Crux of a Core, Part 1 - addressing J Storrs Hall

Over the past couple of years perusing the internet on climate issues I have repeatedly come upon various misrepresentations of the GISP2 ice core record here and here and here and here and here and here and here and here and here. (I could literally list at least a 100 more locations where I find this exact same argument on the internet. You can google: "hockey stick gisp2" and see.) Each misrepresentation misses the very basic point that an ice core - any ice core or any other proxy - is a local record of temperature.  Using a single ice core record as a proxy for global temperature is a little like reading the thermometer on your back porch and claiming you know the global average temperature.

Fig. 1: GISP2 as presented on Watts Up With That, conflating a local record with a global record.

One of the major challenges in today's world is that misinformation pops up and propagates like rabid bunnies before the scientific community can effectively address the erroneous information.

The original source of this specific misinformation seems to come from J Storrs Hall, a nano technology engineer from the Foresight Institute. When this blog post hit the internet it quickly made the rounds to all the popular climate skeptic blogs and is now a permanent resident of the "interweb" and continues to misinform people.

Let's get to the crux of this core. First, let's look at where it's located. We find the core comes from the summit of the Greenland Ice Sheet at 72.6 N 38.5 W at an elevation of 3200 meters. This is well above the Arctic Circle and very high in altitude as well. The location is logical because this is where one would expect to drill in order to find the oldest ice possible.

Fig. 2: Google Earth image for the location of the GISP2 project.

Hall presents GISP2 as if it were a global record and makes no attempts to clarify that it is not nor does he even hint that he has any inclination that this is the case. On a whim I decided to send a brief email to Dr Richard Alley, one of the principal investigators for the GISP2 temperature reconstruction. He very kindly abliged me with a response saying, "GISP2 is GISP2, not the world" and also directed me to an article on Andy Revkin's DotEarth blog where he addresses the issue more in depth.

Let's not just take Dr Alley's word from the NYT. What we can do is look directly at the research. In Alley 2010 History of the Greenland Ice Sheet: paleoclimatic insights we find in section 2.2.6, they state "Preferential condensation of the heavier species [of O18 isotopes] causes them to be progressively depleted in air mass, and thus in precipitation, with cooling. Although linked to a site temperature, O18 is affected by the seasonal distribution of precipitation and other factors (Joezel et al., 1997; Alley Cuffey, 2001), requiring additional paleothermometers." This clearly tells us that oxygen isotope ratios (like the ones used for GISP2) are measuring a local record of temperature for the summit of the Greenland ice sheet, and are not a global proxy.

But, what does this mean? Still we are left with data that suggests the Holocene, even if it's just northern latitudes or even just Greenland, has been far warmer than today. When we begin to bring in more lines of evidence we get a clearer picture of the Holocene. More importantly, we actually understand that the gradual cooling since the Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) has been driven by changes in the tilt of the planet, so aptly demonstrated via Dr Alley's bald spot (and thereby giving new purpose to my own polar thinning). 

Fig. 3: Composite diagram of Holocene temperature records (data sources here).

In Miller 2010 (section 12.2) they describe the cooling trend over the past 6k years as a "Neoglaciation." They state, "Where quantitative estimates of temperature change are available, they generally indicate that summer temperature has decreased by 1-2C during this initial phase of cooling." This is a far cry from what Mr Hall is attempting to indicate with his presentation of GISP2 data, and arguably we have now warmed the planet again - in spite of an early phase of obliquity forced glaciation - by almost half the natural cooling of the Holocene. This again corroborates Dr Alley's statement during the subcommittee hearing that "Based on about 5 lines of evidence the HTM was about 1C warmer than today." Miller 2010 actually goes a little further and lists the following:

(Note: These are not directly related to the diagram in Fig 3.)

If we take a quick stop back at the IPCC to look at radiative forcing from GHG's you can easily see why the planet has warmed since preindustrial times and created a reversal of this neoglaciation.

Fig 4: Chart from IPCC AR4 Working Group I: The Physical Science Basis (Scale: 10k yrs to present)

So, what's the take away?

As Churchill is once purported to have said, "A lie gets half way around the world before the truth has a chance to get its trousers on." This was never more true than with J Storrs Hall's misrepresentation of the GISP2 data.

It's our job, folks, to help the truth get its trousers on.

 

In Part 2 of this article I will address misrepresentations coming from Dr Bob Carter's use of the GISP2 ice core.

- - - - - - - - - - -

Special thanks to Dr. Alley for taking a few moments out of his busy schedule and very important work to answer a few questions. 

Be sure to check out Peter Sinclair's Climate Denier Crock of the Week video on this same topic.

 

Posted by Rob Honeycutt on Saturday, 26 February, 2011


Creative Commons License The Skeptical Science website by Skeptical Science is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.