About that graph…

clip_image001This one:

The title “Battle of the Graphs” certainly lives on, even though it is approaching a decade in age, as there has been a lot of off-topic contention on this WUWT thread as well as a free-for-all bashing over at the “Stoat” a.k.a. William Connolley (who “takes science by the throat”, implying he is some sort of “tough guy”) saying that this graph that appeared in a Telegraph article was erroneous and created by Christopher Monckton.

Based on the simplest available evidence, I was ready to conclude, as were many, that indeed Monckton had created the graph, that it was in error, and that he had refused to admit to any of this.  I was ready to censure him myself, just as the over-the-top Stoaters wanted to do, probably so Connolley could direct a new denigrating Wikipedia entry as he is known to do (he’s not allowed to edit Wikipedia pages of living persons anymore, so he directs by proxy). Now, after further investigation I can tell you I was wrong, and so is Connolley.

If Monckton was wrong I certainly would’ve had no trouble pointing this out just as the Stoaters were doing, but I have one advantage that neither Monckton nor the Stoaters have: I have actually worked at a newspaper and I have submitted articles as a guest author to newspapers. So, I am familiar with the artwork process. Further, I have also published a number of articles from Monckton myself here and I am quite familiar with his style of producing graphs.

Thus, I noticed something about the Telegraph article that no one else seemed to.

WUWT commenter Kevin O’Neill, who also frequents Connolley’s website pointed out in this comment the charges against Monckton.

First let’s have a look at the article itself. The URL for it is:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1533290/Climate-chaos-Dont-believe-it.html

A screencap of the heading portion is shown below with the highlight done by me in yellow.

Telegraph_monckton_2006

Unfortunately the link under the yellow highlight no longer works and so for some it is impossible to check Monckton’s references and calculations that were included with the essay. We’ll get back to that in a moment, please read on.

Here is how the article presented the graph that is in contention, I have screen captured a portion of the original Telegraph article:

Telegraph_monckton_2006_graph

Several things immediately struck me as being out of place when I first saw the graph after reading about the contention surrounding it, here is a list.

  • The style (colors, font, etc) is not anything like I’ve ever seen from Monckton in all the graphs he has submitted to WUWT.
  • The horizontal lines on the bottom portion of the graph are obviously spaced incorrectly (the 20th century average line looks like it is incorrect on left axis) along with other cues in the plot line indicating to me that they were hand-drawn yet I’ve never gotten the graph from Monckton that was hand-drawn. Everything he has ever sent me has always been from a computer program output, thus the idea of having improperly spaced lines and coordinates a hand drawn plot didn’t make sense to me.
  • My experience with newspapers told me that this was likely a graph that was prepared by the art department of the UK Telegraph. You see, all major newspapers and even some middle and minor ones have an art department. And, when they get some sort of illustration from a guest author, or data from a government report, they almost always redraw it to fit the style and format of the newspaper. Especially the colors and the fonts.

Just look at any major newspaper in the United States like USA Today when they get in data from say, the Labor Department, they produce their own graphs of that data. They can also make grievous mistakes with such data in the way it is presented such as this article from Charles Apple (who watches newspapers and the graphics and photos they produce) demonstrates:

110706UsaTodayWeatherSnapshot02[1]

Obviously, neither the editor nor the artist saw the sexual suggestion in the imagery. I don’t blame the NWS or the Red Cross who provided the data, I blame Doyle Rice and Julie Snider. Note the references at the bottom of the graphic.

Here, USA Today took data from the National Weather Service and the American Red Cross and turned it into what is obviously a ridiculous graphic. It got past the editor, and made it into the final publication.

I noted such references to internal artists, editors, and sources were missing from the UK Telegraph article as seen in the screen cap further above, and it is this omission that I believe led many people to conclude that Monckton produced that graphic.

If you examine other graphics from the UK Telegraph, you will find that they do have such references but they are also similarly designed and of a similar size with similar fonts and colors. For example, look at this graphic from 2005 that has been redrawn, but no mention given of an internal reference to The Telegraph art department:

Telegraph_GW_2005Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/4198339/Global-warming-will-bring-cooler-climate-for-UK.html

It is plainly obvious that is a graphic created by the newspaper and not by any scientific entity, otherwise it wouldn’t have the jagged shadow edges. So, the question surrounding the graph allegedly produced by Christopher Monckton is; did he included in the original list of references that he provided the Telegraph in that now missing link at the top of the original article? I’m happy to say I have found that original source file that Monckton provided to the Telegraph. It was lodged in the Wayback machine. I was able to find it simply by putting in the correct URL of the original Telegraph article as shown below:

https://web.archive.org/web/20090301000000*/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1533290/Climate-chaos-Dont-believe-it.htmlWayback_Monckton_telegraph

When you pull up the archive from 2009, the link appears for the PDF file of Monckton’s references but unfortunately it gives a 404 as seen below:

Wayback_Monckton_telegraph2

Oddly though if you click on  the LEFT MOST vertical lines  (circa 2007/2008) in the timeline above, the PDF will actually download, and that is what I did. For those of you that would doubt this you can go here and try it yourself:

Click to access warm-refs.pdf

And for posterity, here is a local link to the PDF of the References Monckton provided for the Telegraph article in 2006: warm-refs

If you open that PDF file you will notice a number of graphs and references including the graph from IPCC section 7 graph C. McIntyre speaks of its source here.

