Was The Medieval Warm Period ‘Regional?’
Some commenters yesterday noted that the climate establishment has not just completely ignored the threat to their orthodoxy posed by the Medieval Warm Period and other similarly-warm pre-human-emissions eras.
Initially, there was a recognition that this issue could be important, and there was definitely some attempt to deal with it.
However, over time, the accumulation of evidence, particularly as to the existence Medieval Warm Period as a global phenomenon, gradually became overwhelming.
So — in the face of evidence that, under the normal precepts of the scientific method, would be deemed to invalidate the hypothesis that only human CO2 emissions could be causing current warming — how can the orthodoxy be kept alive?
The answer, almost entirely, has been to resort to the hand-waving of “detection and attribution” studies, and hope nobody notices. And, to a remarkable extent, nobody notices.
Readers may be interested in a short history of this issue.
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The initial IPCC Assessment Reports that came out in the 1990s contained graphs of climate history showing that the Medieval Warm Period was warmer than the current period, despite the human CO2 emissions in the current period. In the late 90s, the clique of climate “scientists” principally responsible for the preparation of the next IPCC report, due in 2001, recognized this as a problem.
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In approximately 1996, a scientist named David Deming received an email from a member of the inside clique named Jonathan Overpeck. Deming later described the email in testimony before the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works. Deming’s testimony is quoted in a 2013 post at Watts Up With That as follows: “With the publication of the article in Science [in 1995], I gained significant credibility in the community of scientists working on climate change. They thought I was one of them, someone who would pervert science in the service of social and political causes. So one of them let his guard down. A major person working in the area of climate change and global warming sent me an astonishing email that said “We have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.” According to the WUWT post, Deming did not specifically identify Overpeck in his testimony, but “rumors” began to circulate that the email had come from Overpeck. Overpeck then denied sending such an email. However, after Overpeck made the denial, another email surfaced, this one from Overpeck to Keith Briffa (another member of the inside climate clique) dated in 2005, in which Overpeck said “I’m not the only one who would like to deal a mortal blow to the misuse of supposed warm period terms and myths in the literature.”
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In 1998 and 1999, Michael Mann and co-authors published two articles in Nature giving temperature reconstructions going back to the year 1000 and beyond. Contained in these articles was a graph of a temperature reconstruction for the Northern Hemisphere going back to the year 1000 AD. The graph showed that temperatures had remained essentially flat from the year 1000 to approximately 1940, after which there was a sharp upward spike in the most recent years. In other words, the Medieval Warm Period had disappeared. This graph quickly became known as the “Hockey Stick” after its iconic shape.
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In 2001, the IPCC came out with its Third Assessment Report of world climate. The Hockey Stick graph had totally taken over the narrative, appearing as the lead graph in the Summary for Policy Makers and at multiple other places throughout the Report. The abolishment of the MWP was never mentioned as such, but astute observers could easily see how the graph solved the problem of the gaping logical flaw in any argument that recent warming could only have been caused by human CO2 emissions. A version of the Hockey Stick graph that appeared in the Third Assessment Report in 2001 appears at the end of this post.
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Over the course of the next about five years, the basis for Mann’s Hockey Stick graph was gradually and thoroughly destroyed. A longer version of the story appears in a post I did in 2019 here. The unraveling began in about 2003 with a very talented Canadian mathematician named Stephen McIntyre trying to replicate Mann’s work and putting in a request for Mann’s full data and methods. McIntyre was met with refusal and hostility. McIntyre then set about the very laborious process of trying to replicate Mann’s work without access to the data and methods, and ultimately established that Mann had used flawed statistical methods and had cherry-picked data to get the reconstruction he wanted.
