THE STATE OF THE DEBATE
1. Thaumaturgy has made a large error in that he failed to note that the Michel Leroy "Siting Index" only accounts for positive bias. Hence Glenn's criticism that there is a possibility of a significant positive bias to the stations so far sampled in the U.S. by surfacestations.org is correct.
2. Thaumaturgy is still correct that surfacestation.org has only sampled 43% of the U.S. national sitings. The maps from surfacestation.org and the methodology of casting a net for "volunteers" indicates that their sampling protocol is not random, therefore the fact that they have found about 69% of the currently non-random sampled sites have said potential for positive bias means little in the way of statistical value.
No it is not random in the statistical sense, but Thaumaturgy continues to avoid the question I asked. 100% of the California stations have been surveyed, and 35% have a 2 deg bias and 35% have a 5 deg plus bias. Can't we agree that the California contribution to global warming is crap? Shouldn't it be excluded?
The map itself on surfacestations.org is clearly biased for those areas with higher populations and hence higher probability of finding an installation at or near a "bad siting" criterion per the Leroy (1998) standard.
Well, in reality you haven't actually looked at the list of stations. Once again you are not doing your homework. LA and San Francisco and other large towns are NOT included in the global historical network, which I am using. All the towns are moderate in size. Colfax, California, one of the stations, has all of 1719 people according to a google search. What a hoot. you assume (of course without actually looking) that this is an urban area. Blythe California, another station had only 22,000 people. Once again, not a huge urban town. Cedarville is 220 people. Electra California has 774 souls. There are two figures on the internet for Eureka California, 26,000 or 42,000. That is a moderate town regardless. Brawley California 22,529.
Thaumaturgy, you need to do your homework before you make silly claims. I would have given you the benefit of the doubt, saying ok, you messed up with the Leroy scale, but you continue to do it over and over and over and over. And you don't give up. You make claims without actually checking to see if your claims are true. Do you think that Electra, California with a population of 774 is a big urban area? The tiny town my ranch is next to has about that many people. There are only 2 businesses in the town--a fertilizer plant and a restaraunt.
3. Glenn has also introduced a "red herring" of sorts in trumpetting the fact that surfacestations.org has sampled "100% of the California Stations". Again, that does not mean anything statistically as the temperature doesn't care one way or another whether there is a "state line" arbitrarily drawn by the U.S. government (which itself may introduce a bias) or not.
LOL. You can't even agree that the data from California should be excluded. How sad. You don't think that bad data should be excluded and you continually claim that I am the one who doesn't know statistics. What a hoot.
That is 54 stations, of which 38 have Leroy rating of 4 or 5.
So, are we really to abandon the entire U.S. grid because in a single arbitrary box in one of the most populace states in the U.S. 38 stations were found to have a potential for positive bias?
Once again, you are not very precise. I never said that we should abandon the US data based upon California. I would like you to document that bald faced assertion of yours or withdraw it. What I have asked is if we can agree that the Califronia data is crap. YOu are now side-stepping, (slip-slidin' away as Paul Simon sang) on this issue, by claiming something I never said. Put up the evidence where I said we should give up t he US data because California is bad or with draw that baseless bald-faced assertion.
Again, I cannot stress enough that I was in grave error in not noting that the Leroy system only accounts for the potential of positive bias.
And you are in grave error in claiming that the surveyed stations are in large population centers. You are in grave error in claiming that a large amplitude low frequency component of the Fourier transform means a secular trend. I just provided a counter example, which, no doubt, you will try to find some wiggle room on as you do on the question of the validity of California's data.
However, this is hardly a deathblow for the entirety of the data that support global warming.
Now, the problem for Glenn's side of the debate comes forth that:
Global warming evidence is not solely based on U.S. or U.K. or Chinese surface temperature measurements. It is from a number of lines of evidence which correlate among each other to verify the general trend.
Well, from start point to end point the Satellite data only rises by .18 deg C (and if one started one month later, and measured only to May 2008, one would see a decrease in tropospheric temperature over the 30 years. But the land data, subjected to parking lots, urban heat islands and other effects shows between .6 and .7 deg rise over the past 30 years. This discrepancy is something you need to explain. No doubt you will say it is my fault.
It is nice to quote people but one should always check the data to see if the quote actually fits the data. Kind of like if I quoted you saying that there was a bias towards large population centers in the California data. I would hardly say a town of 774 or even 22,000 is a big city. I could quote you on that, but that wouldn't make it true.
Now, it is highly unlikely that a stray air-conditioner unit would affect borehole temperature measurements and it would surely take a very large parking lot to significantly melt a glacier.
I think I asked this before and I don't recall the answer. Maybe I forgot. but what are these borehole measurements you keep talking about. The thermal conductivity of either a borehole in the earth or a bore hole in a glacier totally excludes the measurement of global warming in a bore hole. In the earth, the yearly average temperature at a given site can be approximated by measuring the temperature about 3-6 feet down.
What bore holes are you talking about?
