Author Topic: Hyping Daily Maximum Temperatures (Part 1)  (Read 203 times)

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Offline rangerrebew

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Hyping Daily Maximum Temperatures (Part 1)
« on: January 22, 2023, 07:00:37 am »
Hyping Daily Maximum Temperatures (Part 1)
January 19, 2023 By jennifer 14 Comments

 
There is more than one way to ruin a perfectly good historical temperature record. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology achieves this in multiple ways, primarily through industrial scale remodelling (also known as homogenisation – stripping away the natural warming and cooling cycles that correspond with periods of drought and flooding), and also by scratching historical hottest day records, then there is the setting of limits on how cold a temperature can now be recorded and also by replacing mercury thermometers with temperature probes that are purpose-built, as far as I can tell, to record hotter for the same weather.

The Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) regularly claims new record hot days, and Australian scientist report that heat records are now 12 times more likely than cold ones. But how reliable – how verifiable – are the new records?

I have been trying for five years to verify the claim that the 23 September 2017 at Mildura was the hottest September day ever recorded in Victoria. According to media reporting at that time, it was the hottest September day all the way-back to 1889 when records first began. Except that back then, back in September 1889, maximum temperatures were recorded at Mildura with a mercury thermometer. Now they are recorded with a temperature probe that is more sensitive to fluctuations in temperature and can thus potentially record warmer for the same weather.

https://jennifermarohasy.com/2023/01/hyping-daily-maximum-temperatures-part-1/
« Last Edit: January 22, 2023, 07:01:59 am by rangerrebew »
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