then make the further generalization from two specific glaciers to the entire WAIS, and moreover to Antarctica in general. Scientists who point out the small actual glacier size (and volume of ice) are brushed aside in the rush to get a headline or a flamboyant sound byte that will keep the viewers tuned in. Words like unavoidable collapse carry a sense of foreboding.

This isn’t just a problem from geology. Confusion over the meaning of words used in science crops up frequently. Laws of physics (e.g., conservation of energy) are said to be true in general, meaning “always true.” But if a physicist says “that is generally true,” a non-scientist hears “that is usually true” – meaning “most of the time, but not always.” Neither is aware of the other’s interpretation.

The word “average” is easily misunderstood. For any set of data, about any topic, you can construct an average. But it may be irrelevant – a good example being the “average temperature of the Earth.” Regional and seasonal variations are so great that a single average number is meaningless. And yet people have such familiarity with the word “average” – batting averages, school grade averages, etc. — that it’s commonplace to believe that any statistic called an “average” represents something real.

Climate change is another prime example. In the ordinary sense of the term, everyone realizes that the climate changes, and there is no argument about it. However, there is a very special limited definition given to the term by the U.N. around 1990: “Climate Change” refers only to changes caused by mankind’s emissions of CO2. Under that restricted definition, anyone who doesn’t think that CO2 is the cause of the changes we’re experiencing is labeled a “denier” of Climate Change. The frequently-recited figure of “97% consensus” is too small for the percentage of scientists who recognize climate change in the ordinary sense of the term; it’s much closer to 100%. But in the specialized U.N. sense (about CO2 driving the change), there is widespread disagreement based on reliable opposing scientific data.

In the absence of quotation marks, italics or capitals, ordinary citizens have no idea that the controversy is rooted in radically different meanings of the same words.

Elected officials striving to be responsive to their constituents’ concerns are often pressured by advocacy groups who have latched onto an incorrect interpretation of words. Scientists are sometimes guilty of riding a bandwagon that formed when the public misunderstood and exaggerated their original meaning; perhaps it’s convenient, prestigious and financially advantageous to let that confusion continue uncorrected. The effect snowballs and leads to new laws being passed, with expensive new regulations. Years later, with nothing accomplished, people ask “Oh, is that what you really meant?” Then the blame game begins, after much taxpayer money went down the drain unnecessarily.

Even words like “increase” and “decrease” get distorted. When a budget (national, state or local) goes up, you might think that’s an increase. But if the amount is less than the rate of inflation, those wanting the money call it a decrease, a budget cut. The problem is particularly troublesome at election time, when politicians hurl accusations at their opponents. Without precise definitions, clarity is very elusive.

Unfortunately, attending to precise definitions takes time and seems boring. The media don’t want to run the risk of being boring, and so they take shortcuts and oversimplify. Consequently, a lot of people are misled by statements that use scientific words incorrectly.

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Agnostic
May 21, 2014 11:31 pm

I thought this was an exceptionally good post. It goes into the top draw of my “climate” files.

Admad
May 22, 2014 12:47 am

Lucid, balanced… a breath of fresh air and sanity. As Agnostic suggests, one to keep. Thank you.

Peter
May 22, 2014 12:53 am

The AVERAGE human has one breast and one testicle.

tty
May 22, 2014 2:04 am

A minor quibble: WAIS stands for “West Antarctic Ice Sheet” not “West Antarctic Ice Shelf“. Melting/collapse of an ice shelf has no effect on sea-level since it is already floatin.

tty
May 22, 2014 2:07 am

Peter says:
“The AVERAGE human has one breast and one testicle.”
Incorrect, the average human has two breasts and one testicle (and one ovary).

urederra
May 22, 2014 3:20 am

One of my pet peeves is the use of the term ozone “hole”.
webster.com defines ozone hole as “an area of the ozone layer (as near the south pole) that is seasonally depleted of ozone” http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ozone%20hole
What people understand by the term ozone hole is an area of the ozone layer with no ozone on it. Just like a hole in your pants means that there is a portion of your pants lacks of fabric.
For a scientist, however, a ozone hole is an area of the ozone layer with less than 220 dobson units. “A baseline value of 220 DU is chosen as the starting point for an ozone hole since total ozone values of less than 220 Dobson units were not found in the historic observations over Antarctica prior to 1979. Also, from direct measurements over Antarctica, a column ozone level of less than 220 Dobson units is a result of the ozone loss from chlorine and bromine compounds” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobson_unit
So, an area of the ozone layer with 300 dobson units is a normal ozone layer, but a layer with 210 dobson units is a ozone hole.
And the media is not to blame for this misunderstanding, it is the scientists.

