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imperfecto del subjuntivo
That's ridiculous. If you have a point make it.
It's just your total inability to understand it. Face it, dude or dudette!
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That's ridiculous. If you have a point make it.
Prima facie I found no reason to suspect the information is incorrect. The issue is how the information is showed to force twisted conclusions. I'm sure you can find out why.
Read McIntyre's site. Lately he's spent time on a rebuttal of the silly Lewandowsky survey, which is taking a howitzer to a mosquito. His larger issue is with protocols of data selection and analysis. He argues that it's improper to hunt for results in limited data sets without specifying in advance what limits determined the data set ...
... since every possible shape inhabits a sufficiently large data set (go back to the sculptor who chips away everything that doesn't look like a horse, or whatever). Select the points you want from this space:...
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.and you can produce any shape you desire. Hockey stick, saw-tooth, exponential, whatever.
This was the issue with McIntyre's pursuit of the Yamal dendrochronologies. There were more sample sites available than Mann, et. al. used. They resisted McIntyre's efforts to get the raw data. The expanded data set (all available chronologies in the region) did not produce the signal that Mann. et. al. found.
Also, arguments wihout ad hominem suggest confidence.
Standardised anomoly isn't the most obvious choice for the y-axis. I've very little stats background, but doing it this way does seem to make the Antarctic trend greater than the basic anolomy trend, as shown at tamino's http://tamino.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/poles-apart/. Perhaps it was chosen for that very reason?
My instincts point me at this; I'll have to think it over Antarctic sea-ice extent is less variable than Arctic sea-ice extent, so the standard deviation is presumably smaller, so "number of standard deviations from average" exaggerates the actual variation. Or something like that?
I bet you can't substantiate this your claim with a proper peer reviewed paper.
"So along comes Steve McIntyre, self-styled slayer of hockey sticks, who declares without any evidence whatsoever that Briffa didn’t just reprocess the data from the Russians, but instead supposedly picked through it to give him the signal he wanted. These allegations have been made without any evidence whatsoever.
McIntyre has based his ‘critique’ on a test conducted by randomly adding in one set of data from another location in Yamal that he found on the internet. People have written theses about how to construct tree ring chronologies in order to avoid end-member effects and preserve as much of the climate signal as possible. Curiously no-one has ever suggested simply grabbing one set of data, deleting the trees you have a political objection to and replacing them with another set that you found lying around on the web."
I have this, if it helps :
You're quite right!
That graphic is a masterpiece of manipulation. Even the choice of colours is made to provoke in the unaware -99.9% of population- the perception of "well, what a pole loses the other one gains, so nothing happens"
I expected something like that to be the kind of source behind that, but I still have hopes that Malcolm is somewhat serious and he'll be able to provide a peer reviewed paper supporting his claim.
"A chronology using only the recent data from either POR or YAD will exhibit a greater 20th century increase in growth than one based on JAH, but one based only on KHAD, as in McIntyre's experiment, is the most anomalous and, therefore, arguably the least defensible."
Read McIntyre's site.
Standardised anomoly isn't the most obvious choice for the y-axis. I've very little stats background, but doing it this way does seem to make the Antarctic trend greater than the basic anolomy trend, as shown at tamino's http://tamino.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/poles-apart/. Perhaps it was chosen for that very reason?
My instincts point me at this; I'll have to think it over Antarctic sea-ice extent is less variable than Arctic sea-ice extent, so the standard deviation is presumably smaller, so "number of standard deviations from average" exaggerates the actual variation. Or something like that?
Standardised anomoly isn't the most obvious choice for the y-axis. I've very little stats background, but doing it this way does seem to make the Antarctic trend greater than the basic anolomy trend, as shown at tamino's http://tamino.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/poles-apart/. Perhaps it was chosen for that very reason?
My instincts point me at this; I'll have to think it over Antarctic sea-ice extent is less variable than Arctic sea-ice extent, so the standard deviation is presumably smaller, so "number of standard deviations from average" exaggerates the actual variation. Or something like that?
Pretty close, but remember standard deviation is a measure of how much difference there is between data points. The difference between data points in Arctic sea ice is big because more than half of it has disappeared over the last decade. Or put another way the standard deviation is smaller in the Antarctic because the ice hasn't changed much.
