Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Joyce. Show all posts

Monday, 4 November 2019

Storm Lorenzo was only a gust compared to Storm Ulysses in 1903

James Joyce's classic novel Ulysses was based in Dublin in the year 1904. In the Aeolus chapter, a severe weather event is mentioned :

Lady Dudley was walking home through the park to see all the trees that were blown down by that cyclone last year.

In Don Gifford's 1974 book, Notes for Joyce, it is explained that this refers to one of the most severe gales in Dublin's history and was compared at the time to that of 1839 (the night of the big wind). The gale caused great damage to property and particularly to trees in Phoenix Park. It is estimated that between 1000-3000 trees were uprooted in the park. In parts of the country it was reported that whole woods were leveled.

A cyclone that could bring down so many trees in Dublin would be seen as a catastrophic event today, and final proof of man made climate change / the end of the world. But we don't get storms that have this much force anymore, they are a thing of the past. Historic climatic events such as in 1839 and 1903 show that the climate, if anything, has actually improved in Ireland.

Sunday, 7 December 2014

James Joyce and Climate Change


In James Joyce's famous book, Dubliners, there is an interesting passage from my favourite short story in the book, An Encounter:

He stopped when he came level with us and bade us good-day. We answered him and he sat down beside us on the slope slowly and with great care. He began to talk of the weather, saying that it would be a very hot summer and adding that the seasons had changed greatly since he was a boy—a long time ago.

Is there any veracity to this ? If we assume that this slice of oral history is based on Joyce's own childhood reminiscences, then we can work out what period the old man in the story is referring to. Dubliners was written in about 1904 and this particular story is about two boys mitching off school. James Joyce was born in 1882 which would mean he would have heard this bit of oral history around 1890-1895. If we assume the old man was in his seventies at the time, then this would put him being born around 1820. We can then test his claim by referring to the temperature record from Armagh, one of the longest temperature records on the planet :

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.1148/pdf

Figure 7 shows that the pre-1820 period was cooler than the period that followed:



The above paper concluded :
Long-term trends are seen in both seasonal and annual mean temperatures, with spring and summer series relatively flat compared with autumn and winter. Prior to 1820 we note that autumns and winters were cooler by ∼1 °C. Later, we note a significant warming in the mid-19th century, which started in the late 1820s and continued till c. 1870. A cool interval at the end of the 19th century was followed by a period of rising mean temperatures that lasted till the mid-20th century. Finally, a slight cooling from 1960 to 1980 was followed by a gradual warming over the past two decades. In spite of the current warmer conditions, annual mean temperatures still remain within the range seen in the previous two centuries.

So James Joyce grew up in a warmer climate than that of the old man and it's interesting that the old man refers to the summer going to be "very hot" as this ties in with the above data as things begin to warm up again around 1895. But with all the talk about climate change and rising temperatures today, the records show that the annual mean temperatures in the past 100 years have not moved outside the range of Joyce's and the old man's time.

The Valentia temperature record is the most reliable source as it provides data not compromised by urban heat :

Mean Air Temps

So we can see that the temperature rose consistently above 11C in the 1990s and 2000s but there were periods in the past when it exceeded 11C aswell so we are still within ranges that people in Joyce's time experienced. Indeed, if we look at the latest annual mean temperature records from Valentia we can see that last year we were barely at 11C. While this year we are just over 11C at the time of writing with December turning out colder than the previous three years. So there is nothing terrifically extraordinary about recent temperatures in Ireland :


Mean temperature in degrees Celsius for Valentia_Observatory
YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20147.46.77.910.411.414.716.314.715.612.39.77.8*11.2*
20137.67.06.18.310.313.217.315.914.813.38.28.410.9
20129.08.810.110.211.513.314.415.713.510.88.08.311.1
20115.58.37.911.611.912.313.914.014.112.511.28.411.0
mean7.37.28.29.411.613.815.415.414.111.79.37.810.9
*Mean temperatures for 2014 as at 7th December 

There is an interesting article on the Armagh observatory website that puts the climate debate into context and explains just how complex Earth's climate system is. For example, scientists are still unsure as to what role clouds play in our climate :

The clouds are a main character in the climate scene, however their detailed role is yet to be determined. Climate models do not know how to deal with them. They play a double role, one the one hand they are bright and they reflect part of the radiation coming directly from the Sun back to space, having a cooling system because less energy arrives to the Earth surface. But on the other hand the Earth releases to space energy too and clouds can act as a blanket, trapping that radiation which should have escaped to the space in the same way as the greenhouse gases. Which of the two effects is going to dominate depends on the type and altitude of the cloud. Thus assessing their role in climate becomes nightmarish.

Of course, the sun also plays an important role in the climate system and the period that the old man grew up in is known as the Dalton Minimum, a period of low solar activity that lasted from about 1790 to 1830. This then accounts for the cool period that we saw above in the Armagh records.




Indeed, the old man would have lived through the transition of The Little Ice Age, a period of cooling that occurred between circa 1550 and 1850. NASA claim that this period was marked by a rapid expansion of mountain glaciers in Ireland. So the end of the Little Ice Age would have been a recent memory for the older generation by the time of Joyce's birth in 1882.




We can see from the above graph that the climate has (surprise, surprise) always been changing. In the 1970s, when Tim Severin recreated Saint Brendan's voyage in the Atlantic, which occurred in 512-530AD, numerous references were made to the warmer climatic conditions Brendan experienced. This period is known as the Medieval Warm Period and the North Atlantic, where Brendan sailed to, was warmer than today. This allowed the Vikings to travel further north than had been previously possible because of reductions in sea ice and land ice in the Arctic. One wonders, if Tim Severin tried to publish his book today, when climate alarmism has become fashionable, if the climate police would be set on him.

So we can see that there was indeed veracity to the old man's claim in Dubliners, that it was cooler when he was a boy, and that it had warmed up in Joyce's time. Perhaps An Encounter was indeed based on some of Joyce's reminisces as a boy and the stories he heard growing up in Dublin.