May 22, 2014 3:38 am

peter
rofl

Bruce Cobb
May 22, 2014 3:59 am

Chris says:
May 21, 2014 at 7:31 pm
The “steady” pace has doubled from the 80 billion tons/year in the 2005-2010 time period to 160 billion tons/year during the latest measurements. I wouldn’t call that a steady pace, I’d call it a rapidly increasing pace.
Ooooh….sounds scary. Until you realize there are some 2.2 million billion tons of ice in the WAIS. Even at this slightly increased rate, it would still take some 14,000 years to completely melt. Also, there is no reason to think that the rate of melt will continue to increase. Indeed, it is just as likely to decrease.

Hoser
May 22, 2014 5:18 am

You got me wondering what is the average temperature of every atom on/in the Earth? A total WAG: 2500 K? Maybe it’s useful when considering whether the Earth will solidify before it is swallowed up (or not) in the red giant phase of the Sun. Nice to know we probably will still have a magnetic field as the Sun’s photosphere approaches our orbit.
http://www.space.com/3373-earth-moon-destined-disintegrate.html

LT
May 22, 2014 5:30 am

The problem with their summary is when they throw in the little tid bit about warm water caused by global warming flowing under the ice shelf the COULD speed the process up. That it is where the usual mindless conjecture is allowed to be appended onto any climate related research article. It is basically unethical to attempt to scare people without qualifying the conjecture with the facts that the process started eons ago and has nothing to do with the actions of humanity.

Tom Harley
May 22, 2014 5:31 am

I am still waiting for the coastal real estate collapse … waiting …. come on now, when are you AGW believers going to head for Siberian Real Estate. There should be some great real estate opportunities over there by now. Oh, Al, and the weather to your liking!

stpaulchuck
May 22, 2014 5:34 am

It’s too bad there’s pretty much no “news” outlets left to the general public, but only Progressive (sic) noise machines attended to by the acolytes graduated as Journalism Majors.

May 22, 2014 8:00 am

Satellites that can read sea level changes say all is normal-nothing to worry about

DesertYote
May 22, 2014 11:33 am

The misunderstanding of terminology is deliberate. Lefties are masters at the use of deceptive language to propagandize their goals. They always sound like they are trying to do just the opposite of what the are actually doing. That is why any lefty proposal to improve the economy, collapses it, any legislation to fight crime, encourages it, any project to protect children puts them in danger, and any program of education results in brain washed zombies.

TBraunlich
May 22, 2014 11:51 am

I am a journalist and we are taught in school about this particular problem with terminology and to avoid it by always providing the correct context for science stories. Therefore, journalists who fail to do this because they will get a more sensational story that way are NOT doing proper journalism. It is inexcusable and can only be explained by bias or incompetence.

Edohiguma
May 22, 2014 12:28 pm

In the planet’s lifespan it’s all sudden. Humans are basically a fart that just escaped.
Putting it into perspective for the species called homo sapiens, however… ~20,000 years ago humans walked into Japan from the Asian mainland because the sea level was low enough to allow it.
I’ll be starting to get worried about such changes when I get to live 10,000 years. Aka never.

george e. smith
May 22, 2014 1:02 pm

“””””…..Gary in Erko says:
May 21, 2014 at 7:51 pm
e. smith
Thanks for your comments but I disagree with your idea of median as it applies to a day of temperatures. Median is the middle value of a quantity of samples. ……”””””
Well “median” is a term from statistical mathematics. It has nothing whatsoever to do with climate or weather, or even physics.
There is NO “median” anything, anywhere in the universe, and there most certainly isn’t any “median” earth temperature.
It is the central element of a purely mathematical ordered data set of known numbers. Those numbers have no meaning whatsoever.
The data set itself may in fact have NO median value. Unless the number of elements in the set, is ODD, there can be NO central element in the ordered set, so there is no median..
You can’t simply invent a number midway between the two elements on each side of the middle of the ordered set. Even, if both of those elements have equal value, there is NO element in the middle of the even set, and you can’t just invent one, so there is no median.

u.k.(us)
May 22, 2014 1:56 pm

So, glacier flows are now another “settled” science.
Let’s move on.
Sarc/

Eamon Butler
May 22, 2014 4:05 pm

I don’t suppose that gravity plays any part in the ”collapse” of a few Kilotons of ice clinging on to the edge of a downward slope to dip into the sea?
Peter:
”The AVERAGE human has one breast and one testicle.”
I think I know her.

Beta Blocker
May 22, 2014 6:14 pm

There was an interview concerning the West Antarctic Ice Sheet on NPR last week with Ian Joughin, a glaciologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Joughin used the specialized geological terms cited by Dr. Tom Sheahen at the start of this post in responding to NPR’s questions and in describing the mechanics of the how ice sheet moves, and he clearly spun his story from an alarmist perspective.
Anyone listening to this NPR interview could not give any other interpretation to what was said by this glaciologist but that the retreat of the ice sheet is unprecedented, it is man-caused, and it is unstoppable.