This is Briffa's response to McIntyre's attack on his integrity and competence :
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/people/briffa/yamal2000/
with an expansion at http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/people/briffa/yamal2009/
I doubt that anyone who argues in your style has much to offer except a bad example.Malcolm, you really don't know what you are talking about here.
I have offered to tutor you...
Why don't you apply that standard to those who cite Skeptical Science?No. If you can;'t be bothered to present the arguments yourself (and support them with peer reviewed literature if required) then they have no value to the discussion. Stop trying to outsource your arguments, make your case yourself using your own words.
Questions:P.S.
Malcolm Kirkpatrick:Originally Posted by Reality Check
Malcolm Kirkpatrick: Species of Foraminifera could not adapt to CO2 changes that took millions of years to happen.
What do you think will happen to Foraminifera when CO2 changes over decades?
First asked 10 September 2012
11 days and counting!
George Orwell, "Politics and the English Language".That's ridiculous. If you have a point make it.
Now that I have made this catalogue of swindles and perversions, let me give another example of the kind of writing that they lead to. This time it must of its nature be an imaginary one. I am going to translate a passage of good English into modern English of the worst sort. Here is a well-known verse from Ecclesiastes:
I returned and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all.
Here it is in modern English:
Objective considerations of contemporary phenomena compel the conclusion that success or failure in competitive activities exhibits no tendency to be commensurate with innate capacity, but that a considerable element of the unpredictable must invariably be taken into account.
I have to consider this. I'm hanging on "traps heat". I wonder what happens to thermometers wrapped in insulation that is painted in various colors and shades of grey, floating in space in orbit around the sun. Don't they all reach the same temperature if they're all composed of the same material (mercury or alcohol in calibrated glass tubes) and orbit at the same distance?Malcolm, could you please take the time to reply to the above?
I have to consider this. I'm hanging on "traps heat". I wonder what happens to thermometers wrapped in insulation that is painted in various colors and shades of grey, floating in space in orbit around the sun. Don't they all reach the same temperature if they're all composed of the same material (mercury or alcohol in calibrated glass tubes) and orbit at the same distance?
Questions:
a) What rate of change in atmospheric CO2 do you anticipate?
b) How do you infer that "species of foraminifera could not adapt to CO2 changes that took millions of years"? Species go extinct in, broadly speaking, two ways: they evolve into different species or they leave no descendants. A high rate of extinction at the species level might mean no more than a rapid rate of evolution.
Can you understand the inanity of ignoring the most relevent event in that citation:Approximately 40% of Bentham foraminifera species went extinct at the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (55 million years ago), which included a strong ocean acidification event (Zachos et al., 2005; Kump et al., 2009).Can you understand that the topic is ocean acidifcation and its effects on foraminifera? The effect is that species go extinct.
c) Why suppose that extinction rates that coincide with increase or decrease in CO2 levels are caused by CO2 changes? Both extinction and CO2 might be responding to some other factor.
But you're not here to discuss things, aren't you, Malcolm? You do think that your puerile and desperate distortion of the opponent words are quips and that you pushed out Megalodon from the discussion, so you try to do "the same" with Reality Check. Hilarious! You probably think that a bad tv program is powerful because it pushes its audience towards other channels.Is there precedence in Earth history for the rapid release of carbon dioxide (CO2) by fossil fuel burning and its environmental consequences? Proxy evidence indicates that atmospheric CO2 concentrations were higher during long warm intervals in the geologic past, and that these conditions did not prevent the precipitation and accumulation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) as limestone; accumulation of alkalinity brought to the ocean by rivers kept surface waters supersaturated. But these were steady states, not perturbations. More rapid additions of carbon dioxide during extreme events in Earth history, including the end-Permian mass extinction (251 million years ago) and the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, 56 million years ago) may have driven surface waters to undersaturation, although the evidence supporting this assertion is weak. Nevertheless, observations and modeling clearly show that during the PETM the deep ocean, at least, became highly corrosive to CaCO3. These same models applied to modern fossil fuel release project a substantial decline in surface water saturation state in the next century. So, there may be no precedent in Earth history for the type of disruption we might expect from the phenomenally rapid rate of carbon addition associated with fossil fuel burning.