Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
In a recent interchange over at Joanne Nova’s always interesting blog, I’d said that the slow changes in the sun have little effect on temperature. Someone asked me, well, what about the cold temperatures during the Maunder and Dalton sunspot minima? And I thought … hey, what about them? I realized that like everyone else, up until now I’ve just accepted the idea of cold temperatures being a result of the solar minima as an article of faith … but I’d never actually looked at the data. And in any case, I thought, what temperature data would we have for the Maunder sunspot minimum, which lasted from 1645 to 1715? So … I went back to the original sources, which as always is a very interesting ride, and I learned a lot.
It turns out that this strong association of sunspot minima and temperature is a fairly recent development. Modern interest in the Maunder sunspot minimum was sparked by John Eddy’s 1976 publication of a paper in Science entitled “The Maunder Minimum”. In that paper, Eddy briefly discusses the question of the relationship between the Maunder sunspot minimum and the global temperature, viz:
The coincidence of Maunder’s “prolonged solar minimum” with the coldest excursion of the “Little Ice Age” has been noted by many who have looked at the possible relations between the sun and terrestrial climate (73). A lasting tree-ring anomaly which spans the same period has been cited as evidence of a concurrent drought in the American Southwest (68, 74). There is also a nearly 1 : 1 agreement in sense and time between major excursions in world temperature (as best they are known) and the earlier excursions of the envelope of solar behavior in the record of 14C, particularly when a 14C lag time is allowed for: the Sporer Minimum of the 16th century is coincident with the other severe temperature dip of the Little Ice Age, and the Grand Maximum coincides with the “medieval Climatic Optimum” of the 11th through 13th centuries (75, 76). These coincidences suggest a possible relationship between the overall envelope of the curve of solar activity and terrestrial climate in which the 11-year solar cycle may be effectively filtered out or simply unrelated to the problem. The mechanism of this solar effect on climate may be the simple one of ponderous long-term changes of small amount in the total radiative output of the sun, or solar constant. These long-term drifts in solar radiation may modulate the envelope of the solar cycle through the solar dynamo to produce the observed long-term trends in solar activity. The continuity, or phase, of the 11-year cycle would be independent of this slow, radiative change, but the amplitude could be controlled by it. According to this interpretation, the cyclic coming and going of sunspots would have little effect on the output of solar radiation, or presumably on weather, but the long-term envelope of sunspot activity carries the indelible signature of slow changes in solar radiation which surely affect our climate (77). [see paper for references]
Now, I have to confess, that all struck me as very weak, with more “suggest” and “maybe” and “could” than I prefer in my science. So I thought I’d look to see where he was getting the temperature data to support his claims. It turns out that he was basing his opinion of the temperature during the Maunder minimum on a climate index from H. H. Lamb, viz:
The Little Ice Age lasted roughly from 1430 to 1850 … if we take H. H. Lamb’s index of Paris London Winter Severity as a global indicator.
After some searching, I found the noted climatologist H. H. Lamb’s England winter severity index in his 1965 paper The Early Medieval Warm Epoch And Its Sequel. He doesn’t give the values for his index, but I digitized his graph. Here are Lamb’s results, showing the winter severity in England. Lower values mean more severe winters.
So let me pose you a small puzzle. Knowing that Eddy is basing his claims about a cold Maunder minimum on Lamb’s winter severity index … where in Lamb’s winter severity index would you say that we would find the Maunder and Dalton minima? …
Figure 1. H.H. Lamb’s index of winter severity in England.
As you can see, there is a reasonable variety in the severity of the winters in England. However, it is not immediately apparent just where in there we might find the Maunder and Dalton minima, although there are several clear possibilities. So to move the discussion along, let me reveal where they are:
Figure 2. As in Figure 1, but with the dates of the Maunder and Dalton minima added.
As we might expect, the Maunder minimum is the coldest part of the record. The Dalton minimum is also cold, but not as cold as the Maunder minimum, again as we’d expect. Both of them have warmer periods both before and after the minima, illustrating the effect of the sun on the … on the … hang on … hmmm, that doesn’t look right … let me check my figures …
…
…
…
… uh-oh
…
…
Well, imagine that. I forgot to divide by the square root of minus one, so I got the dates kinda mixed up, and I put both the Maunder and the Dalton 220 years early … here are the actual dates of the solar minima shown in Lamb’s winter severity index.