But further we don't even have to stay on the ground. Weather balloon data supports global warming trends as well:
I like this source. Take your pick of the numbers. The lottery is on:
"It is interesting to compare temperature trends from the relatively sparse 63-station radiosonde network to those from some of the other well-known global temperature records, e.g., the
Microwave Sounding Unit (MSU) data obtained from NOAA satellites (Christy et al. 2000). While comparisons between the exact same atmospheric layers cannot be made, the computed linear trend for the MSU from its beginning year (1979) through 2005 for the lower tropospheric layer from the surface up to 8 km (about 350 mb) shows an increase of about 0.09°C/decade; whereas the Angell record for the 850-300 mb tropospheric layer over the same period shows no trend. The University of East Anglia data of Jones et al. (2001), derived from thousands of stations over the globe, indicate a global surface warming of 0.12°C/decade over Angell's full period of record (1958-2005) compared to 0.17°C/decade for the Angell data. For the years overlapping with the "satellite" period of record (1979-2005), the surface data of Jones et al. show an increasing trend of 0.17°C/decade; quite close to the 0.21°C/decade trend obtained from the 63-station network of Angell. "
http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/trends/temp/angell/angell.html
Is it 0.09, 0.12, 0.17, or 0.21. Enquiring minds want to know.
Let's not limit ourselves to land or sky, let's look at ocean data:
Yes, let's look at the ocean data. Over the past 5 years the oceans have COOLED. You never responded to this picture either. YOu seem to have a selective response filter. Blue is cooling from 2003 to 2007. Yes, the oceans are still warmer than they were in 1990 but, we have more CO2 in the atmosphere in 2008 than we did in 2003 and the oceans are cooling. Why isn't the increase in CO2 warming the oceans? Remember, every blue dot is a grid element that cooled over the past 5 years.
edited to add. Notice that the land is in general heating up while the oceans are cooling. ONly on the land do we have hot parking lots, hot roof tops and hot cement beneath the thermometers, and only on land do we have air conditioners. I guess one alternative is that CO2 only sits over the land, and doesn't sit over the oceans, but I would find such an explanation ridiculous. Wouldn't you? (my confidence in your response has been shattered by some of the things I have seen you assert here).
Now, I'll admit it's been about 17 years since I was on a research oceanographic cruise, but when I was out on the North Atlantic measuring gas exchange in sea water, I sure didn't see floating islands of air conditioner units or large parking structures. If I had you can be guaranteed I'd have been off that damn research ship in a second.
So, congrats, Glenn on pulling us off into anecdotal data by finding a likely non-random sampling of surface temperature sites with the potential for positive bias and dragging the conversation away from the mass of data that disconfirm your hypothesis.
Well, Thaumaturgy, since I am the originator of this thread, and had certain purposes for it, it seems difficult to charge me with derailing my own thread. I would say that your stubborn refusal to see the data with the Fourier data is what has derailed things. But then, maybe you think you started this thread.
It is still incumbent upon you to prove a statistically significant actual bias using proper statistics including true random (or near true random) sampling methodologies, and then explain how the various efforts by NASA, NOAA, and numerous international bodies to account for bias and error are somehow ineffective.
And you think a heat source can cool a thermometer???? Even after your silliness with the Leroy scale? And you wonder why you might feel like you are being treated as a common crackpot. Do you never learn? Hot car engines parked next to thermometers will not result in the thermometer becoming cooler. If you can't understand that, nothing will help you.
Hot radiative cement beneath a thermometer will not cool that thermometer. If you can't understand that, nothing will help you.
Hot air conditioning exhaust blowing gently on a thermometer will not cool that thermometer. If you can't understand that, nothing will help you. I can do no better than this in proving that those stations will have a bias. If you think that they can be cooled by hot air blowing over them, I would just LOVE to hear the explanation. It is for this reason that I am beginning to think that you are what you worried about being treated as.
Then, please, feel free to get back to the little discussion of 95% Confidence Intervals vs standard deviation. (as you know sandard error of the mean is, by definition, smaller than the standard deviation unless you have only 1 data point. That's just the math:
I did post a standard devation post. I didn't see that you even responded. Maybe you can point me to it. I noted that the standard deviation of temperature measurments over very small areas was of the order of 2 deg F while the globe is supposed to have warmed only 1.1 deg. The signal of warming is smaller than the one standard deviation of error. That means, my friend, that you can't be sure that the globe has warmed. But getting you to actually respond to those issues rather than to respond with silliness on the Fourier transform seems to be rather difficult.
(Now my math skills, having been maligned earlier may be in error on this but any time you divide a number by another number >1 means it gets smaller, so maybe you've found a way to get a standard error on the mean that is somehow larger than the standard deviation. I dunno.)
I doubt your knowledge of FFT and I will now doubt your physics skills as well. How can you go about saying that I haven't proven a bias in the class 4 and 5 thermometers???? This is one of the most ridiculous things I have seen someone say. Hot air blowing across a thermometer doesn't bias it?????? How can that be? Are you really serious? Is your stubborness that great? Or are you the crank you don't want to be?
I would advise you to cut your losses. That is what I did when my head was handed to me in a previous GW debate on another list. The other guy was absolutely right and I was wrong on what I claimed at that time. I publically admitted that I was wrong, thus cutting my losses, saving my credibility for another day.
I seriously doubt that you will acknowledge what the Lorraine and Corson picture shows--that the a non-secular trending function can have a high amplitude in the low frequency range of the data. Somehow I doubt you will agree that California's data is crap. That is all I asked of you, and you can't even seem to doubt that much of your religion of GW. and I doubt that you will admit that the oceans are currently cooling down, as the data, derived from NOAA, clearly shows. See the picture below.