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Earth Australia Science

'Impossible' Research Produces 400 Years of Climate Data, Shows El Nino Now Stronger (phys.org) 162

Long-time Slashdot reader William Robinson writes: Using cores drilled from coral, scientists have been able to produce the first 400-year-long seasonal record of El Niño events. "This understanding of El Niño events is vital because they produce extreme weather across the globe with particularly profound effects on precipitation and temperature extremes in Australia, South East Asia and the Americas," reports Phys.org.

The results? A new category of El Niño "has become far more prevalent in the last few decades than at any time in the past four centuries," reports Scientific American. "Over the same period, traditional El Niño events have become more intense."

Obtaining this data was considered impossible, until a Melbourne PhD researcher realized that coral cores, like tree rings, captured the "signature" of El Niño events going back for several centuries, according to the article. They were then able to identify that signature using machine learning techniques, and after three years of work produced the 400-year record.

The study's lead author now says that "By understanding the past, we are better equipped to understand the future, especially in the context of climate change."
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'Impossible' Research Produces 400 Years of Climate Data, Shows El Nino Now Stronger

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  • Impossible? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @12:36PM (#58578172) Homepage Journal

    Why put "Impossible" in the title when the summary goes on to explain clearly that it is not.

    • Re:Impossible? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @12:45PM (#58578200) Homepage Journal

      More interesting is that 400 years ago we were starting to enter the so called 'little ice age'. To get really useful data you need to get a longer period so we will know how the behavior was during Roman warming and the Viking and early medieval time.

      • Really? (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        We're Screwed: 11,000 Years' Worth of Climate Data Prove It [theatlantic.com]

        There is no downside to fighting climate change. It'll reduce pollution, improve human health, help keep our way of life (with much less pollution), create economic opportunities (EVs, "green" energy,) and others that we can't even imagine.

        But there's resistance and negative propaganda from vested interests. All the negativity against fighting global climate change is just lies created by the coal miners and oil companies. As we have always seen,

        • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Well, no downside except for the increased poverty, decrease in standard of living, reduced economic activity, slowing of scientific research, lowering of arts funding, increase in government control, and international tensions between the "haves" and "have nots" who will now never be allowed to become "haves" because of climate concerns.

          But other than that, Mrs Lincoln...

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Uberbah ( 647458 )

            Well, no downside except for the increased poverty, decrease in standard of living, reduced economic activity, slowing of scientific research, blah blah blah

            The only losers in addressing climate change would be the shareholders of fossil fuel companies. For everyone else, it would be the biggest economic boom since the WWII era. And the costs of addressing climate change are utterly insignificant next to the costs of not addressing it. It's already costing the United States hundreds of billions each year

          • Well, no downside except for the increased poverty, decrease in standard of living, reduced economic activity, slowing of scientific research

            This purely ideological assertion is completely contrary to all economic modelling on the topic. People keep assuming that if you remove fossil fuels the power that replaces it will somehow be generated by magic and all the coal miners and power plant workers will be unemployed and nobody replacing them.

            Which is horseshit. Transitioning to a non fossil fuel economy wil

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              This is fantastic! Exactly what the world needs right now.

              So what is this new energy technology that can totally replace fossil fuels?

          • Well, no downside except for the increased poverty, decrease in standard of living, reduced economic activity, slowing of scientific research, lowering of arts funding, increase in government control, and international tensions between the "haves" and "have nots" who will now never be allowed to become "haves" because of climate concerns.

            But other than that, Mrs Lincoln...

            Well that escalated quickly.

        • Re:Really? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @01:54PM (#58578452) Homepage Journal

          Now the subject was specifically the El Niño, not the global perspective. The interesting part here is the behavior of El Niño and how it has behaved in a long term perspective to get better data related to changes in climate.

          And even with a large amount of data and a long timespan we are still looking at a chaotic system that we don't have full control over. Is the butterfly in Amazonas creating a hurricane in Mexico or is it preventing one. Maybe it doesn't have any effect at all today, but tomorrow it creates a hurricane while the day after it prevents one.

          Looking at El Niño makes sense - it's a large considerable event, but we have to know it behaves really long term and combine that with the 10000 year data to really get a better understanding. Correlation does not always mean causation, it could be different events that have the same cause further back.

        • Re:Really? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @02:43PM (#58578718)

          Stick it to the libs and burn coal and oil and die in the hole...

          If we really wanted to stick it to the libs, we would accept the climate data, and then convert our fossil energy base over to nuclear.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            If we really wanted to stick it to the libs, we would accept the climate data, and then convert our fossil energy base over to nuclear.

            I'm a "lib." Go ahead, stick it to me. I'm all for nuclear. Supposedly there are new designs that are safer and don't produce waste that has to be stored for 5000+ years.

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            by gtall ( 79522 )

            Climate change doesn't need you to believe in it for it to happen. But if you click your slippers together three times, maybe you too can be back in Kansas.

          • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

            If you're the sort of person to tell a freshmen college student on a budget to pass up that used Honda Civic, and instead go for a $2.5 million Bugatti without seat belts or breaks, sure.

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because, as TFS states, it was deemed impossible until now.

      • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @01:19PM (#58578312)

        Because, as TFS states, it was deemed impossible until now.