But no trace of the exact artwork combination as presented above appears in the Telegraph article is in Monckton’s reference PDF file, clearly indicating that the telegraph art department redrew that 1990 IPCC graph and the hockey stick graph, changing the top-bottom order. Below is page 6 from Monckton’s “warm-refs” PDF file, showing those graphs:

Monckton_Warm_refs_page6

While I was ready to condemn Monckton for producing a sloppy graph like many of these Stoaters, it is now abundantly clear to me that he did not draw it and the claims by these people are erroneous and simply mendacious.

Stoat/Connelley is simply flat wrong, and the website that cited Monckton’s graphic as an example of what not to do needs to clarify that it was the newspaper that made the errors, that the source graphs came from the IPCC, and that Monckton drew none of them.

All this breastbeating over something that can be simply researched as I have done is just a waste of everyone’s time.

Monckton prepared a rebuttal as well which I present below.

=================================================================

There comes a point …

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Those of us who have raised questions about the magnitude of Man’s influence on climate have become used to the expensively funded, often carefully co-ordinated campaigns of personal vilification organized by adherents of the Climatist Party Line. Occasionally we growl a little. More often we refuse to be distracted. We carry on.

The purpose of these relentless attacks on us is not only to do us down but also to frighten off third parties who might otherwise find the courage to speak out and express their own doubts about the Party Line.

But there comes a point when it is necessary to take action. I hope no one will disagree that that point is reached when allegations of lying or fabrication are made; when the allegations are unquestionably false; when they are persisted in despite requests to cease and desist; and when they are widely disseminated in a manner calculated baselessly to cause maximum reputational damage.

Recently a commenter at Jo Nova’s blog posted several comments to the effect that I had “faked” a graph. I quickly asked Jo to replace them with a note to say legal proceedings were in train. Enough, I had decided, was enough.

Here is the diagram I was supposed to have “faked”:

clip_image001

This surely blameless diagram appeared alongside an article I had written for the Sunday Telegraph on 5 November 2006, the first time I ever went public on the climate question. The article went live on the internet at midnight on a Saturday night. Two hours later the Telegraph’s website crashed, for 127,000 people had tried to access the article.

Now, it is not the custom of UK newspapers to ask their contributors to illustrate their articles. As usual, I was not consulted and offered no advice on the matter, and had no hand in their production and no foreknowledge that they were to be used. The graphs are not labeled as having been sourced from the IPCC (indeed, one of the graphs has the shadow of a hockey stick overlaid on it and marked as the “IPCC ‘hockey stick’”, making it blindingly obvious that it is not an official IPCC’s graph).

The Telegraph’s graphs are simple and, it seems to me, harmless schematics illustrating the difference between the representations of 1000 years’ global temperatures as they appeared in the IPCC’s 2001 (top) and 1990 (bottom) reports.

The graph from p. 202 of the IPCC’s 1990 report now looks like this:

clip_image003

With the article I supplied some background material for Telegraph readers on its website. In that material, the IPCC’s 1990 graph also appeared, mistakenly captioned as 1996 rather than 1990. The graph as I reproduced it looked like this:

clip_image005

What I had not realized until very recently was that for several years allegations had been circulated all over the place to the effect that I had fabricated the graphs that had appeared in the Sunday Telegraph article. Yet not one of those who had made these allegations had ever contacted me to verify the facts. And not one of them had said what was wrong with the Telegraph’s graphs anyway.

Perhaps the worst of the many allegations of dishonesty against me appeared on a “science education” website, where an entire section under the bold heading “Misuse of scientific images” was devoted to the Telegraph’s graphs.

The offending section contained the following untruths:

  • Ø that in that article I had “disputed the concept of climate change” (Not that old chestnut again! I had accepted the concept but queried its likely magnitude);
  • Ø that the Telegraph’s graphs were instances of “poor use of graphical displays” that “can confuse and obscure data” (No, they neatly showed the main point: in 1990 the medieval warm period and little ice age were shown clearly, but by 2001 both had gone, and a sharp uptick in the 20th century had been added);
  • Ø that I had “created the [1990] graph on the bottom using different calculations that did not take into account all of the variables that climate scientists used to create the top graph” (No, I had not created either graph or done any calculations for such a graph);
  • Ø that I had deployed “common techniques used to distort visual forms of data – manipulating axes, changing one of the variables in a comparison, changing calculations without full explanation – that can obscure a true comparison” (No, none of the above); and
  • Ø that the article had been published in the Daily Telegraph (No, the Sunday Telegraph, and that suggests the website had never seen the original article but had picked up the libel from somewhere else).