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After the demolition of the Hockey Stick, an alternative narrative was needed to support the position that the Medieval Warm Period had not existed. By 2009, Hockey Stick lead creator Mann had shifted to the new narrative, namely that evidence for the MWP only came from certain limited “regions” and therefore the era could not be said to have been a world-wide warm period such as the current era. Here is a 2009 piece from Penn State News (Penn State is where Mann teaches), quoting Mann as follows: “These terms can be misleading,” said Mann. “Though the Medieval period appears modestly warmer globally in comparison with the later centuries of the Little Ice Age, some key regions were in fact colder. For this reason, we prefer to use ‘Medieval Climate Anomaly’ to underscore that, while there were significant climate anomalies at the time, they were highly variable from region to region.”
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Good try. The effort to diminish the MWP as merely “regional” has inspired several organizations and individuals in response to compiled lists of research papers covering all areas of the world and reconstructing temperatures from the approximate MWP years of 1000 to 1250 AD. One of the most comprehensive collections I am aware of has been compiled by Craig Idso at the Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change. Idso has listed well over 100 studies from literally every corner of the world, organized under categories that include Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia/New Zealand, Europe, North America, Northern Hemisphere, Oceans, and South America. As with the Hockey Stick graph, the idea that the MWP was merely “regional” has been thoroughly demolished.
The dozens upon dozens of studies compiled by Idso and others have put the promoters of the “human causation” hypothesis in a nearly impossible position. One study, or two, or five, might be flawed and/or easily refutable. But more than a hundred? And from all over the world?
And thus once again the promoters of the “human-causation” hypothesis have changed the subject. Now, instead of following the scientific method of attempting to falsify the hypothesis, we talk about the mumbo jumbo of “detection and attribution” studies.
As of now, that seems to have fooled almost all of academia, the media, journalists, Hollywood celebrities, and billionaires. Also the incoming U.S. president.
Read more at Manhattan Contrarian
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judy
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Marjorie here, the first time I heard of the mediaeval warm period was at a conference in Newcastle in England called climates of the past. The 1962 conference was organised by NATO and I was privileged to meet and speak to the father of climate studies HH Lamb. He was the 1st to show the complete record for planet Earth of climate change back to Roman times. His graph clearly
shows the mediaeval warm period with subsequent ice age as global rather than regional phenomena. Subsequent to the little ice age we have had our most recent warming for which we should be grateful.
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Koen Vogel
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A good summary and review of the history of all the wishful thinking that drives much of the climate sciences.
The current global warming phase is also regional. In fact this is a major indication that global warming due to a global increase in CO2 is a non-starter. The IPCC themselves recognize (and provide data in Volume 3) that the Northern Atlantic is heating much faster than the southern and Pacific oceans, and that the Arctic ocean is warming faster than all oceans, and mainly during the winter(!). Over the Oceans, Radiative Forcing due to GHG should be roughly evenly distributed across the longitudes, and more intense towards the lower latitudes (more heat emitted, more heat captured by GHG, more heat radiated), so is completely incompatible with heating the Arctic during the winters, where no heat is emitted during winters. IPCC report that this regional pattern was also true for the 1909-1943 warming phase, so I have no problem with data that indicates the same was true for mideval times: this indicates a single process is likely responsible for the regional heating during the last 1000 years, and that this process cannot be RFGHG. All these data indicate the IPCC CO2 attribution story is bunk.
Regarding the Medieval data set: there is a heavy bias in the data record towards European data, which likely indicate the Northern Atlantic was also heating then. In fact Thule settlements in Greenland – up to the Northern shores – confirm this: starting around 900 and ending around 1200. Viking farmers settled the area that vikings called it “green”land. This Northern Atlantic heating may have been balanced by cooling elsewhere, which might globally average to the “no global heating” proposed by Mann. Given the sparse data set you could probably prove global heating, cooling or status quo. Somewhere there’s likely a Chinese data set (they were also good record keepers) that might be useful to compare to the European one. The acknowledgement of regional heating during present and previous times is good news for CO2 sceptics as it supports the theory that CO2 attribution is bunk.
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tom0mason
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If people wish to show that they are in some small way scientific then find out how the medieval warm period and the following mini ice age affect the globe, go and look at the Chinese or South American academic papers on the subject. Yes the have data, and science but are not filled with the opinionated sophistry which seems most western paper are bloated with.
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