Original link: http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.ca/2015/05/new-paper-finds-large-warming-bias-in.html
A new paper published in the Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics finds that the quality of Northern Hemisphere temperature data has significantly & monotonically decreased since
the year 1969, and that the continued use of 'non-valid' weather
stations in calculating Northern Hemisphere average temperatures has
created a 'positive bias' and "overestimation of temperatures after
including non-valid stations." The paper appears to affirm a number of criticisms of skeptics that station losses, fabricated/infilled data, and positively-biased 'adjustments' to temperature data have created a positive skew to the data and overestimation of warming during the 20th and 21st centuries.
Graphs from the paper below show that use of both valid and 'non-valid' station data results in a mean annual Northern Hemisphere temperature over 1C warmer at the end of the record in 2013 as compared to use of 'valid' weather station data exclusively.
In addition, the paper shows that use of the sharply decreasing number of stations with valid data produces a huge spike in Northern Hemisphere temperatures around ~2004, which is in sharp contrast to much more comprehensive satellite data showing a 'pause' or even cooling over the same period, further calling into question the quality of even the 'valid' land-based stations (urban heat island effects perhaps?).
Using temperature data from "valid" stations only, and a base period of 1961-1990, the warmest temperatures were in the first half of the 20th century. |
Highlights
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- Introduce the concept of a valid station and use for computations.
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- Define indices for data quality and seasonal bias and use for data evaluation.
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- Compute averages for mean and five point summary plus standard deviations.
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- Indicate a monotonically decreasing data quality after the year 1969.
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- Observe an overestimation of temperature after including non-valid stations.