Week in review – science edition

Week in review – science edition

via Climate Etc.
https://judithcurry.com

by Judith Curry

A few things that caught my eye this past week.

Large reductions in solar energy production due to dust and particulate air pollution

Towards a new estimate of “time of emergence” of anthropogenic warming – Lehner, Deser, Terray:

Detection & attribution of climate change signals using discriminant analysis & Bayesian theorem

Melting and cracking – is Antarctica falling apart? [link]

A novel proxy and the sea level rise in Venice, Italy, from 1350 to 2014 [link]

Study: Thaw of Greenland’s ice sheet accounted for more than 25% of sea level rise in 2014

Pronounced differences between observed and CMIP5 simulated multidecadal climate variability in the 20th century. [link]

Carbon dioxide emissions have leveled off, but atmospheric CO2 continues to rise: That’s a problem, and a mystery. [link]

Is there observational evidence of changes in Tropical Atlantic Variability under AMO phases

Lightning as a major driver of recent large fire years in North American boreal forests

Precipitation, temperature, and teleconnection signals across the combined North American, Monsoon Asia, and Old World Drought Atlases [link]

Major correction to RSS satellite temp data more than doubles warming since 1998. Now TLT warming faster than land:

Dependence of drivers affects risks associated with compound events

 Climate change vulnerability for species—Assessing the assessments [link]
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Another paper on OHC by Cheng et al – RHS Fig shows temperature changes. LHS shows how much “lost” to depth.

Evidence Review Suggests Humans May Not Be The Primary Drivers Of CO2 Concentration Changes

The Maritime Continent may be a switchboard for teleconnections between climate systems.

Using global tide gauges to validate/improve representation of xtrm sea levels in flood impact studies

Paper out now – when will current climate extremes become average?

ea level rise is accelerating, 2.2mm/y in 1993 to 3.3 mm/y in 2014 – mainly due to Greenland melt

STUDY: Antarctic Sea Ice Loss Driven By ‘Natural Variability,’ Not Global Warming

Consensus and discrepancies of basin-scale ocean heat content changes in different ocean analyses [link]

Sea ice trends in climate models are only accurate in models with biased global warming [link]

Strong constraints on aerosol–cloud interactions from volcanic eruptions by Malavelle et. al in Nature

And the Bjorn Steven’s opinion about it

Antarctic Climate Alarm Silenced: Ice Mass Stable, Recently Published Studies Show

Exxon makes a biofuel breakthrough

Arctic Warming Reverse! New Study Finds Winter Arctic Sea Ice “To Increase Towards 2020”

The influence of autumnal Eurasian snow cover on climate and its link with Arctic sea ice cover

Could geoengineering research help answer one of the biggest questions in climate science? [link]

“ENSO and the recent warming of the Indian Ocean” [link]

Researchers look to the ocean for decadal predictability of NW Europe and

A look at the new Santer et al study on why troposphere warming differs between models and satellite data: [link]

Role of forcings in 20th century N Atlantic multi-decadal variability: 1940-1975 N Atlantic cooling

NatureClimate study looks at global risk of deadly heat

‘Observational Large Ensemble’ to compare observed and modeled temperature trend uncertainty

Relative importance of radiative and dynamical heating for tropical tropopause temperatures [link]

Abrupt North Atlantic circulation changes in response to gradual CO2 forcing in glacial climate

A hint for climate modelers: “Models are best when they isolate a specific mechanism in a transparent way.”

Social Science and Policy

Does information matter for completing the 1,000,000 piece climate change jigsaw puzzle?

A bitter scientific debate just erupted over the future of the American power grid [link]  Here is the full paper in PNAS [link]

Peter Gluckman: ‘The changing need for science advice”.

Stranded research? Leading finance journals are silent on climate change [link]

The changing hail threat over North America in response to anthropogenic climate change

The role of ‘standards of evidence’ in ‘evidence for informed policy making [link]

Pierrehumbert:  The trouble with geoengineers hacking the planet [link]

Great work by at about why agribusiness knowledge of climate diverged from scientific

Political commitments disable our critical faculties – and the smarter you are, the worse the damage

About Science

 

Academics strike back against bad science [link]

Pressure to publish in journals drives too much cookie-cutter research [link]

“Trust me, I’m a scientist.”

David Spiegelhalter:  Exaggerations threaten public trust in science [link]

Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science? [link]

Evidence based medicine manifesto for better healthcare [link]

‘Beware the Rise of the Post-Factual Expert’. Our latest piece, republished by

“An epistemic pluralist claims that …there are many different but equally valuable ways of interrogating reality.” [link]

Uncertainty analysis comes to integrated assessments [link]

Fascinating piece on the nature of time by ; a long one, but worth the read

Why academics should stop self-censoring & say what they really believe online

via Climate Etc. https://judithcurry.com

July 2, 2017 at 10:33AM

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