From: Keith Briffa <k.briffa@uea.ac.uk>
To: Valerie.Masson@cea.fr,Henry Pollack <hpollack@umich.edu>
Subject: Re: latest draft of 2000-year section text
Date: Thu Feb 23 10:14:30 2006
Cc: jto@u.arizona.edu,Eystein Jansen <Eystein.Jansen@geo.uib.no>

   Valerie and Henry
   these are really great and useful comments - I am going to try to get these incorporated ,
   in the time allowed , though today again I am busy with exam question scrutiny board
   meeting and teaching. Thanks a lot for your help
   Keith
   At 10:02 23/02/2006, you wrote:

     Dear Keith,
     A few rapid comments on the section 6.6 revised text. I have enjoyed reading it, more
     concise, less defensive and key conclusions appear more solid. Sometimes the text is
     written in the past tense, sometimes in the present tense : it could be homogenised.
     Please remove the sentence page 6-15 "The paleohydrologic record of North America is the
     most complete and diverse of any of the world in part due to the proximity to many well
     equipped labs but also due to the concern of the frequent change in drought, flood...".
     This has nothing to do in a scientific assesment (equipement versus motivation). The
     same motivation should hold true for all tropical areas!
     It would be worth to discuss in one paragraph somewhere (possibly together with the text
     page 6-6 about the proxies) the methods of tree ring standardisation which seem to have
     changed over time and lead to larger low frequency signals in the tree ring width based
     reconstructions.
     Comments on the structure :
     6.6.1 I think that the italic question for the section does not work. I suggest to add
     sub questions such as :
     What do early instrumental records tell us? (p6-2, lines 7 to 39)
     What new reconstruction efforts have been conducted since TAR for NH temperatures (6-2
     lines 41 to 6-6 25)
     What are the main sources of uncertainties in large scale climate reconstructions (6-6
     lines 27 to 49) - should refer to the section introduction / description of proxies
     What do NH temperature reconstructions tell us (6-6 lines 51 to 6-8 line 5)
     Regarding climate forcings and simulations (6.6.3 and 6.6.4) there must be a cross
     verification with chapter 9, have you looked at their revised text? The title 6.6.3
     includes too much refereence to modelling. They have been also statistical efforts to
     relate forcings and respondes (not only physical models) which have to be mentioned.
     Then modelling should be in 6.6.4 only. Another way could be to combine both in one
     section : 6.6.3 would be model-data comparisons with 1) forcings and 2) simulations
     versus reconstructions. Section 6.6.5 is too long compared to the # of studies conducted
     here.
     Minor comments :
     6-3 2 line 20 add "North European records"
     line 27 and onwards I think that Boehm reconstruction should be cited around the Alps
     back to 1780 (it really deserves to be cited).
     line 33 Chuine et al puts the French heat wave in a 700 perspective with grape harvest
     dates, which could be mentioned.
     line 36 shorten to "detailed changes in various climate forcings"
     line 44 : what are the documentary sources incorporated by Mann? I understand
     essentially early instrumental records.
     6-3 line 49 : this paragraph is a bit vague. Maybe mention more clearly areas where no
     data are available. Goosse et al GRL 2004 used a synthesis of Antarctica data +
     simulations to discuss the pb of phase with Antarctica and could be mentioned. I suggest
     to replace "assimilated" which has a special meaning for meteorologists by "combined"
     6-4 line 9 change"are" to "is"
     line 16 : how many such long records are available (= what are "very few"?)
     6-3 line 39 : is it the rapidity of the 20th c warming or the level of late 20th c
     temperatures that have to be discusssed?
     6-5 line 8 use reconstruction, not "series". I understand that one series is one proxy
     record and a mixture of records with various statistical methods is a reconstruction.
     Line 31 : add "many of the individual annually resolved proxy series".
     6-6 line 30 change "over a fixed calendar based time window such as J-A or J-D" to "over
     a specific season"
     6-8 line 29  : I propose to change the text about tropical ice cores.
