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Is it getting hotter in Fresno ... or not?: A book about my hometown's changing weather [Print Replica] Kindle Edition

5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 15 ratings

What is the source of the climate data about which so much contention arises? How are these datasets constructed? Are they able to give us precise answers about climate change? Dr. Christy examines these questions in detail for one spot on the earth – his hometown of Fresno, California. He delves into the observations, adding some data never before used to build a dataset of temperatures starting in 1887. Along the way he mentions the personal experiences of his Fresno life that dovetail with his passion for climate science. After putting all of the information together, he arrives at a conclusion that implicates humans for the temperature changes Fresno has seen, but not in the way that is popularly promoted today. Finally, he offers insight from his background as a professional Climatologist and former resident of Africa as to how we might approach policy decisions regarding this highly contentious issue.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B091JJJW8R
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ John Christy (March 31, 2021)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 31, 2021
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 9880 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Not enabled
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 140 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 15 ratings

Customer reviews

5 out of 5 stars
5 out of 5
We don’t use a simple average to calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star. Our system gives more weight to certain factors—including how recent the review is and if the reviewer bought it on Amazon. Learn more
15 global ratings
How Honest Scientists Adjust Temperature Data and Evaluates Trends.
5 Stars
How Honest Scientists Adjust Temperature Data and Evaluates Trends.
A year ago, when passing through Huntsville, Alabama, I had the great good fortune to sit down with Roy Spencer and John Christy for a pleasant extended lunch. As we were leaving John gifted me his new book, “Is It Getting Hotter in Fresno…or Not?” The city of Fresno might not resonate with most people but having studied the effects of climate on ecosystems in California for 30 years, I knew it would be an invaluable contribution to my understanding. On the cover is young boy staring to the heavens, so I also hoped that meant that John would explain climate change at the recommended level of a 6th grader to better reach the general public.But climate change is complex, and can’t be explained by any simplistic, single magical control knob. A better title for his book would have been “How Honest Scientists Adjust Temperature Data and Evaluate Trends.” The young boy on the cover represented John’s life as a “weather geek” with an unwavering desire to understand climate and weather since middle school. Throughout the book, Christy’s uncompromising integrity is obvious as he devotes several chapters to explaining how and why temperature data MUST be adjusted before any comparisons between weather stations can be meaningfully evaluated. He readily admits however those adjustments are part science and part an art form, requiring a thorough knowledge of the landscapes surrounding each weather station. Without understanding those landscape effects Christy warns “the adjustment procedure is heavily influenced by what the scientist expects. So rather than objective information, we have pre-determined information>”You might need to read twice the chapters on why temperature adjustments are needed, but I suggest you do. It points out how different landscapes, natural or altered, affect the weather. That will help you separate good adjustments from bad adjustments. Christy saw firsthand how each change in the location of Fresno’s weather station brought it to a new landscape. He witnessed the effects growing urbanization on various areas of the region. Too many climate skeptics readily assume all adjustments are driven by a political bias. Indeed, without a thorough knowledge of the surrounding landscape changes, applying a one-size-fits-all algorithm and the expectation that any warming must be driven by rising CO2, will certainly bias temperature adjustments. But good skeptical climate scientists, like John Christy, understand there are several important variables affecting weather, and good adjustments must be made.While Fresno’s weather holds little interest for most, especially if they have never been there, I was eager to read John’s analyses. Fresno is just 60 miles southwest of Yosemite National Park, whose climate I had studied as part of my research on northern California’s ecosystems and wildfires. Fresno is a growing city surrounded by grasslands of the San Joaquin Valley 300 feet above sea level, where lost wetlands and irrigation affect temperatures. In winter Fresno is affected by tule fogs, while Yosemite’s forests are buried in snow at 4000 feet. Nonetheless, like Christy’s analysis of Fresno’s temperature trends, the US Historical Climate network determined the maximum temperatures of Yosemite have not been warming, in contrast to significantly rising minimum temperatures. A similar lack of warmer maximum temperatures since 1930 has been reported for all northern California.Using Christy’s adjustment methodologies, maximum Fresno temperatures declined as did Yosemite’s between 1930 and 2010, while minimum temperatures behaved very differently, steadily warming. After accounting for urbanization effects, he concluded, “I have more confidence that the natural climate of Fresno has not warmed over the past 130 years and the upper bound of the natural TMAX (maximum temperatures) would be about +0.05 F/decade.” And despite the uptick since 2010, there has been no statistically significant daytime warming in Fresno.In contrast there has been a significant rise of 0.51F /decade in the minimum temperature. As illustrated in the lights of the satellite photo, the current location of Fresno’s weather station (KFAT) is the Fresno airport located in the heart of Fresno’s increasing urban heat island. Due to human alteration of that landscape, KFAT is now 6F warmer than in the late 1880s. Clearly maximum and minimum temperatures are being driven by different dynamics. Thus, they should be analyzed separately as Christy has done. Averaging maximum and minimum temperatures creates a misleading average as would averaging apples and oranges.Finally, Christy examines trends in extreme temperatures using various thresholds. One such analysis examined the number of days per decade when maximum temperatures exceeded 99.5F (orange bars). As would be expected from the trend analysis, extreme hot days have been increasingly less common since 1880. Although there has been a recent uptick, but still there were more hot days in the 1930s. And as a growing urban heat island would also predict, the number of days when minimum temperatures dipped below 32.5F, has been steadily decreasing (blue bars).For everyone interested in how temperature trends are constructed, I highly recommend Christy’s book. His thorough examination of Fresno’s temperatures suggests there is no climate crisis. But for people living in Fresno’s city limits, efforts to reduce the stifling heat caused by urban heat islands, would be money well spent.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2023
If you want to understand how the claims of global warming are made this is a great read using the town of Fresno, CA as an example. Dr. Christy is from Fresno and is a world-renowned climate scientist. Highly recommended.
Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2021
This book is, in my mind, two books: The first is a simple and clear explanation of why the central valley of California has the climate that it does. For this, some excellent maps and satellite photos are provided that illustrate the points being made. I grew up in Fresno, so this part not only explained odd climate factors that I observed during my childhood, but it also brought back many fond memories. It also has relevance for me today, like why a niece’s family citrus farm is located to the east, and why the recurring forest fires in California have nothing to do with “climate change.” Dr. Christy writes in an engaging fashion, mixing personal childhood history with some solid facts regarding climate that I find good to know. Like why the Central Valley is plagued by an inversion layer, etc. The second part is an almost mind-numbingly deep dive in what it takes to re-construct a somewhat-accurate historical climate dataset. This part can be skimmed, but it’s worth going through just to see what it takes to determine the temperatures of the past, and to learn about the history of how such temperatures were collected. Sometimes there were gaps. At the Clovis station in Jan. 1924, a note attached to the records stated that “R. Webster was killed while at this station and I am taking his place. Will try and give complete report hereafter.” Fort Miller, established to protect gold miners, provided temperature measurements (albeit spotty) starting in 1851, but it is now at the bottom of Millerton Lake behind Friant Dam...?! Oh, and it makes a big difference where the thermometer is located: on the ground, on top of a building, facing north (so the sunlight doesn’t hit it), what times during the day were the temperatures recorded, etc. etc.... all these factors must be accounted for somehow. It’s a huge job, and the reader learns on her own just how difficult it is, and what the caveats necessarily are, in drawing any definitive conclusions about “climate change” from such datasets.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2022
This is an honest look at global warming without all the scare tactics. John Christie shows you the real changes not the hyped ones
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Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2021
I finished this book with deep respect for the author's brilliance, humility, and abilities as a teacher. Anyone who thinks the science of climate change is settled should read this and discover otherwise.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2023
John Christy and Roy Spencer have been pioneers in gathering and interpreting satellite based data on worldwide temperatures. Their database is seen the world over as the gold standard for unbiased temperature data since the dawn of satellite capture (1979). The beginning of every month I go to their website to see the result of the previous month's satellite data.

