The New Global Cooling Thread. |
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The new Global Cooling thread.
They have pictures and videos of them [IPCC scientists] collecting data. Right... just as I said before, Pleebo is just looking for blind followers of his words, just like his mentor Al Gore.
Bahamut.Ravael said: » I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the people taking the measurements in general didn't use control charts to monitor their processes. Data cleaning becomes a huge mess when measuring equipment gets out of statistical control. Frequent calibration is very important. The methodology of collecting the data was more than likely lax in that aspect. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Leviathan.Chaosx said: » It's more the data and how it relates to all fields of science. That's why they have scientists from all different backgrounds who try to paint a bigger picture. These are supposed to be historical data, but Alt showed reasonable evidence to show that the historical data could be corrupted due to too much alterations and adjustments. Cerberus.Pleebo said: » You know what gets old? People who constantly reinforce their ignorance every time they open their mouths about something they have zero understanding of constantly commenting on or creating these topics and spreading misinformation. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Cerberus.Pleebo said: » You know what gets old? People who constantly reinforce their ignorance every time they open their mouths about something they have zero understanding of constantly commenting on or creating these topics and spreading misinformation. Offline
Posts: 35422
Damn am I the only one that thought this was about the Fonzie spreading coolness ?
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Bahamut.Ravael said: » I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the people taking the measurements in general didn't use control charts to monitor their processes. Data cleaning becomes a huge mess when measuring equipment gets out of statistical control. Frequent calibration is very important. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bahamut.Milamber said: » Lets just say you use a simple pt100 sensor for temperature. What happens if someone places a structure nearby, and the windows during certain parts of the day where you happen to sample reflect light onto the sensor/sensor housing. Repeat ad nauseum for all kinds of reflective sources. That's to be accounted for. That isn't an error, but a prevention of an error to get better data. The previous data isn't compromised. Bahamut.Milamber said: » Perhaps the sensor has had too much condensation or rain/freeze cycles, and now has a thick coating of ice. Perhaps birds have found a nice place to make a nest. Perhaps birds have found a good place to perch overhead, and give the sensor a regular coating of excrement, leading towards ever slower transitions towards ambient temperature. Perhaps you live in a place where people like to vandalize or shoot things, and have damaged the station. If nobody checks on the equipment and/or performs regular maintenance/calibration, then the data will obviously be skewed/tainted. That would be recording error, not equipment error. Bahamut.Milamber said: » Doing things consistently, correctly, and accurately in all circumstances is HARD. Most of those checks are there to explicitly counteract behaviors you would observe in the situations I described. You correct for known faults or errors and throw out any data that meets criteria for exclusion, and try to evaluate the results. Is it perfect? Dear god, no. Is it sufficient to draw any conclusions from? Yes. If you have a specific issue regarding specific data points, then please bring it up. I've used enough time to explain the underlying uncertainties that can occur in the general data collection process. Throwing out data because it doesn't fit with a model is a bad idea. Modifying data to fit a model is a bad idea. Modifying data due to known errors is perfectly acceptable as long as it is stated, as is removing data that has high statistical probability of being an erroneous reading. fonewear said: » Ten pages from now we will be arguing over what "reading" is. fonewear said: » Ten pages from now we will be arguing over what "reading" is. Cerberus.Pleebo said: » Bahamut.Ravael said: » I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the people taking the measurements in general didn't use control charts to monitor their processes. Data cleaning becomes a huge mess when measuring equipment gets out of statistical control. Frequent calibration is very important. I'm halfway through the report. I know where some of the variation is coming from. You'll also see that they don't have anything in there reassuring people that the equipment was properly maintained in the first place. Nice try though. I'm not asking for automatic agreement. I'm asking for your specific criticisms so an actual debate can happen. So far it's just you twits squawking about nothing.