I only discovered that this spectacularly inaccurate and profoundly damaging infestation of allegations when the commenter at Jo Nova’s site who had accused me of “faking” the graph mentioned on his own blog that I had not objected to the libel as it appeared on the science-education website. I had not objected because I had not known about it. No one at that website had thought to check any of the facts with me, or, as far as one can tell, with anyone else.

In short order a letter before action was sent to the website, which promptly did the right thing and took out the entire section, though there are indications that attempts are being made in some quarters – unsuccessfully so far – to get them to put it back up again.

I gave the commenter at Jo Nova’s website who had accused me of “faking” the graphs several chances to retract and apologize. Instead, he and several others sneeringly doubled down by accusing me of “lying” when I had said the graphs at the Telegraph website had not purported to be, and had not been labeled as, IPCC graphs.

They also alleged that the graph in my background materials accompanying the Telegraph article was “not the same graph” as that from the IPCC’s 1990 report: in effect, that I had “faked” that one as well. Judge that for yourselves from the two monochrome versions of the graph above. There seem to me to be no material differences, and I think it would be hard for the defendants to convince a court that there were any.

So I am going to court. My lawyers say the libels are plain and indefensible. They comment additionally that no judge would regard the schematics in the Telegraph (whoever had drawn them) as significantly misrepresenting the difference between the 1990 and 2001 reports’ images of the past millennium’s global temperature anomalies. As far as they can see, there is not a lot wrong with the graphs in any event.

I have told this story not only because some commenters here have been unwise enough to repeat in threads here the allegations they have made elsewhere but also because I thought it might be time to reveal the steps we have to take on an almost weekly basis to try to stem the tide of false allegations directed at us.

Nor am I by any means the only victim. For years, this shadowy Propagandaamt has been tampering with Fred Singer’s Wikipedia page to allege that he believes in Martians.

Niklas Mörner, the sea-level expert, has had his page got at on the ground that he sometimes dowses for water or other underground treasure. My late father once did that for the Maltese Government, and found three lost Punic tombs and a fine marble head of Seneca from the first century AD. My drawing of it (in the day before digital cameras) is probably still to be found somewhere in the Museum of Classical Archaeology at Cambridge. But I never had the knack for dowsing myself.

A pressure-group founded and funded by Prince Charles is prone to intervene to try (unsuccessfully, the last time they tried it on me) to prevent the publication of skeptical scientific papers in British learned journals.

A team of paid hacks telephones the Chancellor and the Dean of the Faculty at every university at which skeptics are invited to speak. About half the time, they succeed in getting us disinvited.

Journal editors are sacked for printing papers by skeptics.

However much one might hope that scientific discourse can be conducted in an open atmosphere of sensible dialog, the truth is that on the climate it can’t, because the extremists won’t play fair. The Politburo are determined to keep the scare going for just a little longer, till they can get the Treaty of Paris safely signed by all nations in December 2015.

So I am going to court to defend myself and, in so doing against the constant barrage of falsehoods told in support of the Party Line. We went to court against Al Gore because his movie was poisonous political propaganda dressed up as science.

We won. Nothing else but a court case would have worked. It was only when the department of education in London were confronted with 80 pages of scientific testimony, and knew that that testimony would stand up in court against all their falsehoods and evasions, that they caved in and settled, paying $400,000 to the plaintiffs and undertaking to circulate 77 pages of corrective guidance to every school in England.

In the present case, the other side has blinked thrice. On the website of my defamer, there is a nervous little note that he will not give me his name and address unless I answer various impertinent questions of his. The court will have no patience with any nonsense of that sort.

And there are now various postings at the same blog, again rather nervous, saying that perhaps they could plead that I don’t have a reputation and they can accuse me of whatever they like.

They will be unwise to take that line. For if they say I have no reputation they have to be able to come up with evidence that any material detrimental to my reputation on which they may try to rely is true. And most of it is no more accurate than their accusations that I “faked” a graph that I had plainly not faked. If they waste the court’s time with point after point that has nothing to do with the case at hand, they will merely aggravate the damages they will have to pay.

Finally, the perp has been unwise enough to admit that at the time when he made his allegation of “fakery” he did not know whether I had “faked” the graph or not. In the courts, to make a damaging and untrue allegation not knowing whether or not it is true is as culpable as making it when one knows it is not true. And there is no defense once that admission has been made. It has been made.

There is a curious and touching notion among some skeptics that, since the truth will of course prevail in the end, we should persevere with the scientific argument but not take the defamers and the scamsters to court. The feeling is that using the courts somehow isn’t cricket.

Sometimes, though, it’s necessary to play hardball. Being Valiant for Truth is not for wimps.

================================================================

UPDATE:

From comments, Steve McIntyre finds another version of the Lamb/IPCC AR1 1990 graph, which looks to me to be much closer to the graph used in the Telegraph article. This graph does NOT appear in Monkton’s PDF.