     There are few strongly temperature-sensitive proxies from tropical latitudes. Water
     stable isotope records from high latitude tropical glaciers where first used as
     temperature proxies but recent calibration and modelling studies have confirmed that
     tropical precipitation isotopic composition is mostly sensitive to precipitation changes
     ("amount effect") at seasonal to decadal time scales both in south America and south
     Tibet.
     References :
     *Hoffmann G*, *Ramirez E*, Taupin JD, et al.
     Coherent isotope history of Andean ice cores over the last century
     <[1]http://wos.isiknowledge.com/?SID=W1hPnja@D7cM8l86jFa&Func=Abstract&doc=17/3>
     GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS 30 (4): Art. No. 1179 FEB 25 2003
     *Vuille M*, Werner M, Bradley RS, et al.
     Stable isotopes in precipitation in the Asian monsoon region
     <[2]http://wos.isiknowledge.com/?SID=W1hPnja@D7cM8l86jFa&Func=Abstract&doc=19/1> JOURNAL
     OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES 110 (D23): Art. No. D23108 DEC 8 2005
     By the way, in the same paragraph, you cite tropical glacier retreat as caused by
     temperature changes. I suggest to refer to chapter 3 on this topic because many studies
     have also shown that precipitation / relative humidity / albedo effects can be very
     important for tropical glacier mass balance (see for instance Vincent et al, Comptes
     rendus Geosciences 2005).
     Page 6-8, ground surface temperatures : are there tropical records available that could
     be explicitely discussed?
     The problem of calibration mentioned line 29 (lack of the last decades of the 20th
     century) also holds true for many of the long tree ring records... should it be
     explicitely highlighted here?
     6-9 : line 9-10, what is a "much longer warm period", I do not understand. I think that
     this could be shortened. I still suffer that Antarctica is not mentioned at all. In
     Goosse et al 2004 I made a stack of 6 records from East Antarctica. There is also one
     good borehole record from Law Dome (Dahl Jensen Annals of Glacio 1998) showing the same
     features.
     6-10 line 28 : I do not think that it is appropriate to discuss the Solanki paper here.
     6-10 and 11 : why mix volcanic and anthropogenic sulface aerosols rather than 2
     sections? Why not discuss changes in surface occupation (land use) in the forcings for
     the last millenium at least in one sentence?
     6-12, lines 38 and onwards : it seems that this is attribution and detection and should
     be a summary of chapter 9 or just a cross reference to chapter 9.
     Section 6.6.5 (6-12 and 13) is too long compared to the studies cited. Maybe Fortunat
     could help to make this section more punchy. Should the PhD thesis of MacFarling Meure
     be cited in this assessment?
     Remove "the best known aspects of the records"
     Refer to chapter XX for biogeochemical cycles
     The last paragraph is  probably redondant with respect to the carbon cycle climate
     feedback discussed in that chapter.
     Page 6-14 line 43 : redundancy in this paragraph. Does the coldest European winter have
     to be discussed in such detail? I would skip this (remove line mid 42 to beg of 45 and
     keep the last sentence of the paragraph which basically says the same thing.
     The section on Asian monsoon variability is not focused on the last 2000 years but on
     millenial variability => mix with 6.4? Why not cite the Tibet ice core records here (ex
     Dasuopu 18O which should be a local precip record). There are also high res speleothem
     records with high resolution. Ramesh should help on this paragraph.
     I hope that you find this useful, congratulations for the large improvements of this
     section and taking into account a record number of comments...
     Valrie.

   --
   Professor Keith Briffa,
   Climatic Research Unit
   University of East Anglia
   Norwich, NR4 7TJ, U.K.

   Phone: +44-1603-593909
   Fax: +44-1603-507784
   [3]http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/people/briffa/

References

   1. http://wos.isiknowledge.com/?SID=W1hPnja@D7cM8l86jFa&Func=Abstract&doc=17/3
   2. http://wos.isiknowledge.com/?SID=W1hPnja@D7cM8l86jFa&Func=Abstract&doc=19/1
   3. http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/people/briffa/

