Pixel42
Schrödinger's cat
But that spillover data is never used when calculating the 20th century average.And when the data spills over into the 19th or the 21st it's used and still quite often referred to as the 20th Century.
Not one single case of the use of "20th century average" you have insisted is commonplace has been posted in this thread.And do I need to remind you there are several cases of just that posted in this very thread?
What's absurd about this is the prolonged discussion.
Once again, the only thing you're getting right.
Reading a paper and seeing that the total dataset covers 1880-2006 and then assuming that references to "20th century average" being made elsewhere are calculated wrt that whole dataset is completely absurd.Reading a paper and seeing they used the years 1880-2006 and then seeing it referred to as the "20th Century Average" isn't absurd.
Another of your reading comprehension failures. That's NOAA explanation of why they chose the 20th century average as their baseline period, it's not why they chose the years 1901-2000 to calculate that average. They chose 1901-2000 because that's the universally accepted convention.The fact that NOAA specifically mentions how they used the truncated data set instead of the "full period" is recognition of the fact that people could become easily confused (because the convention isn't real, it's imagined)
Luck? Where?
Here:
There's no "definition" of the "20th Century", it's just a general description and not to be taken literally to mean the years 1901-2000. The fact that NOAA happened to use it was simply dumb luck in this particular instance.
Again, that's the reason why they chose the 20th century average as their baseline for calculating anomalies, not the reason they used the years 1901-2000 to calculate it that average.I don't have to ask, they've provided the reason for doing so, it's "conceptual simplicity", not some made up universally accepted convention nonsense. If that were the case there wouldn't have been a need to point it out like they did.
OK, I will.Feel free to do so, they will just reiterate what they've already posted. Specifically ask them about this "universally accepted convention".
More reading comprehension failure.No you said the same one.
Changing the baseline used to calculate the 20th century average from 1901-2000 to something else would be an absurd thing to do in any circumstances.It isn't arbitrary, it's based on more data or more reliable data becoming available among other things.
Even if that were true, and it isn't, we're not talking about colloquial use, we're talking about use by NOAA.Nonsense. The only thing I fail to comprehend is how making up something makes it true. There's no "universally accepted convention" on what the colloquial usage of "the 20th Century" is to be about.
Still waiting for that single case of "20th century average" being calculated with a baseline greater than 1901-2000.There's been numerous cases, posted here.
The only person here who's denying simple facts is you.It's quite clear the term is colloquial and not some "universally accepted convention" like you made up. Denial of this simple fact will not make it any more true. It's one thing to say in most cases it refers to the years 1901-2000 and quite another to insist the whole world should have to follow your made up convention.