He writes in a comment:

The lower panel of the Telegraph diagram appears to have derived from (what appears to be) a variation of the Lamb graphic, a variation that I had not noticed until now. The variation appears in the following blog posts (and visually matches almost exactly):

LAMB_2ndversion

http://drtimball.com/2011/they-are-still-trying-to-rewrite-climate-to-show-current-conditions-are-abnormal/

http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.ca/2009/12/from-mann-paper-in-nature.html

Neither blog post provides a citation for the figure, but there are clues that should enable its exact provenance to be tracked down fairly quickly. It appears to be from a book about European climate and have been developed by Lamb. It is unclear why the Telegraph would have used this variation instead of the IPCC 1990 variation, but doubtless we will find out in due course.

UPDATE2:

Nick Stokes adds in comments (bold mine):

There is a version of that graph at the John Daly site here. The article does not seem to be dated, but Daly is indicated as the author, which would make it 2004 or earlier. No source given.

Here is the graph from John Daly’s website, listed as figure 4:

And here is the Metadata, dating the creation of it precisely to Feb 10, 2004, two years before Monckton’s article in the Telegraph.

(right click on image at Daly’s website here to verify yourself)

John-Daly-Metadata-1000yrs

Nick Stokes adds in a second comment:

Steve McIntyre says: July 3, 2014 at 12:12 pm

“The lower panel of the Telegraph diagram appears to have derived from (what appears to be) a variation of the Lamb graphic, a variation that I had not noticed until now.”

Here, on the Wayback machine, is a version from 2001 on the John Daly site.

And the screencap:

John-Daly-solar-2001-wayback

Since Daly’s graph is a near perfect match for the one in the Telegraph, and appears as far back as April 21, 2001, and Monckton did not provide it in his PDF to the Telegraph, I’d say “case closed”.

UPDATE3:

There is some whingeing from Kevin O’Neill in comments that Figure 7.1c from IPCC AR1 WG1 chapter 7 (available here: http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/far/wg_I/ipcc_far_wg_I_chapter_07.pdf ) was not “faithfully” reproduced in my article, even though I made a reference to a technical discussion at Climate Audit on that specific graph and the exact figure appears no less than 3 times in the essay split between my own and Monckton’s

If you open that PDF file you will notice a number of graphs and references including the graph from IPCC section 7 graph C. McIntyre speaks of its source here.

To satisfy such whingeing, here is the exact page from IPCC AR1 WG1 chapter 7, followed by a magnified view of figure 7.1 (including graphs A,B, and C) in case Mr. O’Neill wants to claim “a magnified version is needed for readers with poor eyesight” as part of his game. I challenge him and readers to find any material difference between the graphs below taken directly from the IPCC WG1 Chapter 7 page 202 and those in the essay.

 

IPCC_FAR_Figure 7-1_page202

Magnified figure 7.1abc:

IPCC_FAR_Figure 7-1abc

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Chuck Nolan
July 3, 2014 4:14 pm

If a skeptic is thought to be wrong no one hammers him more than another skeptic.
Alarmists rarely self attack.
Alarmists get hammered by alarmists when they become skeptics.
**
As far as voter ID, try to get into Holder’s inJustice Department without one.
**
Tom J says:
July 3, 2014 at 11:48 am …
Could it really mean that Connolley’s doing everything he can to insure, that in the end, the scientific method will suck.
——————————-
Nah, he’s trying to make sure the scientific method will be abandoned or die.
**
Good on Lord Monckton. Please hold his feet to the flame.
The truth is, even if this whole CAGW thingy blows over the really bad guys will get away with it. It’s all these other low level hypocrites that are helping them so we need to hold everybody accountable every chance we get. Who knows, we might catch a big one. Use their tactics against them.
I could see how maybe Al Gore and Obama would want everyone to pay for global warming but why this guy?
They offer two choices: 1) Allow Wall Street millionaires to become billionaires with default swaps and hedge funds trading in carbon credits. 2) Give congress and thereby all of government trillions more dollars to piss away. Damn…decisions, decisions, decisions.
Nobody’s explaining how either of these choices will even affect global warming even 1°C.
So, how much leeway do you get during the discovery process?
To prove malice one might want to look at some other activities of the blogger.
Who does he work for?
What kind of income does he have?
Who pays the bills?
Does he throw mud everywhere or just at Lord Monckton?
What kind of help does he get and how much?
And my biggest question is “How can he be so sure about CAGW?”
cn

Anything is possible
July 3, 2014 4:16 pm

I think the graph under discussion MAY have originated in this paper :
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/254/5032/698.abstract
I can’t confirm because I am not a member of Science Magazine – perhaps someone who is can check it out?
TIA.

Anything is possible
July 3, 2014 4:18 pm

No, my bad it didn’t. Please ignore above post.

