Try this one - http://discover.itsc.uah.edu/amsutemps - and click on
'redraw'

Tom linked to a spreadsheet of UAH data.  This is just a nice little
toy for viewing UAH daily averages.  Just trying to be helpful - not
making any point.  2010 is tracking higher than any year this century
(go team).  Unfortunately 1998 has only partial data.  It will be
interesting to see if the unpronouncable Iceland volcano has much
impact.

Proffessor Ole Humlum has good resources - http://www.climate4you.com/
- the first graph (long term HadCRUT3) under 'polar temperature' is
particularly interesting.  The site includes UAH, RSS and HadCrut3
data.  (I sometimes refer to myself as a hyper-sceptic - I don't take
anything on face value anymore).

Arctic temperature in the 1930's seems to be comparable to recent
temps. This should not be hugely surprising - there are all sorts of
indices with similar periodicities.  Many of these are addressed in
Willie Soon's brave but foolhardy attempt at a unified theory of
climate change.

http://www.ileperu.org/pdf/soon_climatechange.pdf

And lest anyone feels tempted to repeat the 'oppositely directed
trends in irradiance and temperature' meme - I suggest they have a
look at Judith Lean's new paper as well.


On Apr 24, 11:54 am, Eric Swanson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 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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