Visualizations : Flawed Data - Temp Over Time and CO2 Levels
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Data source:
Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center
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Comments (25)
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Frank van Ham
says:
Hey! Apparently there is a correlation between Co2 level and temperature... :/
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Anonymous
says:
This view shows the correlation between CO2 and temp. That tendril at the right, is that the world spinning out of control in recent years?
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Bruce
says:
Interesting indeed, the collaborative manipulation of data like this is really something! I hadn't tried those arrangements, and now it shows something else quite interesting. Adding the year as the size makes it a little messy, but if you then scroll over that tendril, you'll see that all the points are within the last 2K years cluster. What does this mean though that such high CO2 levels are preceeding significant changes in temperature? Something, much worse is yet to come?
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Frank van Ham
says:
I know, I never said there was a causation between the two (see original post). There most certainly is a correlation though..
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Anonymous
says:
Snobby people make poor arguments.
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Anonymous
says:
Couldn't this also show that natural CO2 is a function of temperature, not the other way around?
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Anonymous
says:
After watching a BBC documentary http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4520665474899458831
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Anonymous
says:
I am interested in which technique was used to compute the Xcorrelation function with the unequally spaced (in time) data provided
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Lee Byron
says:
This view is interesting. I see a significant shape difference between the last 200 years and the previous few hundred thousand.
It only seems to be CO2 that is outlying, temperature is lining up with the natural cycle of things. |
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Bruce
says:
Wow, very cool to see that this is still getting so much interest. I want to further caveat the way I created the data set from the original datasets here:
http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/trends/trends.htm I had to compile several different text files that used different time scales and had disparate data points. For the times scales I converted, data with AD years to BP. There was also the problem that temperature and CO2 were done separately so they don't have data points for all the same years. To address this I did a simple macro that when through all the years that there was data for and inserted copies of the last data point for either CO2 or temp deviations. It may be more appropriate to use some kind of averaging, especially since many point will be closer to a more recent entry, but I just always used the previous. Anyway, I would invite anyone more savvy to revisit the original text files. Regardless, there is certainly a clear correlation between these two datasets, which cannot be ignored. The fact that we have outliers should raise some questions. One question someone has was that since temp hasn't gone up is it reasonable to assume we've reached the maximum impact. My opinion is that there is likely a large delay between the change of CO2 and temp, but since we have made unnatural changes in CO2, it will not follow the previous trends which followed some more natural coupling. From this data it appears to me that the two do in-fact mutually affect one another, this should be even more alarming because as temp does rise, even more CO2 may get dumped from a natural process that we aren't fully accounting for. This could be releases from carbon sinks, like permafrost fields and the ocean and/or a killing of exchangers such as forests or plankton. Anyway, I'm glad this has raised so many good questions, it would be nice to try and pull in some REAL scientists into the discussion. The public is ready to be engaged, and mediums like Many Eyes make it possible to provide more accurate discussions, based on REAL data instead of broad abstractions. |
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Bruce
says:
I apologize for the errors, I tried to explain my imperfect solution, but it apparently wasn't factored into many folks considerations. There were several comments about the temp climbs preceding the CO2 climbs, despite my cautions about how I created the data pairs. I've since revised the script that created the pairs so the date nearest to a corresponding data point was used as opposed to simply the last data point. This is why I've changed this title to flawed. The new dataset is here:
http://services.alphaworks.ibm.com/manyeyes/data/SgoRsIsOtha6nEVIYgB3J2- new visualization is here: http://services.alphaworks.ibm.com/manyeyes/view/Sm4H4JsOtha6-tkwkPGDJ2-/S#m4H4JsOtha6zsUoiPGDJ2- The normalized data may also be of interest: http://services.alphaworks.ibm.com/manyeyes/view/SgoRsIsOtha6RF__h7G3J2- |



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