NikFromNYC
July 3, 2014 4:25 pm

Welcome to Wikipedia.gov, Dr. Connolley, where citizens have recourse to not only challenge slander, but severely punish it. When Obama’s lies about Obamacare soon result in a conservative takeover, those deeply involved in the climate scam will further suffer ClimateAudit.gov in turn. Haughtily dismissing the blunt proof of full corruption of peer review in the form of the bladeless input data of the latest hockey stick sensation from Marcott in 2013 makes all that ancient history of Mann’s shenanigans fresh again. Yet you did dismiss it, foolishly, and in public, an act that is undeniable proof of ethical and moral corruption to any objective observer, including laypersons since there’s no statistical black box involved behind it, just no blade, period. Science is the one of the very few human activities besides the law that at its core is defined as being averse to being taken by the throat.
Monckton is helping initiate a proper backlash against willful, knowing and slanderous deception in the name of bastardized “science” in place of the real thing.
“It is far better to be feared than loved. For of men it may be generally affirmed that they are thankless, fickle, false, studious to avoid danger, greedy of gain, devoted to you while you are able to confer benefits upon them, and ready, as I said before, while danger is distant, to shed their blood, and sacrifice their property, their lives, and their children for you; but in the hour of need they turn against you. The Prince, therefore, who without otherwise securing himself builds wholly on their professions is undone. For the friendships which we buy with a price, and do not gain by greatness and nobility of character, though they be fairly earned are not made good, but fail us when we have occasion to use them. Moreover, men are less careful how they offend him who makes himself loved than him who makes himself feared. For love is held by the tie of obligation, which, because men are a sorry breed, is broken on every whisper of private interest; but fear is bound by the apprehension of punishment which never relaxes its grasp. Nevertheless a Prince should inspire fear in such a fashion that if he do not win love he may escape hate. For a man may very well be feared and yet not hated, and this will be the case so long as he does not meddle with the property or with the women of his citizens and subjects. And if constrained to put any to death, he should do so when there is manifest cause or reasonable justification. But, above all, he must abstain from the property of others. For men will sooner forget the death of their father than the loss of their patrimony…. Returning to the question of being loved or feared, I sum up by saying, that since his being loved depends upon his subjects, while being feared depends upon himself, a wise Prince should build on what is his own, and not on what rests with others. Only, as I have said, he must do his utmost to escape hatred.” – Niccolo Machiavelli (The Prince, 1505)
-=NikFromNYC=-, Ph.D. in chemistry (Columbia/Harvard)

commieBob
July 3, 2014 4:27 pm

If I were being sued I would talk to a lawyer. A good lawyer will keep you out of court. You really don’t want to go there. Ask yourself: “Is this the hill I want to die on?” Even if the judge holds the damages to a nominal one dollar, the lawyers’ fees will destroy you. Even if you can afford to pay the lawyers, the waste of your time and added stress aren’t worth it.

NikFromNYC
July 3, 2014 4:34 pm

Mann’s eventually apologetic retraction of slandering Andrew Bolt is of note:
http://blogs.news.com.au/images/uploads/mannlie_thumb.jpg

Robert of Ottawa
July 3, 2014 4:42 pm

Anthony, this is the second time in a week that there has been a “controversy” between you and other Skeptics.
I suggest there is an organized attack on Skeptics by Warmistas, the goal being to create “division in the ranks” and provide the press with gotcha arguments. Remember the purpose of 350.org and http://www.climaterapidresponse.org etc. There is a concerted effort going on here; remember also that the US government has declared global warming as the most urgent issue on the planet.

July 3, 2014 4:45 pm

Once again, full marks to Anthony, and also many thanks indeed to Steve McIntyre, whose fascinating comment attaching an image of the John Daly temperature reconstruction may well – as Anthony has said – have closed the case. For I did not possess and had never seen a copy of that graph, but presumably the Telegraph found it on the John Daly website. Now we shall see whether my defamers have the good sense to apologize without reserve, retract their libels, and remove them from the web.
To those who say it is unwise to go to law, I say that I have never yet entirely lost a libel case. I only pursue them rarely, and only when the libel is particularly damaging, particularly persistent, particularly widely circulated, demonstrably false, and not retracted or apologized for upon request. In such cases, it is not likely that one will lose, particularly in the Scottish courts, which are very businesslike and down-to-earth in their approach and will have absolutely no patience with the various evasions and circumlocutions that are the stock-in-trade of the climate communists.
The wriggling stops at the door of the court, as the Department of Education found out to its enormous cost in the Al Gore case. It was I who recommended that the case be pursued; I who suggested, against the advice of lawyers, that the case should be filed; I who advised the plaintiff to fire the lawyers and get proper ones when they refused to carry out his instructions; I who insisted, against the new lawyers’ advice, that detailed scientific testimony was essential; I who insisted that they write to the court and ask for a new judge when the first judge threw the case out because there was no scientific testimony; I who wrote the scientific testimony once we got a new judge.
At every stage, just about everyone said I was wrong. But I had faith in the desire of the courts to reach the truth. The first judge failed to watch the movie before throwing out the case, so on that ground – and to the astonishment of the lawyers – I got that judge thrown off the case and another appointed. For I knew what they had forgotten: that justice must be seen to be done. And this is just one of many major cases in which I have taken on the establishment, usually on behalf of consultancy clients, and won.
Though it is never wise to be too cocky, any fair-minded person reading the evidence would surely conclude that any allegation that I had faked the graphs that appeared in the Telegraph article was baseless.
“Anything is possible” mentions the landmark paper by Friis-Christensen and Lassen in 1991. In the context of the current failure of global temperatures to rise for almost 18 years (see an adjacent posting by me for the latest update), and bearing in mind the numerous predictions of global cooling that are now in circulation, including a prediction just sent to me by Dr Horst Ludecke that the world may be 1.2 K cooler by 2100 than today, the conclusion of that great paper by F-C and L is worth restating here:
“The observations we have presented suggest that long-term variations in Earth’s temperature are closely associated with variations in the solar cycle length, which therefore appears to be a possible indicator of long-term changes in the total energy output of the sun. If this result can be related to a real physical mechanism there is a possibility to determine the greenhouse warming signal and predict long-term climate changes by appropriate modeling of the sun’s dynamics. Estimation of the natural variability of the Earth’s climate and its causes are needed before any firm conclusion regarding anthropogenic changes can be made.”
Amen to that.

