Special pleading by exclusion. That' original.
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Actual argument from the subject of this thread. That's reading comprehension.
Indeed you are, and did so by trying to infer that this was not part of the "global" average. Whether it does or doesn't contribute to that average remains to be seen.
I stated quite clearly what the situaton is:
- The US temperatures are regional temperatures.
- The global temperatures are ... global
!
Of course the global temperatures are calculated from all of the regional temperatures from areting the world (including the US).
So whether these
regional temperatures do or do not change the contribute to that average remains to be seen.
Evidence? They obviously don't if there's a 10C bias. I don't think you realize the implications of what you're implying.
I do not think that you know the climate science.
Absolute temperatures do not matter much. It is temperature anomalies that are used. The calculation of global temperatures is designed to minimize the effect of out-lier measurements such as the ones mentioned in the Arctic. For these reasons, it is extremely naive to think that a big number in any reported bias will result in a big change in global temperature anomalies.
The big point is that these will have an even smaller impact on the trends in the temperature anomalies.
The scientific evidence is that the global temperatures from surface stations match the global temperatures from satellites (but usually stated as temperature anomalies).
See
Are surface temperature records reliable? which concludes
The well-known and widely-cited reconstructions of global temperature, produced by NASA GISS, UEA CRU, and NOAA NCDC, are replicable.
Independent studies using different software, different methods, and different data sets yield very similar results.
The increase in temperatures since 1975 is a consistent feature of all reconstructions. This increase cannot be explained as an artifact of the adjustment process, the decrease in station numbers, or other non-climatological factors.
The US bias cancels out as
stated in the paper.
Erroneous Arctic Temperature Trends in the ERA-40 Reanalysis: A Closer Look
This only looks at the Arctic climate. Once again no stated analysis on the impact on global temperatures.
Atmospheric temperature measurements biases on the Antarctic plateau
More regional stuff and no analysis on the impact on global temperatures.
So basically the future result of these papers will be that the biases in these measurements will be compensated for and we will get more reliable readings from these surface stations.
This is good science.