Faulty BoM data adds to Australian hot summer

Amazing – the NNTHS (National Night-Time Hot Spot)at its original Walungurru Airport 15664 has snuck back into BoM temperature anomaly maps this much ballyhooed hot summer. In December there was no sign of the NNTHS but in Jan it was obvious and in February the NNTHS made Walungurru the Star.. Interesting to compare with the Lower Troposphere temperature anomaly maps from UAH satellites. Nettle main is viagra soft tablet yet another traditionally used health supplement employed to end hair thinning. Apart from professional therapists an autistic child also needs compassionate parenting. Men are able to achieve stronger and fuller erection due to combined effect viagra purchase on line of muscles, nerves, hormones and blood vessels are not damaged while removing the tissues that cause cancer. This is supposed by experts who learned the efficiency and safety of chiropractic care, spinal manipulation in particular, as an alternative medicine, still, many people are seeking the help of hypnosis, in order to get relief from stress, depression and anxiety. viagra sale I have not found the December 2018 map yet but January 2019 lacks any anomalous temperature hump is central Australia and has a very different shape to the BoM map. February lacks the more pronounced central Australian anomalously warm ridge yet found the cool anomaly relating to Queensland rain.
See my animation 2002-2007 from 2014 showing how year after year the NNTHS eye glares out from the same site Walungurru Airport 15664 signaling “faulty data”. Now I find that the NNTHS has moved to Jervois 15602 (ENE Alice Springs ~300km)
It looks clear that BoM can not get central Australian temperatures sufficiently “congruent” in their database.

6 thoughts on “Faulty BoM data adds to Australian hot summer”

  1. Just noticed that in the years 2003 and later the NNTHS has moved east to vicinity of the Jervois weather station 15602 (ENE Alice Springs ~300km) – will make another animation.

  2. Very revealing, why can’t the Bureau do this and fix the problems it identifies?

    There seem to be problems in other places too. In earlier years (2003-9) there is another hotspot near Durham in SW Qld, and there is a cool spot through the whole record at Chowilla in SA just north of the SA-Vic-NSW border.

    Wazza do you know if they are using ACORN or raw temperatures for these graphs? Either way they should be putting them to work to spot anomalies, not just churning them out for decades with obvious errors.

  3. Great cold spot find Dave in SA just north Renmark. And re your SW Queensland hot-spot just east of Innamincka – I think the Charleville-Tambo area is also over represented for hot-spots. Then in south eastern WA there is often a hot-spot from vicinity Warburton elongated towards Forrest on the Transline.

  4. O/T to a degree, but probably most people will have the information that Peter Ridd (ex JCU) has his day(s) in Court in about 2 weeks (listed March 26-28).

    I’m pleased for Peter that my fear of endless legal delay has been abated. There still may be a very narrow legal allowance of argument, avoiding the data contest over the GBR, just as the BoM sidesteps ACORN2 data questions.

    An undeniable advance for objective debate, untrammelled by political motives, has been the swift and plentiful crowd funding Peter received. This is cautionary for all Uni vice-chancellors.

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