No year before 1973 was as hot as 1973.
twitter.comWhile this is interesting, it really strikes me that there isn't that much data available. Would this pattern hold if you saw another 100 years into the past? Will it hold an additional 100 years in the future?
Cute, but... doesn't seem very significant?
>Would this pattern hold if you saw another 100 years into the past?
Yes. In the 1700s The Earth was just beginning to emerge from 'the little ice age'. There is some controversy over whether the medieval warm period may have been as hot, or hotter than present.
Caldeira has apparently used the GISTEMP LOTI Global mean series, but this seems to have been smoothed to remove any peaks. I tried plotting this particular series at.
The pattern he describes in his tweet is not so clear with higher resolution data. In particular, there is a pronounced spike in the late 1930s, and another in the mid 1950s:
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/gistemp-dts/from:1880/to:2013
Furthermore, this does not seem to be replicable using other available temperature series. For instance HADCRUT4 global mean series from 1880 to 2013 seems to have a peak in the late 1940's that is not present in Caldeira's graph.
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:1880/to:2013
It is even less visible in the earlier HADCRUT3 variance adj. global mean:
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:1880/to:2013
Or the CRUTEM4 variance-adj land global mean
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/crutem4vgl/from:1880/to:2013
Similar for BEST global land mean (preliminary)
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/best/from:1880/to:2013
In short, unless I am missing something, his claim is based on the one outlier among temperature series which can be made to support it (if you squint your eyes real hard, I suppose).
Wasn't expecting such an awesome response - thank you!
That is a true statement on a 150 year timescale (or possibly even a millennial timescale) but on a geologic timescale it is very false. Also, it is misleading to attribute this deviation solely to the activities of man when solar output has been on the rise for nearly two centuries (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Solar_Activity_Proxies.png)