Figure 3. H.H. Lamb’s England winter severity index, 1100-1950, overlaid with the actual dates of the four solar minima ascribed to that period. Values are decadal averages 1100-1110,1110-1120, etc., and are centered on the decade.
As you can see …
• The cooling during the Wolf minimum is indistinguishable from the two immediately previous episodes of cooling, none of which get much below the overall average.
• The temperature during the Sporer minimum is warmer than the temperature before and after the minimum.
• The coldest and second coldest decades in the record were not associated with solar minima.
• The fastest cooling in the record, from the 1425 decade to the 1435 decade, also was not associated with a solar minimum.
• Contrary to what we’d expect, the Maunder minimum warmed from start to finish.
• The Dalton minimum is unremarkable in any manner other than being warmer than the decade before the start and the decade after the end of the minimum. Oh, and like the Maunder, it also warmed steadily over the period of the minimum.
Urk … that’s what Eddy based his claims on. Not impressed.
Let me digress with a bit of history. I began this solar expedition over a decade ago thinking, along with many others, that as they say, “It’s the sun, stupid!”. I, and many other people, took it as an unquestioned and unexamined “fact” that the small variations of the sun, both the 11-year cycles and the solar minima, had a discernible effect on the temperature. As a result, I spent endless hours investigating things like the barycentric movement of the sun. I went so far as to write a spreadsheet to calculate the barycentric movement for any period of history, and compared those results to the temperatures.
But the more I looked, the less I found. So I started looking at the various papers claiming that the 11-year cycle was visible in various climate datasets … still nothing. To date, I’ve written up and posted the results of my search for the 11-year cycle in global sea levels, the Central England Temperature record, sea surface temperatures, tropospheric temperatures, global surface temperatures, rainfall amounts, the Armagh Observatory temperatures, the Armagh Observatory daily temperature ranges, river flows, individual tidal stations, solar wind, the 10Beryllium ice core data, and some others I’ve forgotten … nothing.
Not one of them shows any significant 11-year cycle.
And now, for the first time I’m looking at temperature effects of the solar minima … and I’m in the same boat. The more I look, the less I find.
However, we do have some actual observational evidence for the time period of the most recent of the minima, the Dalton minimum, because the Berkeley Earth temperature record goes back to 1750. And while the record is fragmentary and based on a small number of stations, it’s the best we have, and it is likely quite good for comparison of nearby decades. In any case, here are those results:
Figure 4. The Berkeley Earth land temperature anomaly data, along with the Dalton minimum.
Once again, the data absolutely doesn’t support the idea of the sun ruling the temperature. IF the sun indeed caused the variations during the Dalton minimum, it first made the temperature rise, then fall, then rise again to where it started … sorry, but that doesn’t look anything like what we’d expect. For example, if the low spot around 1815 is caused by low solar input, then why does the temperature start rising then, and rise steadily until the end of the Dalton minimum, while the solar input is not rising at all?
So once again, I can’t find evidence to support the theory. As a result, I will throw the question open to the adherents of the theory … what, in your estimation, is the one best piece of temperature evidence that shows that the solar minima cause cold spells?
Now, a few caveats. First, I want to enlist your knowledge and wisdom in the search, so please just give me your one best shot. I’m not interested in someone dumping the results of a google search for “Maunder” on my desk. I want to know what YOU think is the very best evidence that solar minima cause global cooling.
Next, don’t bother saying “the Little Ice Age is the best evidence”. Yes, the Maunder occurred during the Little Ice Age (LIA). But the Lamb index says that the temperature warmed from the start of the Maunder until the end. Neither the Maunder’s location, which was quite late in the LIA, nor the warming Lamb shows from the start to the end of the Maunder, support the idea that the sun caused the LIA cooling.
Next, please don’t fall into the trap of considering climate model results as data. The problem, as I have shown in a number of posts, is that the global temperature outputs of the modern crop of climate models are nothing but linear transforms of their inputs. And since the models include solar variations among their inputs, those solar variations will indeed appear in the model outputs. If you think that is evidence for solar forcing of temperature … well, this is not the thread for you. So no climate model results, please.
