ROBUSTNESS OF THE MANN, BRADLEY, HUGHES RECONSTRUCTION OF NORTHERN HEMISPHERE SURFACE TEMPERATURES:
EXAMINATION OF CRITICISMS BASED ON THE NATURE AND PROCESSING OF PROXY CLIMATE EVIDENCE
EUGENE R. WAHL1 and CASPAR M. AMMANN2
1 Environmental Studies and Geology Division, Alfred University, Alfred, New York, U.S.A.
2 National Center for Atmospheric Research , Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A.
Climatic Change
May 10, 2005 -- In review
September 27, 2005 -- Revised
December 12, 2005 -- Provisionally Accepted
February 28, 2006 -- Accepted for Publication
Abstract
The Mann et al. (1998) Northern Hemisphere annual temperature
reconstruction over 1400-1980 is examined in light of recent
criticisms concerning the nature and processing of included climate
proxy data. A systematic sequence of analyses is presented that
examine issues concerning the proxy evidence, utilizing both indirect
analyses via exclusion of proxies and processing steps subject to
criticism, and direct analyses of principal component (PC) processing
methods in question. Altogether new reconstructions over 1400-1980
are developed in both the indirect and direct analyses, which
demonstrate that the Mann et al. reconstruction is robust against the
proxy-based criticisms addressed. In particular, reconstructed
hemispheric temperatures are demonstrated to be largely unaffected by
the use or non-use of PCs to summarize proxy evidence from the
data-rich North American region. When proxy PCs are employed, neither
the time period used to "center" the data before PC calculation nor
the way the PC calculations are performed significantly affects the
results, as long as the full extent of the climate information
actually in the proxy data is represented by the PC time series.
Clear convergence of the resulting climate reconstructions is a strong
indicator for achieving this criterion. Also, recent "corrections" to
the Mann et al. reconstruction that suggest 15th century temperatures
could have been as high as those of the late-20th century are shown to
be without statistical and climatological merit. Our examination does
suggest that a slight modification to the original Mann et
al. reconstruction is justifiable for the first half of the 15th
century (~ +0.05°), which leaves entirely unaltered the primary
conclusion of Mann et al. (as well as many other reconstructions) that
both the 20th century upward trend and high late-20th century
hemispheric surface temperatures are anomalous over at least the last
600 years. Our results are also used to evaluate the separate
criticism of reduced amplitude in the Mann et al. reconstructions over
significant portions of 1400-1900, in relation to some other climate
reconstructions and model-based examinations. We find that, from the
perspective of the proxy data themselves, such losses probably exist,
but they may be smaller than those reported in other recent work.
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Use R-Code of Wahl-Ammann emulation of MBH Northern Hemisphere Climate Reconstruction
Caspar Ammann
Last modified: Fri Mar 3 13:00:00 MDT 2006