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No it hasn't. But some people want you to think that.
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No it hasn't. But some people want you to think that.
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Dave, that's three out of hundreds of thousands! Get a sense of perspective, man!
I've published stuff in orefield mineralogy that has falsified previous papers, but never, ever have I seen anything in that field that I would say is anything more than making mistaken conclusions - and we're looking at papers that predated my work by decades.
In general mineralogy, there is one exception to add to your list: the work of A.W.G. Kingsbury. This is a very sad case. Kingsbury was a very well-respected mineral collector who published many new finds in the journal Mineralogical Magazine especially in the 50s and 60s. Many years later a lot of these were shown to be - as you say - frauds. To this day, nobody knows what motivated this deceit, and you would certainly not get away with it today. Sadder still, he did describe a lot of genuine finds that have been reconfirmed by subsequent workers - why he went the extra length to get more "notches on the stick" is something that has baffled leading mineralogists ever since. But the important thing is that his peers got him in the end!
If you want to read how the fraud was uncovered, see:
http://www.geocurator.org/arch/Curator/Vol6No9.pdf
Cheers - John
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Exactly, Andres - I've never seen such a storm in a teacup!!
cheers - John
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Hey John,
Exactly, the three off the top of my head, are not a great number at all and goes to point to the added value of the pre-published, peer-reviewed system.
However, we have had a number of papers authored over the last 10-15 years that would appear to lack the quality one would expect of a scientific paper. Either by the lack of isolating the degrees of freedom or the isolation of the potential variables in a given observation, causing conclusions to be drawn which are not supportable by replication of the work.
To overcome this I was proposing that the documentation of the experiment and the data be archived similar to the effort we apply to judicial evidence. That we do not apply the same care with informational evidence is appalling, especially if the conclusions are being used to drive national or international policy.
Cheers!
Dave Cooke
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What David is suggesting is some form of central archive, which could indeed be a useful asset. It would clearly require a funding-stream and the manner of its administration would need to be addressed. The taxpayer would no doubt have to cough up for these things.
It would have to be global in nature, however, and in each country the same basic setup would be required. The main principle would be that the data would be available on an open-source basis. I'm all for that. Open source is an excellent thing (apart from anything else it's the exact opposite to Microsoft!)
You would doubtless get a few cranks trying to distort things (be it evolution, plate tectonics, AGW or whatever theorem). But most of the time the peer-review process would block these, and the only other point would be to take anything posted to the Blogosphere (where you can write any old crap) with a pinch of salt ;)
Cheers - John
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That's as good a description of the Denialosphere as I have heard! ;)
Cheers - John
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I think that the inept media can turn anything into the unexpected if it grabs attention and sells.
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After reading the arcticle it sounds as if the Hadley Centre obtained what raw data it needed to do its study, adjusted the data so that is was easier to work with, and only kept the modified data as the raw data was already held by the governments/organisations that the Hadley Centre obtained the data set from.
That's what I understand happened
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I'm not sure that that question has been asked of them?
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I suspect that some of the organisations that provided data do charge and that it is for commercial reasons they stipulated that their data should not be made freely available to the general public. Though I may be wrong.
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