Christopher Hanley
July 3, 2014 4:53 pm

A version of Lamb’s 1000 year climate history graph appears on page 184 of my edition of The Irish Landscape by Frank Mitchell published in 1976.
The caption reads: ‘A graph to illustrate fluctuation of mean annual temperature in England, by 50-year averages, for the past 1000 years (After H. H. Lamb)’.
The peak around 1200 AD is shown at about 10.25C and the graph stops about 1950.

July 3, 2014 5:00 pm

Mr Stokes says he wishes people would not cite unsourced graphs. But I did not cite the graphs that were inferentially drawn by the Telegraph’s graphics department, because I did not see the graphs until the paper came out and my lovely wife brought it from the village.
As always, I shall be willing to accept apologies and retractions, in terms acceptable to and agreed in advance with me, and displayed with due prominence for the same length of time as the original defamations, whereupon I shall regard the matter as closed. Otherwise, my defamers will answer to the courts, and it may also be necessary to involve other parties responsible for facilitating the wide dissemination of the malicious libel of which I have been – until our kind host’s admirable intervention – the unwitting victim.

Bill Illis
July 3, 2014 5:14 pm

What we should be talking about is that Lamb’s graph is the most accurate …
… and Connolley’s never-ending, going-on-a-decade-now, mission to re-write all climate history and science the way he sees fit is …
… unethical to say the least. More accurately, it is …
How can a science be a science if it is primarily focussed on fiction. That makes it science fiction.

July 3, 2014 5:15 pm

AlecM says:
July 3, 2014 at 11:32 am
Very interesting that HRH is allegedly responsible for the attacks on objective science.
Also interesting is that HRH says:
“I happily talk to the plants and trees, and listen to them. I think it’s absolutely crucial,”
Read more:
I wonder if he asked his plants about CO2, the plant food.

Transport by Zeppelin
July 3, 2014 5:23 pm

William Connolley is an excellent example of the >UGLY< side of the climate debate.
An utterly rude & sarcastic child!

Steve McIntyre
July 3, 2014 5:29 pm

I wouldn’t say that the provenance of the figure has been fully explained. The form of the graphic at John Daly’s website (h/t Nick Stokes) does not exactly match Lamb versions that I’ve seen. Did the variation originate with Daly? Or somewhere in the Lamb corpus, is there a variation that differs from the IPCC 1990 version and leads to the Daly version?

Mike Singleton
July 3, 2014 5:35 pm

Why is “Big-Ears” getting away with this, as commented in the body of text.
“A pressure-group founded and funded by Prince Charles is prone to intervene to try (unsuccessfully, the last time they tried it on me) to prevent the publication of skeptical scientific papers in British learned journals.”
He does some bizarre things but surely he should be taken to task over this. For the none UK readers the inference of involvement of a royal personage can carry undue and unwarranted weight even in todays society.

Martin
July 3, 2014 6:12 pm

I think it’s perfectly reasonable for anyone reading that Telegraph article to assume that the author Monckton is the one responsible for the graph.
Dr. Connolly merely said “My candidate for the source of this nonsense is Monkers, in the Torygraph, with a copy of Photoshop.”
That’s not libel!!

commieBob
July 3, 2014 6:15 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says:
July 3, 2014 at 4:45 pm
… To those who say it is unwise to go to law, …

My advice was not to you 🙂 My advice was to someone who is under threat of being sued.
For about ten years, I followed SCO v. IBM, Novell, Red Hat, the whole world. It is a case study of how to keep a bogus case before the courts while inflicting the maximum damage on the ‘good guys’ (ie. scorched earth). The one thing I learned, and learned well, is that even skilled and experienced lawyers can not, with any certainty, predict how a judge will decide.
However, IBM et al. answered my question: “Is this the hill I want to die on?” with: “We must defend this hill.” and it cost them hundreds of millions of dollars in lawyer bills. SCO went bankrupt and left no assets that could be used to recompense IBM and Novell for the damages inflicted on them.

