date: Wed Mar  2 08:38:55 2005
from: Phil Jones <p.jones@uea.ac.uk>
subject: Re: ????
to: Tim Barnett <tbarnett-ul@ucsd.edu>

    Tim,
       Because people still keep going on about the LIA, I guess there is still some debate
    amongst proxy people. I reckon it has more chance of being larger scale than the MWP,
    but both are more likely to be just NH and maybe just the N. Atlantic environs for the
   MWP.
    What neither events are though are peoples of ubiquitously cold or warm periods, with all
    years for several centuries consistently cooler/warmer than modern base periods.
       Tried to say a lot of these things in the attached paper which maybe I've sent you
    before, so apologies if I have already.
        What irks most is the continual comments that say.. 'this reconstruction hasn't got
   the
    LIA or MWP period, which we all know is there..'.  What is the point in doing any more
   proxy
    work if the answer is already known ! Ideas have to change as new data become available.
    I keep saying this, but a lot of ears are deaf to new series and people prefer to believe
   in
    concepts from the 1960s. The 1960s were a good decade for many things, but not for
    the last millennium. It's like saying - based on a very small amount of data here's what
    we think happened, but despite all the new info we will still keep these outdated
   concepts.
       If you were at Duke you would hear me present something about the 1730s and 1740s,
    For western Europe the 1730s were amazingly mild (almost as warm as today - warmer
    for autumns, for some reason), but the 1740s (especially 1740 itself) dramatically cooler.
    All must be naturally forced - but no volcanoes (or at least none we know about in the ice
   cores)
    and little change in solar output (at least in the series we have). So, maybe natural
   variability
    from just the ocean is more than we thought.
      Maybe the long PCM run will have events like this, not the same periods, but it should
   be
    getting something like this.
     So, LIA a coolish period from 1550 to 1720 and again from 1780 to 1840, but certainly not
    always cool. I believe these periods for the NH could be about 0.5C below 1961-90 when
    averaged and maybe some decades nearer to 1.0C below.
    Cheers
    Phil
   At 23:57 01/03/2005, you wrote:

     Hi Phil....i have gotten a little confused on the little ice age.  was it indeed a
     global event, or largely confined to the N Hem and/or Europe.  Is this still a
     controversy or do most good people believe the same story?  tks for clearing things up

   Prof. Phil Jones
   Climatic Research Unit        Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090
   School of Environmental Sciences    Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784
   University of East Anglia
   Norwich                          Email    p.jones@uea.ac.uk
   NR4 7TJ
   UK
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