Week in review – science and policy edition

by Judith Curry

A few things that caught my eye this past week.

New J.Clim paper: hi res model finds fewer but stronger, wetter, and larger tropical cyclones with global warming [link

PNAS:  the biosphere has become less constrained by water stress globally [link]

Glacier shrinkage driving global changes in downstream systems [link]

Himalayan Glaciers Have Been Melting For 400 Years, Scientists Discover [link]

How fast is Earth warming? Ocean heat content and sea level rise measurements may provide a more reliable answer than atmospheric measurements. [link]

Mann and Oreskes: assessing climate change impacts on extreme weather events [link]

Model v. observation differences in western US show need to bolster mountain area datasets. [link]  

“When the polynyas occur- roughly every 75 years…release valve for the ocean’s heat, said the researchers.” [link]

Arthur Petersen on notions of reliability, Relevant Dominant Uncertainty [link]

SST response to anthropogenic and external forcing + impact on AMO and PDO [link]

North American wintertime temperature anomalies: role of El Niño & differential teleconnections [link]

Interested in probability of during ? paper highlights new work on this: [link]

Little Ice Age was global: Implications for current global warming [link]

New article: Highly variable Pliocene sea surface conditions in the Norwegian Sea [link]

Indicators of climate change adaptation from molecules to ecosystems [link]

New review of climate sensitivity estimates from Knutti, Rugenstein and Hegerl [link]

Denmark faces first ‘summer-less’ July in 38 years [linkHappened during the Little Ice Age also.

Monitoring ocean change in the 21st century [link]

Extreme reversals in successive winter season precipitation anomalies in Western United States [link]

Mechanistic drivers of re-emergence of anthropogenic carbon in the Equatorial Pacific [link]

Saturn unveiled: Ten notable findings from Cassini-Huygens [link]

Social science & policy

The effect of population growth on climate change impacts: [link]

Richard Tol: There is a climate signal in US hurricane damages [link]

Disaster risk expert says population growth and urban coastal development have created a ‘ticking time bomb’ [link]  

“The most important thing we can do to prepare for weather extremes” [link]

Rethinking the ‘infrastructure’ discussion amid a blitz of hurricanes [link]

A good overview of the National Flood Insurance Program and its problems [link]

Winton Capital sets up climate change prediction market [link]

6 rules for rebuilding infrastructure in an era of ‘unprecedented’ weather events [link]

About science

Is intimidation the new campus threat? explores in a ed [link]

Poisonous science: the dark side of the lab [link]

PETA is smearing a young scientist because she researches climate change effects on birds [link]

via Climate Etc.

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September 16, 2017 at 08:43AM

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