Brian the Snail said:
The temperature will be that at the location of the Vostock core in Antartica, so this is local. Carbon dioxide, on the other hand, is well-mixed in the atmosphere so it will be pratically the same independently of location.
In that case the temperature should closely correlate to the atmospheric CO2 content if the global warming hypothosis is correct. Your graph suggests otherwise. For instance the temperature increases 7000 years ago whilst CO2 content decreases. Relatively sharp increases in atmospheric CO2 content at approximately 1300 and 1100 appear to occur AFTER the increase in temperature. Yet the depicted massive rise in CO2 content most recently is not matched by a corresponding sharp rise in temperature, we are lead to believe that the increase in CO2 is BEFORE an increase in temperature.
If you're thinking of the two spikes at the right hand edge of the graph, note that the high spike occurs 400 years ago, during the Little Ice Age, rather than the 1000 years you would expect if it marked the Medieval warm period.
There are no such corresponding spikes in the data supplied by Mann et al for use by the IPCC. Which of the conflicting bits of data are the Global Warming lobby basing their claims on?
Why is it junk science? Using two methods to make a measurement is perfectly acceptable, so long as the two sets of data are consistent with each other.
How do you know they are consistent in entirity? It is pure speculation.
In this case, there's an overlap between the Law Dome ice core data and Mauna Loa station data between 1958 and 1978. If you compare the two by following the links under the graph in the link I provided, you'll find that the two sets are in close agreement with each other.
So, because 0.0001% of the data correlates closely, we can extrapolate from that that the remainder of it will. I don't think so!
Your argument that carbon dioxide concentration follows temperature rise relies on the data from the ice core. If you thought that the data was dodgy, why did you use the data to make your point?
I don't know which comes first! I am merely pointing out the contradictory nature of both the evidence for and against man-made global warming. There are certainly viable alternative views, views which aren't based on apparent fraud. The 1995 IPCC report is not the only example
