That's quite a lot to get from one set of trees in one tiny part of the Northern Hemisphere, I thought.
True to form, climate change skeptics who only get their information from Watts Up With That were thrilled with the paper. Strangely, it has only turned up on Tim Blair's site in Australia, not Andrew Bolt's yet, but give it another day.
You can bet your last dollar that no more than a few percent of those who note this would read the commentary on the paper at Real Climate, which deals with it as scientists in the field would - pointing out some of its strengths, but also its weakenesses and the reasons to be somewhat cautious about its authors' broader suggestions about the significance of their study. Here's the important section:
Orbital forcing is indeed substantial on the millennial timescale for
high-latitudes during the summer season, and the theoretically expected
cooling trend is seen in proxy reconstructions of Arctic summer
temperature trends (Kaufman et al, 2009). But insolation forcing is near
zero at tropical latitudes, and long-term cooling trends are not seen
in non-tree ring, tropical terrestrial proxy records such as the Lake
Tanganyika (tropical East Africa) (Tierney et al, 2010) (see below).
Long-term orbital forcing over the past 1-2 millennia is also minimal
for annual, global or hemispheric insolation changes, and other natural
forcings such as volcanic and solar radiative forcing have been shown
to be adequate in explaining past long-term pre-industrial temperature
trends in this case (e.g. Hegerl et al, 2007). Esper et al’s speculation
that the potential bias they identify with high-latitude,
summer-temperature TRW tree-ring data carry over to a bias in
hemispheric temperature reconstructions based on multiple types of proxy
records spanning tropics and extratropics, ocean and land, and which
reflect a range of seasons, not just summer (e.g. Hegerl et al, 2006;
Mann et al, 1999;2008) is therefore a stretch.
Indeed, there are a number of lines of evidence that contradict that
more speculative claim. For example, if one eliminates tree-ring data
entirely from the Mann et al (2008)
“EIV” temperature reconstruction (see below; blue curve corresponds to
the case where all tree-ring data have been withheld from the multiproxy
network), one finds not only that the resulting reconstruction is
broadly similar to that obtained with tree-ring data, but in fact the
pre-industrial long-term cooling trend in hemispheric mean temperature
is actually lessened when the tree-ring data are eliminated—precisely the opposite of what is predicted by the Esper et al hypothesis.
As for the way the study is being mis-reported, one comment in the Real Climate thread does note that a significant part of the blame can be put down to Esper's comments in a press release:
Journalists should only be partially blamed for the bad coverage of the latest Jan Esper paper. Some of them wrote stories without interviewing the authors, which is wrong, but the press release issued by JG University in Mainz helps the denialist fringe by including a couple of odd quotes from Esper himself. Take a look at what he says:And some of the Real Climate team do get stuck into that:
http://www.uni-mainz.de/eng/15491.php
“We found that previous estimates of historical temperatures during the Roman era and the Middle Ages were too low,” says Esper. “Such findings are also significant with regard to climate policy, as they will influence the way today’s climate changes are seen in context of historical warm periods.”
I wonder if you guys could please comment on this press release, because it’s very hard for journalists to deal with such vague statements. Do you really think Esper is advocating lowering the tone of the IPCC reports?Interestingly, John Nielsen-Gammon a couple of weeks ago had a long and useful post in which he looked at how a paper on one particular bit of one Antarctic ice shelve had its significance over-inflated by the skeptic press too. He also noted at one point that the press release for that study did what seemed to be some exaggeration of the significance of the findings.
[Response: I have no idea. I'd say it was more related to emphasizing the potential implications of one's own work over anyone else's - a frequent occurrence in press releases. I generally find it prudent to wait for the work on the implications to be done (for instance). - gavin][Response: Gavin is again quite generous. It would appear that Esper's misleading statements and overstatement of larger implications directly fed the sort of denialist frame represented in the Daily Mail article. It is of course impossible, and unwise, to guess at whether or not that was his intent. -mike]
If climate scientists don't want the public to be so easily confused (and for their results to not be so readily twisted by "skeptics" who are motivated to twist it), they really need to be careful with how their work is explained in their own press releases.
As far as I can tell, it makes the increase in temperature since 1900 look worse. His regression lines specifically stop in 1900. At that points the graphs move up sharply again. So the long term cooling appears to have been reversed in the last 100 years.
ReplyDeleteSurely that's not a good thing?