So, she analyzed her Galápagos coral temperature chronologies alongside published coral temperature chronologies from islands farther north and west and
instrumental sea surface temperature records from the southern Galápagos town of Puerto Ayora and the Peruvian coastal town of Puerto Chicama.
Therefore she analyzed her Galápagos coral temperature chronologies alongside published coral temperature chronologies from islands farther north and west and
instrumental sea surface temperature records from the southern Galápagos town of Puerto Ayora and the Peruvian coastal town of Puerto Chicama.
Not exact matches
The finding surprised the University of Arizona - led research team, because the sparse
instrumental records for
sea surface temperature for that part of the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean did not show warming.
In summary, the historical [
Sea Surface Temperature] record... may well contain instrumental bias effects that render the data of questionable value in determining long period trends in ocean surface temperatures... Investigators that use the data [to try this] bear a heavy, perhaps impossible, responsibility for ensuring that the potential instrument bias has not contaminated their r
Surface Temperature]
record... may well contain
instrumental bias effects that render the data of questionable value in determining long period trends in ocean
surface temperatures... Investigators that use the data [to try this] bear a heavy, perhaps impossible, responsibility for ensuring that the potential instrument bias has not contaminated their r
surface temperatures... Investigators that use the data [to try this] bear a heavy, perhaps impossible, responsibility for ensuring that the potential instrument bias has not contaminated their results.
We argue that the abrupt
temperature drop of ~ 0.3 °C in 1945 is the apparent result of uncorrected
instrumental biases in the
sea surface temperature record [since it is only apparent in SSTs].
The finding surprised the research team, because the sparse
instrumental records for
sea surface temperature for that part of the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean did not show warming.
We argue that the abrupt
temperature drop of 0.3 C in 1945 is the apparent result of uncorrected
instrumental biases in the
sea surface temperature record.