Stephen McIntyre Profile picture
Apr 30 23 tweets 9 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
most readers are familiar with famous "hide the decline" from Climategate. Below are 1850-2000 parts of 5 series calculated from Asian tree ring data, explained below. I recently received some fantastic PAGES2k reverse engineering from @detgodehab and am re-visiting. Image
The data illustrated below comes from
(1) original Briffa 2001 Asian series with late 20th century decline (chopped off in Mann's IPCC diagram);
(2) average of Asian series in gridded MXD series sent by Briffa/Osborn to Rutherford and Mann, ostensible input in Mann 2008
(3) average of (the 45) gridded MXD as used in Mann 2008. As discussed long ago at Climate Audit, Mann chopped off the offending declines and replaced them with temperature data. This was a different incident to the IPCC diagram or the 1999 WMO "hide the decline" diagram.
(4) PAGES2K (2013) introduced a novel Asia reconstruction (Cook et al) from tree rings in which late 20th C decline observed in Schweingruber data did not exist. Closing values were similar to high values at mid-20th century. The difference was not reconciled by PAGES2K.
(5) the current PAGES reconstruction - the "Woke Reconstruction" for short and used in IPCC AR6 - contained a subset of the PAGES2K Asia dset, the average of which yields a monster blade. The "decline" is in the Woke rear-view mirror.
A few years ago, I had noticed that some of the tree ring chronologies underlying the Woke Reconstruction had enormous closing blades that did not appear possible to replicate using standard methodologies.
climateaudit.org/2021/08/15/pag…
I did a couple of Twitter threads as well:
I asked two lead authors of PAGES 2019 about the provenance of the Asian tree ring series, but got nowhere. They didn't consider that they had any responsibility as lead authors of a Nature article to answer questions about their data. ImageImage
The underlying reference (Cook et al 2013) contained only a single sentence as purported description of chronology methodology: that they took "considerable care" to avoid 'segment length curse', with "partial use" of a novel technique then recently introduced by UEA's Tom Melvin Image
the keepers of these chronologies were at Columbia U which resolutely refused data when I was trying to figure out Hockey Stick mysteries. Jacoby: "Fifteen years is not a delay. It is a time for poorer quality data to be neglected and not archived."
climateaudit.org/2005/02/06/jac…
anyway, reader @detodehab got intrigued with the puzzling Asian tree ring chronologies and reverse engineered their calculation. He replicated the results to every detail. No one could have possibly imagined the actual calculation from details in PAGES2K or Cook et al 2013.
It's hard for a statistical methodology to be so bad as to be "wrong". Mann's principal components methodology was one seemingly unique example. PAGES2K's Asian tree ring chronologies are another. It's worse than anyone can imagine.
unfortunately, exposition of the defective calculation are technical and will take some time. But for now, the monster blade of the "Woke" PAGES 2019 Asian tree ring data is bogus. PAGES2019 selectively chose the biggest blades, nearly all of which come from bogus chronologies. Image
I have a question for readers on order of exposition. Which should come first:
1) narrative of detective work by which calculation was reverse engineered
2) pathologies of PAGES2K Asia tree ring methodology
Not all Asia chronologies are pathological, but biggest blades are.
on the left is description of PAGES Asia2K chronologies and on right is my brief description of their actual algorithm as deduced by @detgodehab and verified by me. I'll return later to how he figured this out. For now, the pathologies of the method. ImageImage
I'll describe the pathologies of the PAGES2K Asia algorithm more or less as we discussed them in DMs over past few weeks. @detgodehab had begun with analysis of paki033, the series that I had featured in a 2021 thread and blog article. climateaudit.org/2021/08/15/pag…
@detgodehab had ported the algorithm to Octave. The paki033 iteration stopped after 20 iterations. So let's look at the evolution of the chronology. It opened as nondescript series on left and closed with big blade. On right is sequence of steps showing emergence of closing blade ImageImage
what happened to individual cores? Tree ring "chronologies" are calculated as the difference between measurements and smooth (pseudo-model). Between start and close, the 'model' moved closer to zero at the close, so that contribution to chronology (shown on right) increased bigly Image
this looked very suspicious as a procedure. An obvious question was whether the monster blades in certain PAGES2K chronologies were some sort of artefact, as opposed to "climate". So I suggested that @detgodehab see what happens when last 50 years of data not used? As a test. Image
bingo. Excluding the last 50 years of data, paki033 had an even bigger blade //50 years earlier//. For good measure, @detgodehab did test excluding 25 years and got same big blade //25 years earlier//. ImageImage
so it was very clear that the big blade being produced by the PAGES2K Asia chronologies was bogus and some sort of artefact of their methodology and NOT due to climate. This doesn't disprove global warming. It is only relevant to PAGES2K.
Also, PAGES2K uses much other data. Nor are all Asia 2K chronologies calculated with this bogus methodology. But PAGES2019 selected the worst and most bogus chronologies (claiming they were the best) and that's why there's the monster blade shown in opening tweet. Image
while it's evident that the PAGES2K Asia methodology was pathological, when @detgodehab chopped off 100 years, it didn't produce a blade. I haven't parsed this to see why. There are many mysteries in the algorithm which I'll continue to describe. Image

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