        But the explanation of that (which refers to climate records in tree rings) makes little sense because 1) that is is many-decades-old science, and 2) there are plenty of locations In the El Niño target region - the western US - from which we already have many-hundreds-of-years-old 13C climate records from long-lived trees.

        • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @01:33PM (#58578354)

          Okay, the problem is that the Scientific American summary is bad.

          What they discovered (which is something you could only use corals for) is that it’s becoming more common for the source area of the El Niño to be in the Central Pacific.

          And the line about traditional El Niño being stronger is ... let’s be charitable and use the word “premature”. What the researchers actually say is “there are even some early hints that the much stronger Eastern Pacific El Niños, like those that occurred in 1997/98 and 2015/16 may be growing in intensity.”

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @02:08PM (#58578534) Journal
        I've literally never heard anyone say, "It is impossible to get 400 years of climate data about El Nino." They said, "We only have data on El Nino for a few decades."

        Scientists, during their training, usually learn to be more careful about their language, and not say, "It's impossible" when they don't know if it is.
    • On the other hand, Dr. Mandy Freund is distinctly hot.
  • anywhere near climate research. There's probably already 50 videos on YouTube proclaiming how scientist declare climate change impossible.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "They are ignoring the science." That is my favorite of the common accusations that fly whenever climate change arguments come up.

      We want an abundance of clear evidence that leads unambiguously to a single inarguable conclusion. We want this as badly as Sauron wants his ring. So, we imagine we have it, even when we do not.

      The human mind has a hard time grasping just how many variables are at work here, just how much evidence must be poured-over, just how much assumption must still be baked into our compu

      • See here [youtube.com]. You can watch the whole thing if you want, but the TL;DW is 97% of scientists believe climate change is caused by humans. And then there's this [xkcd.com]

        The only folk arguing over the degree of human impact on climate change are oil executives and folks scared their 401k will take a dive if we switch to a green economy. The former are just greedy bastages but the latter have a real concern (namely that change will negatively impact their ability to live). The solution is a Green New Deal, e.g. a large s
      • " So, scientists on both sides have analysis that support both conclusions. " - 95% support AGW vs 5% who don't is clearer otherwise it sounds like there is a 50/50 battle.
    • There's probably already 50 videos on YouTube proclaiming how scientist declare climate change impossible

      The word you are looking for isn't "Scientist", its "Fucking idiot".

      Folks, don't get your info from biased weirdos on youtube and blogs. Ge your info from people in the field. Climate change is very real, its mostly man made, and the picture is bleak.

  • Data graph (Score:4, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @01:01PM (#58578244) Journal
    Here is the relevant graph [scientificamerican.com]. The record varies rather widely from the observed record, so it seems they need to fine-tune their technique before drawing any firm conclusions.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The graphs are showing the same feature. It's rapidly warning since ~1950 and fairly stable (compared to the change over the last 50 years) before that.
      Capcha is ironic: redneck. You probably are.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @01:31PM (#58578348) Journal

        The graphs are showing the same feature. It's rapidly warning since

        LOL you insulted me for being blind, then didn't read the Y axis. Hint: it's not temperature, it's the ratio of central/eastern El Nino events.

        (compared to the change over the last 50 years) before that.

        You can't know that if you don't know the margin of error, among other things. For you who can't read a Y axis, that's an advanced concept you should leave to others.

  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Sunday May 12, 2019 @02:56PM (#58578798)

    One particularly strong El Niño year was 1846. Weeks of rain in the American Southwest delayed wagon trains, causing one party of settlers in particular to be trapped by early deep snow in the Sierra Anevada:
    https://thestormking.com/Donne... [thestormking.com]

  • After three years of work tweaking their machine learning program to output exactly what they were looking for..... WeEEEEeeEeEEE1(oops)!!!!
    • This study had nothing to do with machine learning.
      • This study had nothing to do with machine learning.

        Yet TFA says exactly that:

        After carefully refining the technique to reconstruct the signature of El Niño in space and time using new machine learning techniques , the scientists were able to compare recent coral results with the instrumental record.

        • ok haha, I misread.
          I wish the actual paper were available.
          • Same here, particularly when it says things like the data being "teased out" over the course of three years using a technique that essentially came from Freund's own PhD thesis and she had to shop for a long time to get anyone to give her money to continue to play with (and then ending up with a fairly poor fit to the observed record, as you've already pointed out).

  • What is the margin of error of the model(s) on _known_ El Nino events and in the absence of ground truth for the really old 'signatures' how appropriate are the results?

  • (Limited by my understanding).

    El Nino is the "warm" part of a weather pattern (El Nino/La Nina) that has a large scale effect on the sea surface temperature (SST) in parts of the pacific.

    It is known, that there are two types of this pattern, termed EP (eastern pacific) and CP (central pacific) el nino, the most notable difference (as far as i can tell) is, that in the EP-version the surface temperatures in a "tongue" west of peru/equador are higher compared to the CP-version, where they are lower. This is

  • This is just one article. One article does not science make. It has to be peer reviewed. Can other people come up with the same results? Is it repeatable? Do we know if what it's saying is correct? That's science.

    All we have right now is an interesting paper. It's not even really a theory yet.

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