February 26, 2010
A critical cog in the machinery that drives the theory of global warming is a small white box not too far from where you live. Inside the box sits a thermometer that tracks the local temperature, which in turn becomes part of a data trail for the monitoring of climate change on Earth.
But there's a problem: Nearly every single weather station the U.S. government uses to measure the country's surface temperature may be compromised. Sensors that are supposed to be in empty clearings are instead exposed to crackling electronics and other unlikely sources of heat, from exhaust pipes and trash-burning barrels to chimneys and human graves.
The National Climate Data Center (NCDC) uses this massive network of sensors to determine daily highs and lows at the 1,219 weather stations in its Historical Climatology Network (HCN). The network has existed since 1892, but only in the last decade has it come under intense scrutiny to determine whether the figures it measures can be trusted.
For the past three years, a group of zealous laymen has visited and photographed nearly every one of the weather stations to determine whether they have been placed properly. And what they found is a stunning disregard for the government's own rules: 90 percent of the sensors are too close to potential sources of heat to pass muster, including some very odd sources indeed:
"He will have to explain to the American people why his vision for bigger government, more spending, and higher taxes will work over the next four years when it hasn't worked in the past three and a half years.” – Sen. Rob Portman on President Obama
On August 31, 1949, Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson announced the creation of an Armed Forces Day to replace separate Army, Navy and Air Force Days. The single-day celebration stemmed from the...
nprpolitics: Sophomoric? Members Of Congress Talk Like 10th Graders, Analysis Shows http://t.co/CwNABkDX
redstate: Morning Briefing for May 21, 2012 http://t.co/rLvhcJl8 #TCOT #RS
nytimes: Euro Watch: European Markets Calm on Lukewarm G-8 Support for Euro http://t.co/udLqRQ9h
nytimes: On Education: Student to Attend South Carolina Boarding School http://t.co/ImfnIgK0
memeorandum: Factories begin to shift back to US (Hal Weitzman / Financial Times) http://t.co/8mpd5QQs http://t.co/zpvhmPy9