Follow the Money
July 3, 2014 6:20 pm

Re: “Lamb corpus” and Steve McIntyre’s earlier Lamb reference, at the library I looked at Climate, Present, Past and Future (1972) and Climate, History and the Modern World (1982). I did not look at every figure within them, but was impressed the generalist type of graph at question would not likely appear in those two. Unavailable at this time to me is “The English Climate” (1964) which by its name and smaller approach (212 pp. only) feels more public-friendly. According to gbooks snippet view, the public-oriented (and obscure) phrase “Dickens winters” appears in The English Climate at its page 77, although it is not visible in the actual snippet presented on my screen.

a reader
July 3, 2014 6:30 pm

That is not John Daly’s book.
REPLY: Right you are, I put up the wrong Amazon link, there are two books by that name. Fixed. – Anthony

Follow the Money
July 3, 2014 6:40 pm

Neither is the one Anthony Watts is displaying! There is another book published one year earlier by John Daly whose title also begins, “The Greenhouse Trap…” So Mr. Watts may wish to cancel his Amazon order??
Lamb is suggested as the deeper source.

angech
July 3, 2014 7:45 pm

Anthony keep your friends close and your enemies closer. While sites such as stoat focus mainly on manly activities like rowing and Tamino’ s on feminism and man hating (strange bedfellows) they are worth the occasional look to see the depths of hatred due to noble cause rot. You might also like to put up a post on Arctic sea ice blog and it’s failure to update it’s graphs, always stopping at the point of apocalypse .
Only a confident person can put up links, as you do to the opposition sites knowing that any one with an open mind reading the misleading arguments and vitriol could only be persuaded to disagree with them.

July 3, 2014 7:47 pm

A while back, we were treated to an education by William Connelley here at WUWT (where did the search function go????) on how quickly he receives notifications of breaking messages of note to him. One might therefore assume that messages posted on his Sloat website might be on that list, given the rapid response times I noted during what I think was his most recent numerous presence here.
One might also test this assertion, as in the following (additional observations are below the quotation):
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o recommend it to TGL. It really is interesting.
#155 William McClenney
2014/07/03
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
Doing nothing about climate change probably will be a catastrophe.There is very little (bordering on zero) doubt in my mind on that. Loutre and Berger (2003) (paywalled at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818102001868) inform us that the Holocene will just go blithely along for another 50k years. It’s always good to be stuck in time, isn’t it? Unfortunately, as early as 2005 Lisiecki and Raymo (paywalled at:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2004PA001071/full) inform us:
“Recent research has focused on MIS 11 as a possible analog for the present interglacial [e.g., Loutre and Berger, 2003; EPICA community members, 2004] because both occur during times of low eccentricity. The LR04 age model establishes that MIS 11 spans two precession cycles, with 18O values below 3.6 o/oo for 20 kyr, from 398-418 ka. In comparison, stages 9 and 5 remained below 3.6 o/oo for 13 and 12 kyr, respectively, and the Holocene interglacial has lasted 11 kyr so far. In the LR04 age model, the average LSR of 29 sites is the same from 398-418 ka as from 250-650 ka; consequently, stage 11 is unlikely to be artificially stretched. However, the June 21 insolation minimum at 65N during MIS 11 is only 489 W/m2, much less pronounced than the present minimum of 474 W/m2. In addition, current insolation values are not predicted to return to the high values of late MIS 11 for another 65 kyr. We propose that this effectively precludes a ‘double precession-cycle’ interglacial [e.g., Raymo, 1997] in the Holocene without human influence.”
As Lisiecki and Raymo (2005) allude, the Holocene is 11k years old so far, in fact the more precise age as counted from periglacial lake varves is 11,717 years old. And this is where the problem with future climate catastrophe lies. You see only the MIS-11 interglacial is known to have achieved interglacial warmth for longer than about half a precession cycle.
And that is where the potential climate catastrophe resides in spades! We are at the 23kyr part of the precession cyclicity right now, making 11,500 half and 11,717 “about half.”
If we don’t do something about this specter, and quicksmart, then we could end up with mind-boggling climate catastrophe! Neuman and Hearty (1996) spell it out for us:
“The lesson from the last interglacial “greenhouse” in the Bahamas is that the closing of that interval brought sea-level changes that were rapid and extreme. This has prompted the remark that between the greenhouse and the icehouse lies a climatic “madhouse.” (http://www.researchgate.net/publication/249518169_Rapid_sea-level_changes_at_the_close_of_the_last_interglacial_(substage_5e)_recorded_in_Bahamian_island_geology/file/9c96051c6e66749912.pdf)
What on earth do they mean by a climatic “madhouse?” Well, the IPCC in 2007, in figure 10.33 from page 821 of Chapter 10 of Assessment Report 4 in SRES marker A1F1 show the upper error bar of the worst case “business as usual” shows that if we do nothing about anthropogenic GHG emissions, sea level (the ultimate measure of climate change) could go up a whopping +0.59 meters, which, of course, is an awful lot of sea level rise!
To put this into proper perspective one should have a look at Figure 2 of Hearty et al (2007) “Global sea-level fluctuations during the Last Interglaciation (MIS 5e)”, a compilation of a dozen studies from around the globe which show estimates of what was either the 2nd or 3rd strong thermal excursion (depending on other studies) right at the end of the Eemian, the last interglacial back in the record. The estimates show anywhere from a +6.0 to +45 m amsl sea level rise accompanied the final thermal pulse before climate dropped off into the last ice age.
But it might be worse than we thought…… Lysa et al (2001) measured up to a +52.0 m amsl rise at the end of MIS-5e, the Eemian (http://lin.irk.ru/pdf/6696.pdf)
In fact, studies of MIS-11 and MIS-19 show a similar pattern of 3 strong thermal pulses that also occurred during glacial inception.
That is why it is absolutely critical that we get right after quelling that IPCC AR4 worst case scenario of +0.59 meters by 2099. Why? If we can quell an anthropogenic rise that is 1 to almost 2 orders of magnitude less than that which might occur anyway, and maybe up to 3 times in quick succession, it will be good practice towards taking on the specter of far more catastrophic climate “madhouse” also known as glacial inception.
“As always……this message will self-destruct in five seconds” see William Connolley and his Wikidelete key.
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After copying what appears on my browser, after at least 4 hours, take a look at the top of the quote. That didn’t show up until I pasted it here! I’ve never seen such a means of commenting before.
There are several things of note here:
1) I had no idea one could put a comment so far up in an email or internal communication.
2) if a comment never achieves being moderated then is is actually deleted?
3) In this instance, how fast was William Connelly’s noted hi-tech comment and response time relative to past WUWT response exchanges? Why would the same take so many hours on Stoat relative to momentary Connelley responses-to-comments here? The differential, of course, is growing ever-more interesting.
4) Any bets on if such a comment recommended as “It really is interesting” will pass muster on Sloat), or if, in the final analysis, it is deemed better not to let it pass moderation, meaning it cannot have been deleted.
More connected, more contemplative, more certain, and obviously much faster That is how “5-hour Reverse Pretzel Logic (RPL)”, plus a few more hours, works.
Got it?

