Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Choosing the right chart

 It's very important to choose the right chart.  The wrong chart can give the wrong impression, and could even be a Denier Chart.

For example.


The Pacific anomaly chart now shows no heating in the Pacific belt.  When El Nino was declared, it was showing a wedge of heat from the East.  Luckily, it still shows a giant hot blob right against the coast.  This is a True Believer Chart.  This is cleared for publication.

However,


However, this is the actual temperature chart.  The anomaly chart has an 'average of the day' subtracted from the temperature, and can have some issues.  The temperature chart shows very cold water up against the East coast, off Ecuador, and this is not on the anomaly chart.  Therefore, this is a Denier Chart.  

ps.  if we are lucky, that super-hot blob on the anomaly chart could be the reason for the Giant Zoom on the accumulated anomaly chart, and the NOAA world temperature chart.  Some people could be blowing it out their nose about the Arctic ice extent causing this.

pps. and to quote the old movie:  When the popular chart conflicts with the denier chart, say "What denier chart?"

more:  Please note that this giant 'Water Volcano' does not exist, much like bitcoin does not exist.  You cannot send tourists there to get blown up.  I am not going through all the back-charts to find the exact math error, since that's work.  Just be prepared to ghost this chart, and say "What El Nino?"  That works every time.


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