<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15587540#post15587540 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
Stu, after multiple very long threads, and having it pointed out to you multiple times you're STILL arguing against a point about past climate change that no one has tried to make.
Find a single scientist who has ever claimed that ALL climate change (now or in the past) has been due to humans. I think you'll be pretty hard pressed to even find any who are surprised that CO2 wasn't the original cause of warming 19,000 years ago, given that it's been known for quite a while that the CO2 didn't start climbing until well after the warming. The more important question though is how are the points your trying to make even relevant to modern warming? Once again, the fact that a different sequence of events occurred in the past is no argument about what is occurring now.
GCMs are based on physical relationships, not temporal relationships, so which came first doesn't matter. If permafrost melts at 33 degrees it doesn't matter whether that temperature came from solar variation or increased CO2. When that thawed vegetation rots it yields a certain amount of methane regardless of why it melted. That methane breaks down into a certain amount of CO2 regardless of its source and that amount of CO2 has a physically constrained radiative forcing regardless of where it came from or how fast you add it. The sun doesn't know or care if that CO2 was a feedback or the original forcing.How can we base models of future climate change upon past climate changes that have entirely different time course and cause/effect relationships?
Well he was clearly paraphrasing Naomi Oreskes' conclusion which was essentially that she read almost 1000 abstracts and they all agreed.If he had stated that he had read 1000 articles and they all agreed then that COULD be a true statement.
Give it a shot. I think you will find it a lot harder than you think. I'll give you a hint though: look in the gray literature in non-ISI journals.Therefore it is a statement that is easily proven false and one that is hard to prove true without examining ALL articles ever published on the subject.
I read the article and never saw this conclusion. Orbital wobbles and procession on the axis as the cause for ice ages has been the mainstream view since the early 1920s. The heyday of the idea that they were caused by changes in CO2 predates that. I don't see anything in the article suggesting that the new paper makes any case other than that what had already been hypothesized is true. As the article itself says, "they confirmed a theory that was first developed more than 50 years ago that pointed to small but definable changes in Earth's rotation as the trigger for ice ages."I merely pointed out that article as yet another example of how the scientists had it wrong. The article even states that.
The Earth axis tilt issue is another disturbance to the "system" that was not modeled properly.
No one commented on it because it's nothing more than an untested hypothesis. It has no legs and at this point there's not much to discuss about it. Sure there are estimates that it may have resulted by noticeable warming, but they're unsupported and brought to you by some of the same people who claim that we have been cooling since 1998. There is no known mechanism by which GCMs affect climate on the decadal to centennial scale. There is no measured effect. For the last 40 years when most of the observed warming has occurred, GCMs don't even show correlation with temperature. The best proposed mechanism is that they cause increased cloud formation, but the real world patterns don't fit the predictions of that hypothesis. You don't see a greater effect at high latitudes where GCM flux is greatest and cloud formation lags GCMs by several months (when the lag should be days at the most if the proposed mechanism is right) before the correlation breaks down completely about 15 years ago.No-one commented on one of my previous examples of an un-modeled disturbance: The fact that Cosmic radiation flux varies wrt the Earth over periods of millions to 10s of millions of years as the earth orbits around the galactic center.
By some estimates it may have varied enough to cause noticeable warming.
Sure, if you go back to the early Greeks, back before the basis of science as a discipline was even established.Wasnt there a time where great minds agreed that the earth was flat?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15602398#post15602398 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
GCMs are based on physical relationships, not temporal relationships, so which came first doesn't matter. If permafrost melts at 33 degrees it doesn't matter whether that temperature came from solar variation or increased CO2. When that thawed vegetation rots it yields a certain amount of methane regardless of why it melted. That methane breaks down into a certain amount of CO2 regardless of its source and that amount of CO2 has a physically constrained radiative forcing regardless of where it came from or how fast you add it. The sun doesn't know or care if that CO2 was a feedback or the original forcing.
