These
are my own reflections:
So,
it was all unreal. The "claims" (which were really
observations as I understand) were "questionable" at best
and it never happened. it was all a technical fault?
I
don't believe!
"So
Gavin Schmidt, head of NASA, the guy who dissed Shakhova, Semiletov
and Prof Wadhams to fend off criticism of his modelling - tells us
that the Nullschool readings were a "glitch". These
readings showed a huge spike and a gradual fall-off of levels.
That
in my mind is not consistent with a glitch. If so,how could we ever
trust the satellite readings or Nullschool again.
Schmidt
is a political animal and who's to say that political considerations
don't trump over scientific objectivity.
Who's
to say that if methane readings go up exponentially that that too
would be a "glitch" or they wouldn't just stop taking
readings?"
That's
my 2 cents for the morning.
CO2
emissions spike – was it just a glitch?
This
is an addition to Robertscribbler’s
article from yesterday
Considering
that all the wildfire and human potential sources for the CO pulse
are unlikely to produce the spike in the Nullschool data, that we
have no warning of potential impending geological activity from the
major agencies, and that we have had no other reports from related
agencies to confirm the spike, we should also consider that there may
well be something wrong with the monitor. Artifacts can appear in the
satellite model data and it’s not unheard of to get a spike reading
due to other signals impacting how physical models interpret sensor
data.
(Hourly
carbon monoxide observations in Central San Bernardino do not match
high surface CO measures recorded by the GEO5 model. Similar lower
atmospheric readings come from station observations throughout
Southern and Central California. Image source: CaliforniaAMQD.)
To
this point, lack of confirmation at ground reporting stations for
high CO readings appearing in the GEO5 monitor increase the
likelihood that these high peak readings were a glitch or an artifact
in the physical data. A cursory view of local warnings shows no local
CO air quality alerts for the areas indicated in the Nullschool data
set (You
can view a list of the local monitors here).
Analysis of this data also shows much lower CO readings from these
stations in the range of 400 to 1200 parts per billion — quite a
bit lower than what the GEO5 monitor is showing.
So
what we have is one model showing a very high CO spike, but none of
the related ground monitors picking it up. Since there are hundreds
of ground stations in this region, it seems quite a bit less likely
that there is something wrong with each of the readings coming from
these stations than from the GEO 5 model itself.
This
begs the question — was there some kind of false positive that
confused GEO 5? Was there some other signal that tripped the model to
show such a high reading? But to these points, a general lack of
overall confirmation from the hundreds of ground sensors scattered
across the region seems to point to the likelihood that such elevated
readings in the GEO 5 monitor were a glitch, an artifact, or a false
reading for this atmospheric level.
UPDATED:
Final Confirmation From Earth Nullschool — It’s A Re-Calibration
Glitch
Earth
Nullschool — the site that produces the above satellite data has
listed a final confirmation. The measure used to interpret
atmospheric data was in the process of being re-calibrated and
produced a stronger than typical signal. In other words, high CO
readings for this region were a glitch. They note:
“It’s pure coincidence that at MOPITT resumed data collection over western North America while its operating temperature was still stabilizing. Had the instrument’s temperature remained unstable for a few days, it would have looked like the whole globe was erupting gas. If MOPITT has started collecting data over the south pole, open ocean, or some other obscure location, I doubt anyone would have noticed and made a big fuss. MOPITT uses light collected in the infrared part of the spectrum. Based on Terra’s system status, the CO, CO2 and SO2 data collected by MOPITT on the 25th and 26th of February should be highly suspect. On the Earth map, the CO, CO2, and SO2 levels spike sometime between 1pm and 4pm Pacific time on Feb. 25th, which is between 2100 UTC on the 25th and 0000 UTC on the 26th. This is precisely during the time window when MOPITT’s operating temperature is still unstable.”
In
addition, Dr. Gavin Schmidt, head of GISS NASA, has
confirmed the glitch in his twitter feed which you can read here.
Bryan, a poster here and blogger over at Of Tech and Learning, did a
bang up analysis on the issue last night, which
you can read here.
Earlier
Sam Carana came up with an alternative explanation
What
made carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide levels
skyrocket over California?
The
image shows levels as high as 990 ppm the day after, i.e. on February
26, 2016. I earlier posted images showing carbon monoxide levels as
high as 46,931 ppb and I also spotted sulfur dioxide levels as high
as 743.72 µg/m3 on that day.
So,
what caused this?
One
theory is that this was caused by seismic activity, with large
amounts of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide being
released from fractures running along faultlines.
Here's
another theory. On February 18, 2016, state officials announced that
the Aliso Canyon leak was permanently plugged. Since the natural gas
could no longer escape there, pressure started to build up inside the
reservoir, until one or more new holes formed elsewhere from where
the natural gas started to escape abruptly into the atmosphere, which
likely started in the evening of February 25, 2016.
So,
here is what I think could have happened. Huge methane emissions
resulted from the new leak(s) and the methane started to oxidize into
carbon dioxide. The oxidation resulted in hydroxyl depletion and this
meant there was less hydroxyl around to oxidize carbon monoxide and
sulfur dioxide, resulting in carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide
levels skyrocketing as well
Don't worry (sic). Nothing ever happened at all and besides the Indian paper was "questionable at best"
Here's a sceptical blog post.
Bad Data – Carbon Monoxide Eruption Over Western North America Not Real
The internet has been in a tizzy over the over the possibility that this sudden and dramatic output of CO, as well as CO2 and SO2, signifies that a large earthquake is imminent on the west coast. The basis for these claims is a paper that appeared in the journal Applied Geochemistry authored by Dr. Ramesh Singh titled, “Satellite detection of carbon monoxide emission prior to the Gujarat earthquake of 26 January 2001.” Most of the blogs have been linking to this page on NatureIndia.com.
I’ve
read the journal paper, and it’s claims are questionable
at best.
However the merits of the paper are irrelevant because there was no
major gas emission on February 25th.
I wonder if the same people who would contend who noticed this and put out the alert are just irresponsible 'scaremongers' would regard those who blow the whistle on the methane clathrate gun in a similar vein.
I strongly suspect they would.
Dutchsinse has now commented
3/01/2016— LARGE CARBON (CO) MONOXIDE GAS RELEASE ALONG THE WEST COAST — ASEISMIC PRECURSOR SEEN IN ACTION
Hundreds
of my viewers have contacted me regarding a large sudden (and strange
) Carbon Monoxide gas eruption across the West Coast of the United
States.
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