How complexity science can quickly detect climate record anomalies Santa Fe Institute

From Eurekalert

Public Release: 14-Dec-2018

The history of our climate is written in ice. Reading it is a matter of deciphering the complex signals pulled from tens of thousands of years of accumulated isotopes frozen miles below the surface of Antarctica.

When making sense of the massive amount of information packed into an ice core, scientists face a forensic challenge: how best to separate the useful information from the corrupt.

A new paper published in the journal Entropy shows how tools from information theory, a branch of complexity science, can address this challenge by quickly homing in on portions of the data that require further investigation.

“With this kind of data, we have limited opportunities to get it right,” says Joshua Garland, a mathematician at the Santa Fe Institute who works with 68,000 years of data from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide ice Core. “Extracting the ice and processing the data takes hundreds of people, and tons of processing and analysis. Because of resource constraints, replicate cores are rare. ”

By the time Garland and his team got ahold of the data, more than 10 years had passed from the initial drilling of the ice core to the publishing of the dataset it contained. The two-mile ice core was extracted over five seasons from 2007-2012, by teams from the multiple universities funded by the National Science Foundation. From the field camp in West Antarctica, the core was packaged, then shipped to the National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility in Colorado, and finally to the University of Colorado. At the Stable Isotope Lab at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, a state-of-the-art processing facility helped scientists pull water isotope records from the ice.

The result is a highly resolved, complex dataset. Compared to previous ice core data, which allowed for analysis every 5 centimeters, the WAIS Divide core permits analysis at millimeter resolution.

“One of the exciting thing about ice core research in the last decade is we’ve developed these lab systems to analyze the ice in high resolution,” says Tyler Jones, a paleoclimatologist at the University of Colorado Boulder. “Quite a while back we were limited in our ability to analyze climate because we couldn’t get enough data points, or if we could it would take too long. These new techniques have given us millions of data points, which is rather difficult to manage and interpret without some new advances in our [data] processing.”

In previous cores, Garland notes that decades, even centuries, were aggregated into a single point. The WAIS data, by contrast, sometimes gives more than forty data points per year. But as scientists move to analyze the data at shorter time scales, even small anomalies can be problematic.

“As fine-grained data becomes available, fine-grained analyses can be performed,” Garland notes. “But it also makes the analysis susceptible to fine-grained anomalies.”

To quickly identify which anomalies require further investigation, the team uses information theoretic techniques to measure how much complexity appears at each point in the time sequence. A sudden spike in the complexity could mean that there was either a major, unexpected climate event, like a super volcano, or that there was an issue in the data or the data processing pipeline.

“This kind of anomaly would be invisible without a highly detailed, fine-grained, point-by-point analysis of the data, which would take a human expert many months to perform,” says Elizabeth Bradley, a computer scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder and External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute. “Even though information theory can’t tell us the underlying cause of an anomaly, we can use these techniques to quickly flag the segments of the data set that should be investigated by paleoclimate experts.”

She compares the ice core dataset to a Google search that returns a million pages. “It’s not that you couldn’t go through those million pages,” Bradley says. “But imagine if you had a technique that could point you toward the ones that were potentially meaningful?” When analyzing large, real-world datasets, information theory can spot differences in the data that signal either a processing error or a significant climate event.

In their Entropy paper, the scientists detail how they used information theory to identify and repair a problematic stretch of data from the original ice core. Their investigation eventually prompted a resampling of the archival ice core — the longest resampling of a high-resolution ice core to date. When that portion of the ice was resampled and reprocessed, the team was able to resolve an anomalous spike in entropy from roughly 5,000 years ago.

“It’s vitally important to get this area right,” Garland notes, “because it contains climate information from the dawn of human civilization.”

“I think climate change is the most pressing problem ever to face humanity, and ice cores are undoubtedly the best record of Earth’s climate going back hundreds of thousands of years,” says Jones. “Information theory helps us sift through the data to make sure what we’re putting out into the world is the absolute best and most certain product we can.”

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astonerii
December 15, 2018 6:13 pm

Climate “science” meets Complexity “science”.
Complexity science is much like google. Humans make a bunch of algorithms that tease out small things from millions to billions of points.
Didn’t google start something recently where they use complexity “science” to tell us which news is legitimate and which is fake?

Gamecock
December 15, 2018 7:45 pm

“It’s vitally important to get this area right,” Garland notes, “because it contains climate information from the dawn of human civilization.”

Wut? There is double ought zero connection. Humans didn’t even get to Antarctica for millennia.

From the West Antarctic ice shelf. One point in 500,000,000 square kilometers. It’s not vitally important at all. It’s not even important at all. It’s interesting, and curious, but not important.

To the extent that the ice cores are a decipherable proxy for weather, they tell us about one point on a vast planet. Useless.

BWTM: the temperature was below 32 degrees forever. Else not ice. Since most of the earth is NOT covered with ice, what is a non-typical ice covered area supposed to tell us?

John Robertson
December 15, 2018 8:25 pm

Interesting concept,so information theory modelling of data may be useful in detecting signals the eyeball misses.
Time will tell.
That thin slices of Antarctic ice can give detailed information of the worlds? climate in days past?
Just what is the signal to noise ratio?
Awful lot of speculation in that.
Mark Twain would love modern science.

mtvessel
December 15, 2018 9:46 pm

Ah. I see.
Entropy as in, not the thermodynamic kind.
silly me

Crakar24
December 15, 2018 10:06 pm

Interesting how every site needs a village idiot, WUWT certainly had theirs. You tell who they are they are the ones rambling nonsensical with everyone who cares to engage

Global Cooling
December 15, 2018 11:42 pm

Insight from the economic modelling given by Mervyn King in his book “The end of alchemy”:

Optimizing over a false model is in many instances worse than the use of a coping strategy that works in your particular environment. Rather than attempt complex statistical calculations, it is better to make investment decisions using a choice of heuristics that reflects a sensible narrative

Rather than investing in climate models and limiting CO2, we should be prepared to a variety of weather incidents

Forest management is a good coping strategy for wild fires.

Global Cooling
Reply to  Global Cooling
December 15, 2018 11:49 pm

Bolded is mine, not part of the quote.

Tasfay Martinov
December 16, 2018 2:05 am

Too funny!
They’re still keeping up the pretence of being interested in palaeo-climate.
But only denyers deny that the world was created in 1850.

KAT
Reply to  Tasfay Martinov
December 16, 2018 2:45 am

+1

E J Zuiderwijk
December 16, 2018 2:12 am
Solomon Green
December 16, 2018 10:34 am

“I think climate change is the most pressing problem ever to face humanity,”

Why disagree? So long as politicians continue to believe that the earth is warming, and will continue to warm disastrously, as a result of humans using fossil fuels, the economic cost of their idiotic attempts to drastically reduce CO2 (and CH4) emissions could eventually lead to civil unrest on a global scale.

But perhaps this is not what she meant and the phrase was only included to ensure publication and maximum publicity.