This short book (132 pages) does a great job in digging into the difficulties of gathering, using and interpreting land based temperature data which has been collected manually for the last 130 years or so. By choosing to focus on a very small area (Fresno, CA), John Christy is able to dig into the details and show clearly why land based weather stations read by humans daily are so fraught with problems and distortions. I have a much better understanding of this process now and can see why trying to gather and use this data on a worldwide basis is a nearly insurmountable task. I also now understand the "urban heat island effect" much better, and why we can expect nigh time lows to be warmer as areas continue to urbanize.

At times, John can lose me in the weeds with his dogged focus on getting it right. His ability to sort through the data, ferreting out erroneous points (thermometers in the sun, faulty equipment) while being able to adjust for rational differences in data (siting elevation, urban encroachment, seasonality factors) made this an eye opening experience for me.

Although satellite data has only been available for the last 40 years, it has proven to be far superior to the land based system we have been using, and much less prone to distortion or misunderstanding.
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Top reviews from other countries

Chillyfinger
5.0 out of 5 stars A Close Look At Data Collection Issues For Temperature
Reviewed in Canada on March 29, 2023
IPCC depends extensively on temperature models. These are very widely criticized as being systematically biased toward higher temperatures, such as over-counting temperatures in urban areas.

This book shows how hard it is to get an honest temperature record. His conclusion (no trend) should make us skeptical about global temperature records.

This doesn't allow us to toss out IPCC temperatures, just to realize that there is a devil in the details.
Easy Raider
5.0 out of 5 stars A very illuminating read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 31, 2022
Although a bit technical in parts, this short book illustrates just how difficult it is to measure and understand temperature changes in even one small part of the world, let alone for the whole globe. Spoiler alert. Is it getting hotter in Fresno? Yes, but not for the reason you might expect!

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