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Week in review – science edition

by Judith Curry

A few things that caught my eye this past week.

Antartica’s ice melt has accelerated [link]

Upcoming research by Jay Zwalley will buck the consensus and show Antartica is still gaining ice [link]

Antarctica’s Ice May Be More Durable Than We Thought [link]

Steve McIntyre: about 2.5 years ago, I did a thorough parsing of Antarctic ice mass loss, observing,that contribution of the glacio-isostatic adjustment (GIA) was more or less equal to the reported ice mass loss and HUGE discrepancies in GIA [link]

New study questions long-held assumption that surface melt in Antarctica is confined to summer | [link]

Large scale climate oscillation impacts on temperature, precipitation and land surface phenology in Central Asia (open access) [link]

Article on statistics of CO2, including cascading uncertainties [link]

New paper by Craig Loehle: Disequilibrium and relaxation times for species responses to climate change [link]

Ice core evidence for decoupling between mid-latitude atmospheric water cycle and Greenland temperature during the last deglaciation [link]

Atmospheric Methane over the Past 2000 Years from a Sub-tropical Ice Core, Central Himalayas [link]

increasing precipitation whiplash in California, including analysis on the rising risk of an 1862-like flood: [link]

Drought, Heat, and the Carbon Cycle: a Review [link]

“Pre-industrial T have been more variable than previously thought…currently used reference level [for preindustrial] represents end of the Little Ice Age, the coldest phase of the entire last 10,000 years” [link]

Paper relating the internal variability of climate models to their sensitivity is out in this month’s Journal of Climate: [link]

Temperature extremes in Alaska: temporal variability and circulation background [link]

Cycles in oceanic teleconnections and global temperature change [link]

On the Cause of Recent Variations in Lower Stratospheric Ozone [link]

Difference between the North Atlantic and Pacific meridional overturning circulation in response to the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau [link]

Predictability of the European heat and cold waves [link]

Now in NatureClimate – Perspective: Climate reddening increases the chance of critical transitions [link]

How the ice age shaped New York [link]

´Practice and philosophy of climate model tuning across six US modeling centers´ [link]

Atlantic-Pacific Asymmetry in Deep Water Formation [link]

The Effects of Younger Dryas Orbital Parameter and Atmospheric pCO2 Changes on Radiative Forcing and African Monsoonal Circulation [link]

Model tropical Atlantic biases underpin diminished Pacific decadal variability [link]

A new angle on climate model uncertainty: changing the order in which different climate processes are computed can vary climate feedback parameter by half the full CMIP5 spread in climate feedback. [link]

Hurricane Harvey Links to Ocean Heat Content and Climate Change Adaptation (open access) [link]

Ocean Carbon Cycle Feedbacks Under Negative Emissions [link]

Decreasing Indian summer monsoon on the northern Indian sub-continent during the last 180 years: evidence from five tree-ring cellulose oxygen isotope chronologies [link]

New paper on “radiative feedbacks from stochastic variability in surface temperature and radiative imbalance” [link]

An Energy Balance Model for Paleoclimate Transitions [link]

A decade later, the most recent US AMOC Science Team report captures progress the community of researchers has made on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation [link]

“A multi-approach strategy in climate attribution studies: Is it possible to apply a robustness framework?” [link]

Social science and policy

Nuclear power won’t survive without a government handout [link]

Pielke Jr: Scientists as both experts and political myth-makers [link]

Massive climate funding by wealthy foundations [link]

Sucking CO2 from air is cheaper than thought [link]

Pirates and Climate Change: A Dispatch From the Bangladeshi Sundarbans [link]

Economically robust protection against 21st century sea-level rise [link]

“Coastal flood damage and adaptation costs under 21st century sea-level rise” [link]

Philanthropy, group think and climate change [link]

About science and scientists

How a belief in beauty has triggered a crisis in physics [link]

Fellows of the Royal Geological Society push back over climate position [link]

Bret Stephens: They Dying Art of Disagreement  [link]

Two years ago, NASA dismissed and mocked an amateur’s criticisms of its asteroids database. Now Nathan Myhrvold is back, and his papers have passed peer review. [link]

Questioning truth, reality and the role of science [link]

 

 

 

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