Week in review – science edition

by Judith Curry

A few things that caught my eye this past week.

Did a slower AMOC 12,000 yrs ago contribute to increased hurricane intensity? [link]

Low-Frequency Climate Modes and Antarctic Sea Ice Variations, 1982-2013 [link]

Understanding the detectability of potential changes to the 100-year peak storm surge [link]

Overview of  in the 5 IPCC reports & beyond [link]

“desert urbanization…nighttime warming and weaker, but significant daytime cooling.” most areas [link]

Antarctica-Regional Climate and Surface Mass Budget [link]

Finding parallels between Hadley Cell expansion & the global warming hiatus, . [link]

The 2016 southeastern US drought: an extreme departure from centennial wetting and cooling [link]

Solar Activity Plays Key Role In North American Blizzard Frequency, Study Finds [link]

New large 75-yr dataset reconstructs Gulf Stream & shows physical link between it & NAO. [link]

A long-term forest experiment helps unravel the complex forest-soil-carbon cycle: [link]

State-dependent quantification of climate sensitivity based on paleo data of last 2.1 million years [link]

How might plausible future volcanic activity alter climate projections? [link]

Perspective: New vigour involving statisticians to overcome ensemble fatigue [link]

New research using driftwood samples from the western offers insights on sea ice changes during the Holocene.[link]

New evidence that Siberian volcanic eruptions caused extinction 250 million yrs ago [link]

How humans are causing deadly earthquakes [link]

The ozone-climate penalty in the Midwestern U.S. [link]

How can we estimate snow depth & water content in snowpacks? Use cosmic ray neutron sensors. [link]

Water storage changes and balances in Africa observed by GRACE and hydrologic models [link]

Leading drivers of Pacific coastal drought variability in the Contiguous United States [link]

Influence of ice sheets on temperature during past 38 million years (a model study) [link]

Do we understand the terrestrial carbon cycle? What uncertainties? What future developments? [link]

Carbon circular logic [link]

Playing with Water: Humans Are Altering Risk of Nuisance Floods [link]

When Less Is More: Opening the Door to Simpler Climate Models [link]

Policy and social science

Potential surprise theory as a theoretical foundation for scenario planning [link]

“Adapting to : A Long-Term Historical Perspective on New Orleans 1718-2005″ [link

McKitrick: Americans have made hurricane destruction worse (but not with carbon emissions) [link]

Climate change tort cases are becoming a reality, not just a theoretical possibility [link]

U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement: Reasons, impacts, and China’s response [link]

’s greenhouse gas emissions rose by an alarming 4.7% in 2016, compared to last year [link]

Now in NatureClimate – A typology of loss and damage perspectives [link]

The driving forces behind membership nominations in international scientific assessments [link]

Narrowing the climate field:  the symbolic power of authors in the IPCC’s Assessments [link]

About science

Alice Dreger: Taking Back the Ivory Tower [link]

Wonderful irony here: Academic freedom lecturer (M. Mann) takes on claims of climate change deniers [link]

The invention of zero—how ancient Mesopotamia created the mathematical concept and India gave it symbolic form [link]

The Academic Reason Why There Are So Few Conservatives in Academia [link]

Author relationships with industry [link]

Science journalism is missing a watchdog attitude [link

Bret Stephens: The Dying Art of Disagreement [link]

Filed under: Week in review

via Climate Etc.

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October 7, 2017 at 12:23PM

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