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Past reconstructions: problems, pitfalls and progress

Classé dans: — gavin @ 7 décembre 2007

Many people hold the mistaken belief that reconstructions of past climate are the sole evidence for current and future climate change. They are not. However, they are very interesting and useful for all sorts of reasons: for modellers to test out theories of climate change, for geographers, archaeologists and historians to examine the impact of climate on past civilizations and ecosystems, and for everyone to get a sense of what climate is capable of doing, how fast it does it and why.

As a small part of that enterprise, the climate of the medieval period has received a very high (and sometimes disproportionate) profile in the public discourse – due in no small part to the mistaken notion that it is an important factor for the attribution of current climate change. Its existence as a period of generally warmer temperatures (at least in the Northern hemisphere) than the centuries that followed is generally accepted. But the timing, magnitude and spatial extent are much more uncertain. All previous multiproxy reconstructions indicate a Northern Hemisphere mean temperature less than current levels, though possibly on a par with the mid- 20th century. But there are only a few tenths of a degree in it, and so the description that it is likely to have been warmer now (rather than virtually certain) is used to express the level of uncertainty.

A confounding factor in discussions of this period is the unfortunate tendency of some authors to label any warm peak prior to the 15th Century as the ‘Medieval Warm Period’ in their record. This leads to vastly different periods being similarly labelled, often giving a misleading impression of coherence. For instance, in a recent paper it was defined as 1200-1425 CE well outside the ’standard’ definition of 800-1200 CE espoused by Lamb.

Since a new ‘reconstruction’ of the last 2000 years from Craig Loehle is currently doing the rounds, we thought it might be timely to set out what the actual issues are in making such reconstructions (as opposed to the ones that are more often discussed), and how progress is being made despite the pitfalls.
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Green and Armstrong’s scientific forecast

Classé dans: — gavin @ 20 juillet 2007

There is a new critique of IPCC climate projections doing the rounds of the blogosphere from two ’scientific forecasters’, Kesten Green and Scott Armstrong, who claim that since the IPCC projections are not ’scientific forecasts’ they must perforce be wrong and that a naive model of no change in future is likely to be more accurate that any IPCC conclusion. This ignores the fact that IPCC projections have already proved themselves better than such a naive model, but their critique is novel enough to be worth a mention.
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Beck to the future

Classé dans: — group @ 1 mai 2007

Guest commentary from Georg Hoffmann

Our understanding of the natural carbon cycle has greatly improved since the times of Svante Arrhenius (1859-1927) and Guy Stewart Callendar (1898-1964). We know what the atmospheric background value of CO2 currently is (it passed 380ppm last year, about 100ppm over the pre-industrial level), we know the seasonal/diurnal cycle in different environments, we have been able to put reasonable constraints on terrestrial and marine sources and sinks, and finally we know the impact of fuel combustion both globally and locally in heavily polluted areas.
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Peer Review: A Necessary But Not Sufficient Condition II

Classé dans: — group @ 27 janvier 2005

by Michael Mann and Gavin Schmidt

In a previous post, we discussed a number of examples where the “Peer Review” process has failed, and poor papers have been published in the ostensibly peer-reviewed literature. In this context, we revisit our previous discussions of the flawed work of McIntyre and McKitrick (henceforth “MM”). MM published a paper, in the controversial journal Energy and Environment, claiming to “correct” the proxy-based reconstruction of Northern Hemisphere temperatures published by Mann et al (1998–henceforth “MBH98″). Following the all-too-familiar pattern, this deeply flawed paper was heavily promoted by special interests as somehow challenging the scientific consensus that humans are altering the climate (an excellent account is provided by science journalist Dan Vergano of USA Today here). As detailed already on the pages of RealClimate, this so-called ‘correction’ was nothing more than a botched application of the MBH98 procedure, where the authors (MM) removed 80% of the proxy data actually used by MBH98 during the 15th century period (failing in the process to produce a reconstruction that passes standard “verification” procedures–an error that is oddly similar to that noted by Benestad (2004) with regard to another recent McKitrick paper). Indeed, the bizarre resulting claim by MM of anomalous 15th century warmth (which falls within the heart of the “Little Ice Age”) is at odds with not only the MBH98 reconstruction, but, in fact the roughly dozen other estimates now published that agree with MBH98 within estimated uncertainties.

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Evaluation par des pairs : une condition nécessaire mais pas suffisante

Classé dans: — group @ 20 janvier 2005 - (English)

Par Michael Mann et Gavin Schmidt (Traduit par Alain Henry)

Dans ce site, nous insistons sur les résultats de recherches sur le climat soumis à des « évaluations par des pairs » [NdT: l'expression française « évaluation par des pairs » étant lourde et peu satisfaisante, nous utiliserons dans la plupart des cas l'expression anglaise originale peer review et nous désignerons les reviewers comme des évaluateurs]. C’est-à-dire, des recherches publiées par un ou plusieurs chercheurs dans un journal scientifique, après avoir été évaluée par un ou plusieurs experts dans le même domaine (des « pairs ») pour en vérifier la précision et la validité. Quelle est l’importance de ces peer review ? Comme le dit très lucidement Chris Mooney :

[Le peer review] est incontestablement une pierre angulaire de la démarche scientifique moderne. Concept central au choc compétitif des idées qui fait avancer la connaissance, le peer review bénéficie d’une telle renommée au sein de la communauté scientifique que les études qui n’ont pas son imprimatur sont considérées avec scepticisme. Les réputations académiques dépendent de la capacité à franchir le peer review pour être publié dans les principaux journaux ; les presses universitaires emploient le peer review pour décider quels livres elles publieront ; et les agences fédérales comme l’Institut National pour la Santé utilisent le peer review pour évaluer les demandes de fonds fédéraux pour la recherche.

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