Tom Curtis, you're referencing NASA /
NOAA land temperature data that has been adjusted or even estimated in the case of weather stations that no longer exist.
Not exact matches
Both NASA GISS and
NOAA NCEI use
NOAA's ERSST.v4 «pause buster»
data for the ocean surface
temperature components of their combined
land - ocean surface
temperature datasets, and, today, both agencies are holding a multi-agency press conference to announce their «warmest ever» 2016 global surface
temperature findings.
As noted above, the ERSST.v4
data make up the ocean portion of the
NOAA and GISS global
land + ocean surface
temperature products.
The
land temperature data bases
NOAA uses show that the «
temperature change» is within the margin of error.
Other major global
land temperature reconstructions by NASA,
NOAA, and the Hadley Center largely rely on the same set of monthly
data from about 7,000 stations that comprise the Global Historical Climatological Network (GHCN - M).
The National Climatic
Data Center (NCDC), which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (
NOAA), has maintained global average monthly and annual records of combined
land and ocean surface
temperatures for more than 130 years.
All of the global surface
temperature data sets employ
NOAA's GHCN
land surface
temperatures.
His rebuttal shows that
NOAA's news
land surface record is similar to that of other major climate datasets, and that a new paper (on which he was lead co-author) confirms its sea surface
data — «Assessing recent warming using instrumentally homogeneous sea surface
temperature records» in Science Advances, January 2017.
However, there remain large, unexplained regional discrepancies between the
NOAA land surface
temperatures and the raw
data.
Now the
NOAA data comes in and confirms the GISS
data, and shows the http://www.ncdc.
noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/2009/jun/global.html Global Highlights: Based on preliminary
data, the globally averaged combined
land and sea surface
temperature was the second warmest on record for June and the January - June year - to - date tied with 2004 as the fifth warmest on record.
Introduction: The
NOAA Global (
Land and Ocean) Surface
Temperature Anomaly dataset is a product of the National Climatic
Data Center (NCDC).
NOAA infills missing
data for both
land and sea surface
temperature datasets using methods presented in Smith et al (2008).
Anyone who has followed WUWT through the years knows the gargantuous effort that has been put forth by both yourself and all of the gatherers of the Surface Stations survey
data and you all deserve a great gesture of appreciation for carrying this to a proper and detailed summary of what has occurred to the
land surface
temperature records and adjustments by
NOAA, NCDC, USHCN and the implications carried into the GHCN dataset used by all major datasets.
If verified, this
data would seem to put a dent in
NOAA's scientific credibility, and in terms of
data, some of the basis for determining U.S.
land temperature rises only.
There are three main global
land / ocean surface
temperature series, produced by
NOAA's National Climate
Data Center (NCDC), NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISTemp), and the UK's Hadley Center (HadCRUT).
Land - only lower tropospheric
temperature data from the three groups, UAH, RSS,
NOAA STAR are shown in the figure above.
The Selective Bias Of
NOAA's National Climate
Data Center (NCDC) With Respect To The Analysis And Interpretation Of Multi-Decadal
Land Surface
Temperature Trends Under The Leadership Of Tom Karl and Tom Peterson
Still, after Bates» blog post, the House Science Committee, a British tabloid newspaper and others who reject mainstream climate science accused
NOAA of playing «fast and loose» with
land and water
temperature data.
These datasets include:
NOAA Climate
Data Record (CDR) of Sea Surface
Temperature - WHOI, Version 1.0 U.S. Monthly Extremes Global Historical Climatology Network — Monthly (GHCN - M) Version 3 African Easterly Wave Climatology Version 1
NOAA Climate
Data Record (CDR) of Daily Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR), Version 1.2
NOAA Climate
Data Record (CDR) of Monthly Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR), Version 2.2 - 1 Global Surface Summary of the Day — GSOD Monthly Summaries of the Global Historical Climatology Network — Daily (GHCN - D) I nternational Surface
Temperature Initiative (ISTI) Global
Land Surface
Temperature Databank — Stage 1 Monthly International Surface
Temperature Initiative (ISTI) Global
Land Surface
Temperature Databank — Stage 2 Monthly International Surface
Temperature Initiative (ISTI) Global
Land Surface
Temperature Databank — Stage 3 Monthly International Surface
Temperature Initiative (ISTI) Global
Land Surface
Temperature Databank — Stage 1 Daily... Continued