It would be interesting to here your take on the extent to which the divergence of the tree ring data was acknowledged in the IPCC TAR report. Gavin sees the following statement as being an acknowledgement of the divergence in the TAR3
“Furthermore, the biological response to climate forcing may change over time. There is evidence, for example, that high latitude tree-ring density variations have changed in their response to temperature in recent decades, associated with possible nonclimatic factors (Briffa et al., 1998a).” from http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/pdf/TAR-02.pdf
Was the divergence discussed in TAR4?
How much of an issue is the divergence for the overall validity of tree rings as temperature proxies?
It would be interesting to here your take on the extent to which the divergence of the tree ring data was acknowledged in the IPCC TAR report.
ReplyDeleteGavin sees the following statement as being an acknowledgement of the divergence in the TAR3
“Furthermore, the biological response to climate forcing may change over time. There is evidence, for example, that high latitude tree-ring density variations have changed in their response
to temperature in recent decades, associated with possible nonclimatic factors (Briffa et al., 1998a).”
from
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/pdf/TAR-02.pdf
Was the divergence discussed in TAR4?
How much of an issue is the divergence for the overall validity of tree rings as temperature proxies?
@bernie
ReplyDeleteWhy not checking yourself?
In AR4 there are a bit more than two paragraphs on the divergence problem.
Georg
ReplyDeleteYou are right on the AR4. I am still interested in a response to my initial question on AR3 and on Gavin's position.
Check out Steve McIntyre's latest. http://climateaudit.org/2009/12/10/ipcc-and-the-trick/
ReplyDeleteIf Mann vs. McIntyre were a boxing match, they'd have stopped it years ago for humane reasons. Mike's credibility has sunk about as low as it can go.