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Originally posted by The_Liberator
After Mez apologizes and retracts those 2 falsehoods that he, no doubt, mistakenly interjected into the debate, I am curious to know his (and the other deniars) rationalization for ocean acidification:
www.sciencedaily.com...
Is that also a hoax/conspiracy?
Originally posted by The_Liberator
reply to post by Nathan-D
The oceans are absorbing less CO2 than they used to.
www.physorg.com...
Originally posted by melatonin
The Trick was actually deleting a whole bank of data as it contradicted the policy, namely the Medieval Warming period. Alas, it ceased to be Met Office data once the records were edited (deleted) so please stop referring to the data as such.
Originally posted by Mez353
Fair enough if you don’t want to respond to my questions and feel that Mel has done enough, it’s your prerogative. It’s also my prerogative to consider that the reason you won’t is that either a) you know that it shows that the dataset is corrupt compared to the original Met office data (namely the deletion of the medieval Warming period) and will produce a drastically different scenario to the hockey stick of alarm or b) you have something else to hide.
Originally posted by Mez353
I’m getting the feeling that this thread is inhabited by people whose prime function is to vanquish informed assessment of local conditions with swaddling cloths of ignorance and prejudice instilled in them by what passes for higher education. You even considered the description I used of your childish behaviour (retarded) as an insult when it was just an adjective that adequately describes you mannerisms and insulting ramblings.
It’s not the ‘trick’ that’s generating the fuss by the way, it’s the term ‘hide the decline’. You focus on the word trick because you can explain that away as something genial, try explaining the words ‘hide the decline’.
Regurgitate biased claptrap all you want but the facts are out there. Try this…
‘The data that CRU discarded was an copy of an archive of the original Met office data - they archive their processed data.’
From the CRU web page
www.cru.uea.ac.uk...
We are not in a position to supply data for a particular country not covered by the example agreements referred to earlier, as we have never had sufficient resources to keep track of the exact source of each individual monthly value. Since the 1980s, we have merged the data we have received into existing series or begun new ones, so it is impossible to say if all stations within a particular country or if all of an individual record should be freely available. Data storage availability in the 1980s meant that we were not able to keep the multiple sources for some sites, only the station series after adjustment for homogeneity issues. We, therefore, do not hold the original raw data but only the value-added (i.e. quality controlled and homogenized) data.
These datasets (the latest being CRUTEM3 www.cru.uea.ac.uk...) have been developed from data acquired from weather stations around the world. Almost all these weather stations are run by National Meteorological Services (NMSs) and they exchange these data over the CLIMAT network, which is part of the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO) Global Telecommunications System (GTS).
The original data used to create its global temperature record has been lost!?
Not only is it now impossible to repeat the study – which is probably a good idea considering the furore and also as new information is learned continually-- but it is now also impossible to create a new temperature index from scratch. CRU is basically saying, "trust us." So much for settling questions and resolving debates with empirical information (i.e., science).
Boy – homework – dog - ate
Originally posted by Mez353
reply to post by atlasastro
Miss, miss, Mez's eating in class miss! Okay, whatever. My point was I'd cited the reference to the site many times earlier, just missed one as it was late. Are you a traffic warden by any chance?
Anyway, you've contributed 3 posts, two having a go at my lack of citation for a site I've referenced alot in previous posts and one other. That makes 2 out of 3 posts that could be deemed OFF TOPIC. Thought I'd point that out, seeming as your a stickler for the rules. Getting battered in The Ashes getting to ya?edit on 5/12/2010 by Mez353 because: to nitpick
Originally posted by Mez353
‘As I said, a number of pages ago: this is analogous to Bristol-Myers discarding a copy of an original dataset that they acquired from the FDA. ‘
No it’s not and you know it. The data was changed, the evidence was deleted when it should’ve been archived as it was now new data and now nobody can repeat the study. Otherwise they’d just go to the Met office and get the same data wouldn’t they? Or are you saying that the scientists can get the exact same data from the Met office, which is unadulterated and repeat the study? They can’t since the data set was modified and the parameters of the dataset that was modified have been DELETED.
What are the basic raw data used?
Over land regions of the world over 3000 monthly station temperature time series are used. Coverage is denser over the more populated parts of the world, particularly, the United States, southern Canada, Europe and Japan. Coverage is sparsest over the interior of the South American and African continents and over the Antarctic. The number of available stations was small during the 1850s, but increases to over 3000 stations during the 1951-90 period. For marine regions sea surface temperature (SST) measurements taken on board merchant and some naval vessels are used. As the majority come from the voluntary observing fleet, coverage is reduced away from the main shipping lanes and is minimal over the Southern Oceans. Maps/tables giving the density of coverage through time are given for land regions by Jones and Moberg (2003) and for the oceans by Rayner et al. (2003). Both these sources also extensively discuss the issue of consistency and homogeneity of the measurements through time and the steps that have made to ensure all non-climatic inhomogeneities have been removed.
They can’t since the data set was modified and the parameters of the dataset that was modified have been DELETED.
Originally posted by Mez353
You can’t even read mate. I never said that they ran weather stations all over the world so where’d ya get that from loony? I said they changed data that they got from the met.
www.americanthinker.com...
And only the lowliest would apply a hack in order to produce a desired result.
and that data was deleted as it was not 'required anymore'. I wok in the pharma industry, if we did that we'd be shut down.
What I am referring to, and need no help with thankyou, is the "accidental" deletion of temperature data by head of the CRU Phil Jones and the bogus data aggregation procedure used by scientists that "renders the [temperature readings] totally meaningless," and the fact that the University of East Anglia is still denying that there was any wrong doing.
The Trick was actually deleting a whole bank of data as it contradicted the policy, namely the Medieval Warming period. Alas, it ceased to be Met Office data once the records were edited (deleted) so please stop referring to the data as such.
The original data used to create its global temperature record has been lost!?
Not only is it now impossible to repeat the study...
The data was changed, the evidence was deleted when it should’ve been archived as it was now new data and now nobody can repeat the study. Otherwise they’d just go to the Met office and get the same data wouldn’t they?
Er, no. Not at all. The processed data becomes new data in the eyes of the FDA, IMB, BMC et al. And thus must be retained for the qualifying retention period. This adequately backs up my point that the CRU should’ve retained their processed data, using your analogy. If in doubt check the Code of Federal Regulations (21 CFR Part 11).
Data storage availability in the 1980s meant that we were not able to keep the multiple sources for some sites, only the station series after adjustment for homogeneity issues. We, therefore, do not hold the original raw data but only the value-added (i.e. quality controlled and homogenized) data.
Originally posted by Mez353
This is an example of what CRU did to develop the new data:
*copypasta*
Now Mel, Libby et al, what is your problem with that?
Addition of CO2
The addition (or removal) of CO2 to a solution does not change the alkalinity. This is because the net reaction produces the same number of equivalents of positively contributing species (H+) as negative contributing species (HCO3- and/or CO3--).