So … what do you think is the one very best piece of evidence that the solar minima actually do affect the temperature, the evidence that you’d stand behind and defend?
My regards to you all,
w.
[UPDATE] In the comments, someone said that the Central England Temperature record shows the cooling effects of the solar minima … I’m not finding it:


As you can see, there is very little support for the “solar minima cause cool temperatures” hypothesis in the CET. Just as in the Lamb winter severity data and the Berkeley Earth data, during both the Dalton and Maunder minima we see the temperature WARMING for the last part of the solar minimum. IF the cause is in fact a solar slump … then why would the earth warm up while the sun is still slumping? And in particular, in the CET the Dalton minimum ends up quite a bit warmer than it started … how on earth does this support the “solar slump” claim, that at the end of the Dalton minimum it’s warmer than at the start?
The Usual Request: I know this almost never happens, but if you disagree with something that I or someone else has said, please have the common courtesy to QUOTE THEIR EXACT WORDS that you disagree with. This prevents much confusion and misunderstanding.
Data: Eddy’s paper, The Maunder Minimum
Lamb’s paper, The Early Medieval Warm Epoch And Its Sequel
Berkeley Earth, land temperature anomalies
climatereason says:
June 28, 2014 at 12:51 pm
The more proxy data, the better. Tree rings for temperature is hardly the be all & end all. Dendro is better for precipitation, IMO, which isn’t as easily translated into T as Mann et al would like everyone to believe.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 12:58 pm
IMO before dismissing your colleagues’ work, it would be respectful to read it.
Their work [although old] was known to me and I have read it and most of the literature cited. None is convincing, or even suggestive.
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 1:01 pm
Did you attend the 2011 workshop, “The Effects of Solar Variability on Earth’s Climate”, which occasioned the NASA article? The 2012 report is freely downloadable:
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13519
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=13519&page=R1
It’s pretty up to date.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 1:20 pm
Did you attend the 2011 workshop, “The Effects of Solar Variability on Earth’s Climate”, which occasioned the NASA article?
No, not that particular one, but half a dozen similar ones the past several years.
Now, I wonder why you did not draw attention to the Figure on page 10:
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=13519&page=10
or the paper by Foukal [page 14] which concludes:
“There is no evidence for the large (~0.3%) increase in TSI during the early 20th century reported in a recent, widely quoted, study of 10Be. That level of increase in TSI would require the complete disappearance of the quiet network and internetwork going back in time to 1900. This requirement contradicts the presence of a fully developed network on Ca K spectroheliograms available since the 1890s. Foukal asserts that this model, which also predicts strong TSI driving of climate throughout the holocene, cannot be correct”
and many others of a similar tone.
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 1:36 pm
I was tempted to mention it because of his funny name, as in “do you know Foukal?”, but it doesn’t bear on Willis’ request for studies finding a c. 11 year signal in climate data.
IMO all here would benefit from your analysis of the many studies which have found such a solar signal in T & precipitation observations, associated with atmospheric & oceanic parameters.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 2:08 pm
IMO all here would benefit from your analysis of the many studies which have found such a solar signal
That would be a massive undertaking, and unthankful, because regardless of my findings the believers of either stripe are not going to pay any attention and are not going to accept anything that is contrary to their own views.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 1:20 pm
Did you attend the 2011 workshop, “The Effects of Solar Variability on Earth’s Climate”, which occasioned the NASA article?
You might be interested in the report from another NASA workshop [in 1977] that I participated in [and helped to edit]: http://www.leif.org/EOS/Sun-Weather-Climate.pdf
It is illuminating to compare then and now. Not much progress IMHO.
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 2:14 pm
I understand that looking at all of them would be a major project. But analyzing just the 2008 paper which you found unconvincing would be helpful, as it references similar earlier work:
The response in the Pacific to the sun’s decadal peaks and contrasts to cold events in the Southern Oscillation
Harry van Loon, Gerald A. Meehl
http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/ccr/publications/vanloon_meehl_2008.pdf
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 2:23 pm
Fascinating indeed how little real climatology has progressed since the important climate year of 1977. “Climate science” was hijacked by the Carbon Mafia (Carbonari?) & computer modeling, to the great detriment of gathering & analyzing real observational data. As you know, Freeman Dyson has expressed a similar sentiment.