Bahamut.Milamber said: » That's what the checks in the pdf Pleebo linked to are doing... Most of those checks are there to explicitly counteract behaviors you would observe in the situations I described. You correct for known faults or errors and throw out any data that meets criteria for exclusion, and try to evaluate the results. Is it perfect? Dear god, no. Is it sufficient to draw any conclusions from? Yes. If you have a specific issue regarding specific data points, then please bring it up. I've used enough time to explain the underlying uncertainties that can occur in the general data collection process. Throwing out data because it doesn't fit with a model is a bad idea. Modifying data to fit a model is a bad idea. Modifying data due to known errors is perfectly acceptable as long as it is stated, as is removing data that has high statistical probability of being an erroneous reading. My argument is, if the data collected were inherently flawed to the point that normal data scrubbing isn't enough and to use drastic measures to alter the data for it to become "usable," then the data should not be used at all because the method of record-keeping was inadequate. The data is not usable if it requires too much alterations to it that would change "A" to "Z". Neither the raw data nor the adjusted data. Which is why I stated my error ratio example/question. The only solution is to collect the data again, using better recording methodologies. Since these are time-based recordings, it would take decades for us to get usable data again to make sound analysis that the average temperature is rising. Then we can re-evaluate if the methodology is sound or not. Asura.Kingnobody said: » My argument is, if the data collected were inherently flawed to the point that normal data scrubbing isn't enough and to use drastic measures to alter the data for it to become "usable," then the data should not be used at all because the method of record-keeping was inadequate. I don't know if this particular data is so bad it's unusable, but the sheer amount of data scrubbing required due to the inconsistencies described in the report is somewhat alarming. Bahamut.Ravael said: » I'm halfway through the report. I know where some of the variation is coming from. You'll also see that they don't have anything in there reassuring people that the equipment was properly maintained in the first place. Nice try though. Bahamut.Ravael said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » My argument is, if the data collected were inherently flawed to the point that normal data scrubbing isn't enough and to use drastic measures to alter the data for it to become "usable," then the data should not be used at all because the method of record-keeping was inadequate. I don't know if this particular data is so bad it's unusable, but the sheer amount of data scrubbing required due to the inconsistencies described in the report is somewhat alarming. So then which corrections within the report do you think go beyond "normal" and what methods would you consider drastic and why?
Cerberus.Pleebo said: » Bahamut.Ravael said: » I'm halfway through the report. I know where some of the variation is coming from. You'll also see that they don't have anything in there reassuring people that the equipment was properly maintained in the first place. Nice try though. Sure, let's have a look. https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/homr/#ncdcstnid=20018983&tab=MSHR
I just picked a station. Details pretty much anything that happened the station in each of the tabs. Er, alrighty. I'm having trouble finding what it is I'm looking for, though.
Bahamut.Ravael said: » Er, alrighty. I'm having trouble finding what it is I'm looking for, though. Asura.Kingnobody said: » fonewear said: » Ten pages from now we will be arguing over what "reading" is. You can't convince them no more then you can convince a creationist that the world couldn't of possibly been made in a few thousand years. The really crazy part is that most ground sites should be adjusted downward due to them being located at airports and other urban population centers. The urban heat island effect is known to raise temperatures by 1~2°C. So ground temperatures are actually lower then raw data measured. Where did you come up with this assumption?
Bahamut.Kara said: » Where did you come up with this assumption? And I'm not the only one who's noticed that (because you didn't quote me saying that). Asura.Kingnobody said: » The methodology of collecting the data was more than likely lax in that aspect. That is part of it. The other parts are how data collection has changed as we get a greater understanding of what affects land temperature. Here is a good article, Exposure, instrumentation, and observing practice effects on land temperature measurements that goes into some of the history of this. Why structures were changed, locations, instruments, etc. Cerberus.Pleebo said: » I'm not asking for automatic agreement. I'm asking for your specific criticisms so an actual debate can happen. So far it's just you twits squawking about nothing. Nausi, the irony in you using an XKCD comic is staggering.
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