Yes, and that error would be apparent when you go to validate the model and it has little skill in replicating reality.My modeling results are very likely to be in great error.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15603613#post15603613 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
Yes, and that error would be apparent when you go to validate the model and it has little skill in replicating reality.
No one takes valid bits and assume that the whole must therefore be valid.
They're validated against direct observations and against reconstructions of the distant past. They have to pass both tests to be considered robust and useful for forecasting. The model only knows the initial conditions, the change in each parameter over time, and the relationships between parameters. It doesn't know or care whether it's starting a run from 800 BC, 1889, or 2009.From what I have read in the literature they are validating there models against historical data going back thousands of years. In the historical data, the CO2 changes lag the temperature changes. Therefore, they are validating the models against scenarios that are not appropriate for a proper validation. They aren't appropriate for validation because there are entirely different system of processes/interactions occuring than anthropogenic warming.
No, that's not at all what I said. The models are made up of assumptions, which are either justified by direct observations or physical relationships. The model still has to be validated as a whole.You yourself just said in a previous post that the models are based upon physical principles and thats why historical data that does not represent anthropogenic climate change can be used to validate them for use at predicting anthropogenic climate change. In fact, not everything in those models is a hard physical law. When you start considering all of the assumptions, estimations, approximations, etc. within these models it is much harder to have any faith in the validity of the model as a whole simply based upon the validity of the pieces.
You're free to reiterate that, but I think most scientists would disagree with you. Modeling is used to take observations and make and test predictions. That's the basis of science. Models are nothing more than another kind of experiment. They're fundamental in just about every branch of science where actual controlled lab tests are too expensive, impractical, or impossible- ecology, molecular biology, astronomy, geology, oceanography, physics, chemistry, etc.Let me reiterate that modeling is not science.
In relation to climate change, it has no legs. The fact that the earth is bombarded by GCRs is well established. The link to climate change, especially as a significant driver is not established.I wouldnt say NO legs:
Nor would they be useful to model. Models are interested in trends. Rare occurrences with no trend or cyclicity on relevant timescales can be ignored, especially if they render the question posed by the model moot.Yet another example of "outside disturbances" to our climate that cannot be modeled.
Stu, you have a very serious problem with assessing the credibility of sources. We've already addressed this exact article before, too.I suppose Rossini will just dismiss this article by 'Don J. Easterbrook: Professor Emeritus of Geology at Western Washington University' as another "single suspect maverick scientist":
Not if the logic it uses is horrible.But we cant trust an article that uses logic & the scientific method now can we?
Again, global cooling. Not just any cooling though, but significant cooling. Yes, they are kooks AND liars if they read the letter and signed their names to it.These 130 scientists must all be KOOKs too!
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15631094#post15631094 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
They're validated against direct observations and against reconstructions of the distant past. They have to pass both tests to be considered robust and useful for forecasting. The model only knows the initial conditions, the change in each parameter over time, and the relationships between parameters. It doesn't know or care whether it's starting a run from 800 BC, 1889, or 2009.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15631094#post15631094 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
Your CO2 flux example is actually a good one for why the relationship is what matters, not the order of events. You can create simple models of CO2 flux based on temperature, alkalinity, and partial pressure of CO2 that are excellent at reproducing reality based on the relationship of those three parameters. It doesn't matter whether the system is absorbing or releasing CO2, heating up or cooling down, or alkalinity is rising or falling. The same model still works..[/B]
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15631094#post15631094 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
No, that's not at all what I said. The models are made up of assumptions, which are either justified by direct observations or physical relationships. The model still has to be validated as a whole..[/B]
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15631094#post15631094 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by greenbean36191
You're free to reiterate that, but I think most scientists would disagree with you. Modeling is used to take observations and make and test predictions. That's the basis of science. Models are nothing more than another kind of experiment. They're fundamental in just about every branch of science where actual controlled lab tests are too expensive, impractical, or impossible- ecology, molecular biology, astronomy, geology, oceanography, physics, chemistry, etc. [/B]