Willis might want to read the pages in your link on the 11 & 22 year cycle correlations with atmospheric pressure, temperature, precipitation & droughts.
Thanks!
Abstract of v. Loon & Meehl (2008) linked above:
Van Loon et al. [2007. Coupled air–sea response to solar forcing in the Pacific region during northern winter. Journal of Geophysical Research 112, D02108, doi:10.1029/2006JD007378] showed that the Pacific Ocean in northern winter is sensitive to the influence of the sun in its decadal peaks. We extend this study by three solar peaks to a total of 14, examine the response in the stratosphere, and contrast the response to solar forcing to that of cold events (CEs) in the Southern Oscillation. The addition of three solar peak years confirms the earlier results. That is, in solar peak years the sea level pressure (SLP) is, on average, above normal in the Gulf of Alaska and south of the equator, stronger southeast trades blow across the Pacific equator and cause increased upwelling and thus anomalously lower sea surface temperatures (SSTs).
Since the effect on the Pacific climate system of solar forcing resembles CEs in the Southern Oscillation, we compare the two and note that, even though their patterns appear similar in some ways, they are particularly different in the stratosphere and are thus due to separate processes. That is, in July–August (JA) of the year leading into January–February (JF) of the solar peak years, the Walker cell expands in the Pacific troposphere, and the stratospheric wind anomalies are westerly below 25 hPa and easterly above, whereas this signal in the stratosphere is absent in CEs. Thus the large-scale east–west tropical atmospheric (Walker) circulation is enhanced, though not to the extent that it is in CEs in the Southern Oscillation, and the solar influence thus appears as a strengthening of the climatological mean regional precipitation maxima in the tropical Pacific.
Additionally, CEs have a 1-year evolution, while the response to solar peaks extends across 3 years such that the signal in the Pacific SLP of the solar peaks is similar but weaker in the year leading into the peak and in the year after the peak. The concurrent negative SST anomalies develop during the year before the solar peak, and after the peak the anomalies are still present but are waning. In the stratosphere in solar peaks, the equatorial quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) is amplified when it is in its westerly phase in the lower stratosphere and easterly phase above; and the QBO is suppressed when in its easterly phase below–westerly phase above. Such an association is not evident in CEs.
Dr. S.
It is illuminating to compare then and now. Not much progress IMHO.
……
Including pages 19-23 ?
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 2:46 pm
The response in the Pacific to the sun’s decadal peaks and contrasts to cold events in the Southern Oscillation Harry van Loon, Gerald A. Meehl
Is typical for it showing average response as maps. That makes it difficult to assess repeatability and error bars. Useless IMHO.
vukcevic says:
June 28, 2014 at 3:12 pm
“It is illuminating to compare then and now. Not much progress IMHO.”
including pages 19-23 ?
especially those pages.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 2:46 pm
I took a look at your study by Gerald Meehl. He is comparing sunspot cycles to computer model results.
Now, I know that your reading is kinda sketchy, but was there some part of the following that eluded your keen eye?
So after all of your bleating and whining about Meehl, and why didn’t Willis look at Meehl, you finally get around to post the Meehl study, and they compare sunspots to nothing but the reanalysis output of a computer climate model.
Let me say it real loud so you get it and can shut up about Meehl forever:
CLIMATE MODELS WHICH INCLUDE SOLAR DATA IN THEIR INPUT, LIKE REANALYSIS MODELS, WILL SHOW A SOLAR EFFECT IN THE OUTPUT! AND YES, MEEHL FINDS A SOLAR EFFECT IN THE OUTPUTS OF JUST SUCH A MODEL … SO WHAT!
Climate model outputs are linear transforms of the inputs, so finding a solar signal in climate model outputs is meaningless. As I said above, if you seriously think that the climate model results in the Meehl study are evidence of solar forcing, you’re dumber than you look.
