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Bored Wombat
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Well, I'm big enough to accept the apology, but I still suspect that you were trying to overstate your case. If you use an abbreviation for a term you should use it when you first use the term. But in this case it would look better for full disclosure if you explicitly mentioned that it did appear in the technical summary. Or at least that the term "summary" wasn't a good description for the summary for policy makers, especially to an audience interested in physics, who would be more familiar with the other summary.mheslep said:I referred to the exact title in the first part of the sentence; in the same sentence I referenced it again. Sorry for the confusion.
Well other northern hemisphere reconstuctions can have a slight bump around 1000 AD, but certainly not all of them.mheslep said:And yes I'd say it is fair to say that some of the key ideas reflected in the MBH 98 hockey stick, namely that there was little or no medieval warming period, has indeed lost favour;
The consensus is that it is certainly not as pronounced as might have been suspected from early, one site based studies. And the suspicion is that this would be further ameliorated if the southern hemisphere were included.
But the National Academies review found nothing wrong with Mann et al's treatment of the data at that time. It was the very recent end that they found that the statistical mistreatment resulted in Mann et al. under-reporting the expected error.
In what way do you mean "fallen out of favour"? Probably we can agree that any medieval warm period was likely at least half a degree cooler than temperatures this decade if we are talking about global mean surface temperature?
mheslep said:that this is reflected by its removal from the Summary for Policy Makers and its subsequent embedding in the graph in the Paleo section with several other competing studies that show a substantial medieval warming, comparable with today's warming.
Disagree. It's removal from the report was because it wasn't new, and had been covered in the 2001 report.
It speaks volumes for the respect that it is still held in that it nevertheless occurred twice in a report that is supposed to be about the findings since the previous report.