Hence, the Huascaran rate of change is not anomalous post-AGW. From Wordnik.com. [Trip Report « Climate Audit] Reference
Andes glaciers – records for Huascaran go back over 8,000 years. From Wordnik.com. [Monbiot v Monckton Round Two « Climate Audit] Reference
The highest peak of the ecoregion is Nevado Huascaran (6,745 m) in Peru. From Wordnik.com. [Central Andean wet puna] Reference
The plots for Quelccaya, Sajama and Huascaran look pretty harum-scarum to me. epica. From Wordnik.com. [My Prediction for dO18 at Bona Churchill « Climate Audit] Reference
While the Quelccaya glacier in the Andes arguably seems to show warm periods, the Huascaran glacier does not. From Wordnik.com. [Swindle and the IPCC TAR Spaghetti Graph « Climate Audit] Reference
The Huascaran data is highly autocorrelated 0.71, and the other two to a lesser degree, which affects the standard deviation. From Wordnik.com. [Plant Deposits at Quelccaya « Climate Audit] Reference
Huascaran is the second highest park in the South American Andes and is at the center of the highest tropical mountain range in the world. From Wordnik.com. [Huascaran National Park, Peru] Reference
If there is inconsistency between Quelccaya and Huascaran, this may point to problems with the proxy as opposed to climate interpretations. From Wordnik.com. [Swindle and the IPCC TAR Spaghetti Graph « Climate Audit] Reference
While it is larger post-AGW, it is still smaller than the pre-AGW Huascaran rate of change, so it cannot be said that the post-AGW change at Quelccaya is anomalous. From Wordnik.com. [Trip Report « Climate Audit] Reference
The Huascaran plot shows a higher absolute rate of change pre AGW than post AGW ignoring for a minute the problem that the “AGW” temperature change begins in the 1700s. From Wordnik.com. [Trip Report « Climate Audit] Reference
Major ice cores published by thompson in Science include: in South America: Quelccaya, Sajama and Huascaran; in the Himalayas: Dunde, Guliya, Dasuopu; in Africa, Kilimanjaro. From Wordnik.com. [Science Editorial « Climate Audit] Reference
It struck me that I could use a similar plot with the Huascaran, Sajama and Quelccaya 5 year data to see if I could identify any changes in mean compositions and long term trends. From Wordnik.com. [New Thompson Article at PNAS « Climate Audit] Reference
Ice cores from Huascaran in Peru and Nevado Sajama in Bolivia show that those peaks have been continuously ice-covered for 25,000 years, yet the glaciers in that area are threatened aswell. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » NYT on Hacked Climate E-Mails] Reference
There is an incomplete Quelccaya archive at WDCP for the 1983 drilling, and very incomplete archives at WDCP for Sajama and Huascaran, but there was then nothing archived at WDCP on Dunde, Guliya or Dasuopu. From Wordnik.com. [Science Editorial « Climate Audit] Reference
This Park contains the highest peak of Peru Huascaran (3,745 m), other 26 snow-capped peaks above 6,000 m, 663 glaciers, 296 lakes and 41 rivers that discharge into the Santa, Pativilca, and Marañon watersheds. From Wordnik.com. [Central Andean wet puna] Reference
I did a quick correlation between the z-scores for the 5 year average isotope composition for Quelccaya, Huscaran and Sajama, with correlation coefficients of +0.12 between Quelccaya and Huascaran and +0.02 between Quelccaya and Sajama. From Wordnik.com. [New Thompson Article at PNAS « Climate Audit] Reference
Huascaran shows a pronounced period of light precipitation prior to 1750, from which there was a sharp increase over a period of 20 or 30 years to compositions that have persisted to the present day with no apparent trend in composition. From Wordnik.com. [New Thompson Article at PNAS « Climate Audit] Reference
Huascaran National Park, Peru - Encyclopedia of Earth. From Wordnik.com. [Huascaran National Park, Peru] Reference
The Graph A comes from Ice Core 2 in Thompsons earlier study on Huascaran. From Wordnik.com. [Glacier Bay, Alaska « Climate Audit] Reference
Peru: Informal mining at Huascaran park must end, says Environment Minister. From Wordnik.com. [Living in Peru : News] Reference
Top: The Yanapaccha glacier in the Huascaran National Park, Peru (from Byers, 2000). From Wordnik.com. [RealClimate] Reference
Quelccaya is at least 1500 years old, Dasuopo is 9000 years old, and Huascaran has seen 19000 years. From Wordnik.com. [RealClimate] Reference
No values are shown for Huascaran in the 1990s I’m not sure why and none for Sajama in the last part of the 1990s. From Wordnik.com. [New Thompson Article at PNAS « Climate Audit] Reference
5 At the same time as the change in the variance of the Huascaran data, the average changes as well, warming by a full percent around 1750 and then staying stable thereafter. From Wordnik.com. [Plant Deposits at Quelccaya « Climate Audit] Reference
Squinting at the Huascaran series in particular, I’d say that, if is supposed to be a thermometer, it doesn’t show anything anomalous about the last half of the 20th century. From Wordnik.com. [New Thompson Article at PNAS « Climate Audit] Reference
Alley then showed 6 àŽàⳏ18 isotope series from Thompson’s tropical glaciers: Dasuopu, Dunde and Guliya in the Himalayas; Huascaran, Sajama and Quelccaya in South America. From Wordnik.com. [Alley at the NAS Panel « Climate Audit] Reference
I’ve plotted Kilimanjaro last fall, In the Andes, 2 of the 3 series have higher MWp than modern, but one series, Huascaran, has very elevated values with the rise occurring in the 18th century and continuing to the present. From Wordnik.com. [NAS Ice Core – Dasuopu « Climate Audit] Reference
The Huascaran record looks suspect. From Wordnik.com. [Plant Deposits at Quelccaya « Climate Audit] Reference
Parque nacional Huascaran. From Wordnik.com. [Huascaran National Park, Peru] Reference
Huascaran. From Wordnik.com. [U.S. News] Reference
"Huascaran National Park, Peru.". From Wordnik.com. [Huascaran National Park, Peru] Reference
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