Unfortunately, given the three monumentally crappy pieces of “evidence” you’ve put forwards as the best support for your theory, not just bad but ridiculously and laughably bad, I’m starting to think that that is entirely possible …
w.
PS—His grasp of statistics is also not up to the task, but that’s another issue. Not an unimportant issue, large enough to sink the whole study by itself … but since he’s just studying Modelworld and not the real world, it’s just another nail in the coffin …
Willis Eschenbach says:
June 28, 2014 at 4:46 pm
Are you intentionally being obtuse? I’ve repeatedly said to ignore the modeling in Meehl’s papers & look at their supporting studies which demonstrate the decadal & bidecadal climate phenomena from observations.
Meehl 2008 is chock full of the studies all of which a real scientist would have examined before pronouncing no 11 year cycle, instead of making a baseless assertion, then challenging others to do his or her work for him or her.
How about this for a one stop shopping place to start your inquiry? It has already been posted but no surprise so far ignored by you. Read the relevant studies cited in this recent workshop, then get back to us. Or start with the 1977 paper linked here by Dr. Svalgaard, which likewise discusses the evidence for 11 year signals in climate data available then. But either way, conducting a thorough literature survey before asserting your view would have been the standard scientific method to employ.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13519
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=13519&page=R1
http://www.leif.org/EOS/Sun-Weather-Climate.pdf
Thanks.
lsvalgaard says:
June 27, 2014 at 9:14 pm
————————————
“As the variation of the energy of surface UV is less than a fifth of the energy of the variation of TSI, UV does not play a major role.”
Dr. S,
can I get a confirmation on this. Are you claiming that surface incident UV has changed less than 0.3 w/m2 in the last 30 years?
With regard to the UV/selective surface issue, I am not claiming this is definitely a proven mechanism for solar influence on climate, just that it may possibly be one of Jack Eddy’s “many plugs”.
A. The oceans are not a “near blackbody”, they are a “selective surface”
B. Spectral variance effects energy accumulation in semi transparent selective surfaces
C. Shorter wavelengths penetrate below the diurnal overturning layer of the oceans
D. It is the shorter wavelengths that vary most over and between solar cycles
E. Shorter wavelengths effect ocean biological turbidity and depth of absorption
F. UV variance effects ozone and thereby UV opacity of the atmosphere.
G. We are only looking for 0.8C in 150 years.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:11 pm
Or start with the 1977 paper linked here by Dr. Svalgaard, which likewise discusses the evidence for 11 year signals in climate data available then.
The problem is that ALL the evidence we thought we had back then has turned out to be spurious and did not survive the passage of time.
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:26 pm
I assume you refer to evidence for c. 11 & 22 year signals in the data. Or other possibly solar-related patterns?
IMO Lamb’s 1965 CET & reconstructed data supporting a Medieval Warm Period & Little Ice Age are still good, regardless of cause, ie whether SSN-associated, as per Eddy 1976, or not.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:36 pm
I assume you refer to evidence for c. 11 & 22 year signals in the data. Or other possibly solar-related patterns?
To avoid misunderstandings, I’ll restate what I said: “The problem is that ALL the evidence we thought we had back then and attributed to a solar cause has turned out to be either spurious or not attributable with any confidence to the sun and thus did not survive the passage of time.”
I realize that my current views on this may be colored by the failure of our efforts back then to pan out.
I chose one of the studies cited in your link, ie King (1975), to see if it indeed has been found spurious with the passage of time. Based upon the more recent work citing King, it appears not to have survived the passage of time, so ALL seems a bit of an overstatement, based upon a sample of one paper, which is all falsification requires.
