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![]() Flying Tadpole wrote: Martin Baxter wrote: Flying Tadpole wrote: Gilligan wrote: ? http://msnbc.msn.com/id/15391426/site/newsweek ? ? . But of course we have lotsa big computers now, so that's all right, and the predictions must therefore be much more reliable and accurate. GIGO. Well things do change, Galileo was eventually proved correct (more or less): "The point to remember, says Connolley, is that predictions of global cooling never approached the kind of widespread scientific consensus that supports the greenhouse effect today. And for good reason: the tools scientists have at their disposal now-vastly more data, incomparably faster computers and infinitely more sophisticated mathematical models-render any forecasts from 1975 as inoperative as the predictions being made around the same time about the inevitable triumph of communism." Cheers Marty Which is a longer-winded way of saying "of course we have lotsa big computers now, so that's all right, and the predictions must therefore be much more reliable and accurate." To which I add "GIGO" because, quite simply, the modelling is a multiple generation extrapolation (model based on model output based on model output) using a simply inadequate data base. Too short a time scale with reliable data. I was always intrigued when a former client demanded we stop using simple analytical techniques, with confidence tests based on testable null hypotheses, on their SO2 problem and start using a surface modeller, where confidence tests were not applied in the strict sense and where the model was a generator, not a tester of hypotheses. It was fun, though, tweaking the various model parameters and treatments to generate the reverse of what (our) independent observations were indicating. I discovered, earlier this year, that the absolute best coastal models applied by supposedly the best Oz modelling scientists could not cope with longshore drift (==mandatory sailing content) because it was too close to shore. These are the same people making a "significant global contribution" to current climate modelling. Yeah. GIGO. Can you send me the ref on that? Hotmail addy works. I'm interested in this stuff tho I haven't really been following the field in the last 25 years - more interested in dealing with the 'GI' part of the problem. With qualified success, I might add (modestly).... pity about the sea surface temps of 99999 I found yesterday in historic data (ie before my time). I agree with the GIGO bit and I supply the modellers with data. In fact I ran a query the other day for one of the ocean modellers extracting sea surface temperature blocked by 1 deg lat/lon grid by day for a big chunk of the Southern Ocean. Interesting in that the timeline is waay too short to show trends, if indeed there are trends to show. Classic S/N problem. One of these days I'd like to give up my current role and go back to playing with data but the money & fringe bennies are too good ATM. I'm sort of thinking on building an accurate micro scale data set on the bay where I live. I'm 90% sure there's a gyre trapping nutrients from a fish farm just north of us. Hard to explain the algal blooms any other way - very low runoff, not much agriculture and very few people, all on reasonable bits of land with septic systems. If I ever finish building I'm gonna have a good look at what's happening. Meanwhile I'm building an cough unapproved structure blocking the longshore drift which has the twin benefits of providing me with my own personal beach and helping keep the creek mouth open, not burying the oyster covered rocks. Thankx, PDW |
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