Editor
July 3, 2014 7:55 pm

Re: Original IPCC graph at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:IPCC_1990_FAR_chapter_7_fig_7.1%28c%29.png#mediaviewer/File:IPCC_1990_FAR_chapter_7_fig_7.1%28c%29.png
Did anyone else note that the caption is incorrect? It says “Years before present” but then gives dates as 1000 AD, 1500 AD and 1900AD.
Thus, [the] graph has to be “fixed” before use by anyone else — one can’t use the original as-is. Just a funny little note in the larger scheme of things.

July 3, 2014 8:16 pm

July 3, 2014 at 2:25 pm |William Connolley says.
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I’m going to laugh loud and heartily when your hide gets tacked to the frame for curing !! Hopefully, Lord Monckton will cure you of your infliction for good.

July 3, 2014 8:29 pm

As posted just this moment over at Sloat:
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But that’s not actually the worst of it, as you might very well expect. What if the IPCC is right about CO2? Ulrich Muller and Jorg Pross, writing in Quaternary Science Reviews 26 (2007) sum this nasty little problem up neatly:
“The possible explanation as to why we are still in an interglacial relates to the early anthropogenic hypothesis of Ruddiman (2003, 2005). According to that hypothesis, the anomalous increase of CO2 and CH4 concentrations in the atmosphere as observed in mid- to late Holocene ice-cores results from anthropogenic deforestation and rice irrigation, which started in the early Neolithic at 8000 and 5000 yr BP, respectively. Ruddiman proposes that these early human greenhouse gas emissions prevented the inception of an overdue glacial that otherwise would have already started.” [emphasis mine]
Bet you didn’t see that one coming. Or this one:
“Investigating the processes that led to the end of the last interglacial period is relevant for understanding how our ongoing interglacial will end, which has been a matter of much debate…..”
“The onset of the LEAP occurred within less than two decades, demonstrating the existence of a sharp threshold, which must be near 416 Wm2, which is the 65oN July insolation for 118 kyr BP (ref. 9). This value is only slightly below today’s value of 428 Wm2. Insolation will remain at this level slightly above the [glacial] inception for the next 4,000 years before it then increases again.” Sirocko and Seelos (Nature, 2005) [emphasis mine]
Essentially, this means that if the IPCC is right, Ruddiman is probably right in that the reason we are not already undergoing the climatic “madhouse” known as glacial-inception is BECAUSE of our anthropogenic emissions! Wouldn’t that mean that removing the CO2 “climate security blanket” at any time in the next ~4,000 years could “tip” us into the next glacial? Tell me again why you want to remove it?
The entire AGW debate actually IS just that simple. We, meaning us, would really have to up our climate change game to get anywhere close to the normal natural background noise of the climatic “Madhouse” that is a glacial inception.
GHGs either can or cannot mitigate glacial inception. It is no more complicated or simple than that. Period.
a) If GHGs can get us over the next ~4,000 years of glacial inception risk, then why are we having this discussion at all?
b) If GHGs can’t vault us across the next ~4,000 years of glacial inception risk, then why are we having this discussion at all?
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In a hair over 3.5 hours, any acceptance or response over at Sloat will be tomorrow, PDT. Just so we all get that.