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I remain unconvinced. Looking at the first chart from the official argo website, there is a relatively dramatic time of increasing surface temperature (the cyan at the bottom) during the 60's. This does not match up with with the observed atmospheric temperature during the 60's, which had a mostly downward trend.
This is just from a very quick review of the data.
I'm not sure which chart you looked at but the two sites you linked both show ocean temperature graphs that show a peak at 1960 with a downward trend throughout the decade with a rise near the end of that decade that is carried through 2010. The data seems to match up to me.
Right here. This cyan bar graph is the 700m data isolated, ie what they are calling the top. The red line is the total heat found in the first 2000m. The black line would be the heat found below the top layer.
In all honesty its a weird graph, but its the only one I found.
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[–] Vanwe ago
I remain unconvinced. Looking at the first chart from the official argo website, there is a relatively dramatic time of increasing surface temperature (the cyan at the bottom) during the 60's. This does not match up with with the observed atmospheric temperature during the 60's, which had a mostly downward trend.
This is just from a very quick review of the data.
[–] Level_Cannon 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I'm not sure which chart you looked at but the two sites you linked both show ocean temperature graphs that show a peak at 1960 with a downward trend throughout the decade with a rise near the end of that decade that is carried through 2010. The data seems to match up to me.
[–] Vanwe ago
Right here. This cyan bar graph is the 700m data isolated, ie what they are calling the top. The red line is the total heat found in the first 2000m. The black line would be the heat found below the top layer.
In all honesty its a weird graph, but its the only one I found.