From the journal “Advances in Space Research”, solar correlation with rainfall was found for two of three Brazilian sites (as in King, 1975, for the Hale cycle):
http://mtc-m16.sid.inpe.br/col/sid.inpe.br/marciana/2004/12.08.11.30/doc/sdarticle.pdf
Bidecadal cycles in liquid precipitations in Brazil
A.A. Gusev a,b, I.M. Martin c, M.G.S. Mello c, V. Pankov b, G. Pugacheva c,d,*,
N.G. Schuch a, W.N. Spjeldvik e
a National Institute for Space Research, INPE, Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil
b Space Research Institute of Russian Academy Science, Moscow, Russia
c Institute of Physics, University of Campinas, 13083-970 Campinas, SP, Brazil
d Southern Regional Space Research Center/INPE, Santa Maria, Brazil
e Weber State University, Department of Physics, Ogden, USA
Received 1 November 2002; received in revised form 15 February 2003; accepted 15 March 2003
Abstract
Data on liquid precipitation in Brazil for three meteorological stations in Pelotas, Campinas, and Fortaleza from 1849 up to 2000
were considered. The stations span practically the entire latitude range of Brazil. Periodic analysis of the annual rainfall level in
Pelotas and in Fortaleza shows a pronounced bidecadal periodicity that extended for about 100–150 years with great variation
amplitude reaching of about 90%. Considering a possibility of solar activity signature in this variation we need to assume the
existence of a phase change in correlation between rainfall level and solar activity. In this case a high correlation/anti-correlation
coefficients with the 22-year solar cycle can be obtained: 0.8 for Fortaleza and 0.6–0.8 for Pelotas. No correlation was found for
Campinas. Correlation with 24-year periodicity independent on solar cycle possibly connected with ocean–atmospheric coupling is
0.5 in Fortaleza for a total period of 151 years. Short term correlation of rainfall level with crossing a sector boundary of interplanetary
magnetic field by Earth during 50 years of observations was also found. The results appear to have bearing both as a
scientific instrument for progress in our understanding of sun–weather connections and, if established, possibilities for long term
practical forecasting in the South American region and elsewhere.
2004 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Brazil precipitation; Solar activity cycle; Bidecadal cycles in climate
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:46 pm
I appreciate your efforts both then (when we were both at LSJU, a mere junior university) & now.
But as above, it appears that not all of the findings then have since been shown spurious.
Konrad. says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:17 pm
can I get a confirmation on this. Are you claiming that surface incident UV has changed less than 0.3 w/m2 in the last 30 years?
The total change over a cycle of UV at the surface is of the other of 15% of the change of TSI. This has been known for a long time, see e.g. http://www.leif.org/EOS/Science-1989-LEAN-197-200.pdf
The MgII-index I referred you shows that there has been long-term trend in UV.
milodonharlani says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:50 pm
But as above, it appears that not all of the findings then have since been shown spurious.
Because I played an important part of the workshop and the research at the time [as I recall, I was one of the most cited authors [with Wilcox and Roberts] in the report] I have followed this topic ever since and I don’t know of any of those studies that has stood the test of time. There are, of course, lots of claims of similar things as there has always been. Ken Schatten counts more than 2000 papers claiming sun-weather-climate relations. None of them compelling. If there were even ONE that was compelling and conclusive we would not be having this discussion.
Willis Eschenbach says:
June 28, 2014 at 4:46 pm
Before you can pound nails in a coffin, you first must build a coffin. That you have not done.
As so many have observed so often, your MO is not scientific SOP.
Build your coffin for short term solar influences first by surveying at the very least all the leading recent literature (citing previous work) finding a signal for a ten to twelve or 22-year cycle and attacking same on whatever bases you can. This essential first step you have not accomplished.
Once you have conducted such a search, then you can further analyze each additional new study that comes out contrary to your position and, if you can find fault with them as well, those can be additional nails in the coffin you should have carefully built previously.
Sorry, but that’s how it’s done in the real world of science. And with good reason. I can’t agree more strongly with Pamela’s excellent summary of scientific paper-writing on this important point.
sturgishooper says:
June 28, 2014 at 6:03 pm
Hey, you are still here. How about our Socratic Method inquiry? What is your response, if any?
Konrad. says:
June 28, 2014 at 5:17 pm
The MgII-index I referred you shows that there has not been a long-term trend in UV.
lsvalgaard says:
June 28, 2014 at 6:00 pm
I’m sure that you have followed subsequent developments closely.
But IMO it appears prima facie that Gusev, et al (2004) pretty conclusively confirms King (1975) regarding Brazilian rainfall & the 22 year Hale cycle.
I haven’t checked out other papers cited in your excellent link.