I think we all had some inkling the numbers were data but let me ask the relevant question here....how far back in time do they supposedly represent, and based exactly on what facts? In other words, we don't want someone playing stick a number on every foot of a mile long ice core, pretending that it has some meaning, or some such! I don't dazzle easy, so smoke and mirrors and a meaningless splattering of number confetti really cannot help your attempted case here.
Again you have a misunderstanding about the information I posted about the Milankovitch Cycles, as well as the specific data set to which you are inquiring. Perhaps this because you may be looking for information to support preconceived ideas rather than letting the science show you what it is. This is often a problem among people who have little or no understanding of the actual science.
Recall the three variations included in the Milankovitch Cycles, eccentricity, axial tilt, and precession. Those three specific phenomena are observed and measured. There is no guess work or assumptions about it, they are direct measurements. So we know what is happening and at what rate each is progressing. From that all one needs to do is work back mathematically in time. Because each of these three factors affect the amount of solar irradiation striking the earth, the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) varies. So when working with and incorporating all three variables the TSI shown to vary as well. As I mentioned previously, it so happens that approximately every 100,000 years those the variable combine to make favorable conditions for either warming or cooling of global average temperatures (GAT). The graphs I previously posted demonstrate the process extremely well.
The data set to which you are inquiring about how far in time it goes back is not from ice cores as you appear to be suggesting. It is a computation of TSI based on the Milankovitch Cycles which goes back 5 million years. Here are the specifics on the dataset.
Berger, A., 1992, Orbital Variations and Insolation Database. IGBP PAGES/World Data Center for Paleoclimatology Data Contribution Series # 92-007. NOAA/NGDC Paleoclimatology Program, Boulder CO, USA.
This data set contains data on changes in the earth's orbital parameters, and the resulting variations in insolation. The directory contains both the 1978 calculations and the latest (1991) solution by A. Berger. The 1978 solution is preferred for time 0 (1950 A.D.). The two solutions are equivalent through 800 KYBP, and the 1991 solution is preferred for times greater than 800 KYBP.
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