Robert, your UAH link doesn't work for me.

Besides, the UAH data is flawed (as I've shown in a peer reviewed
report) and John Christy manipulates it to fill in missing data points
over the poles.  Is this important?  Well, over the Antarctic, the UAH
TLT data has shown a cooling trend.  If their data is wrong, then this
cooling trend may not actually be there...

E. S.
----------------------------------
On Apr 23, 7:29 pm, Robert I Ellison <[email protected]>
wrote:

> The El Nino is persisting - although diminished from the recent 
> peak.http://ioc-goos-oopc.org/state_of_the_ocean/sur/pac/nino3.4.php- We
> have had in recent months a record global sea surface temperature
> anomaly.  Global temperature for March is about 0.2 degrees below the
> monthly peak in 1998.  Every year is different.
>
> A nicer way to compare UAH data - over days to years is here 
> -http://discover.itsc.uah.edu/amsutemps/execute.csh?amsutemps
>
> The idea of abrupt climate change on decadal timescales is important
> and hugely relevant.

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