cc: Mike Wallace , John Kennedy date: Wed Apr 9 13:40:03 2008 from: Phil Jones subject: Re: Decision on Nature manuscript 2008-01-00939A to: David Thompson Dave, Agree on the skeptics. Unfortunately a few know some people who should know better. Susan knows what some have been doing over the past few weeks. Some are also making a lot out of the current La Nina cooling in the global record. Press Release essential therefore. Dick Reynolds would be great for a news/views item. He could also then get called by the press in the US. If you can talk to Nature into this we can involve him in the release. Cheers Phil At 13:27 09/04/2008, David Thompson wrote: Phil, I know what you mean about liaising over a press release. It's occurred to me the work might be misused by the skeptics. My knee-jerk reaction was to have nothing to do with the press on this. I figured it would be easy to be quoted out of context, and I thought I'd let the work speak for itself. I also don't think the fringe skeptics are worth an ounce of my time. But ... maybe that's too strong of a reaction. I'm certainly open to crafting a few paragraphs which we all agree on. And I'm happy to entrain other folks in the release. I don't know if Nature are doing a news and views item. If they are, I'll suggest they contact, say, Dick Reynolds and maybe Susan. -Dave On Apr 9, 2008, at 12:28 PM, Phil Jones wrote: Dave, An email came last night to update my profile with Nature, so I expected this. Congratulations again! Once we have the proofs, we'll need to liaise over a press release. We need to be very careful what we say. When we do these with the global T figures the UEA and Met Office press offices work together. I reckon we should use this process again - and involve David Parker, Chris Folland and possibly John Mitchell in the drafting of this. The press release will need to briefly mention the implications of this for the long-term trend and also the changes that will be made to the SSTs (not just for 1945-60) but also potentially to the recent few years from the buoy dominance now. Do you know Dave if Nature are doing a news and views item on the paper? If they aren't it would be good to try and get them to do one and have Dick Reynolds do it. Dick could then discuss the implications of both these points. In both of the above, I'm trying to head off the obvious skeptic backlash who'll say we can't measure T properly, so why should we believe the rest of the global T data. I know all that you've done is kosher and we learn of problems through varied analyses, but the skeptics won't see it this way - and they'll try and rake up as much as they can. As for the proofs I'll be away the week before you come to Norwich (so away April 21-25). Also away May 12-16. I should be in email contact these week though. I don't think we'd gain much with a cover picture. The paper isn't really about volcanoes. I wouldn't bother with the front cover. The attached may be useful when you're talking about this. This just shows that the US destroyed most of their WW2 logs. I got this from Scott Woodruff in Boulder. The name of the person who signed this is cropped. Scott did that to protect the guilty! The person is still alive - I'm told! Cheers Phil At 11:31 09/04/2008, David Thompson wrote: Yeehaw. Nature made a decision very quickly (the editor actually emailed to say the manuscript would be accepted within about 2 hours of my submitting the revised version). Two quick questions: 1. I think we should all have a chance to review the page proofs ... we won't be able to make major changes, but I think it's important everyone is comfortable with every word. I imagine I'll receive the proofs within the next few weeks. Does anyone have any extended travel plans during that period? 2. They've asked if I'd like to submit a possible cover image. I imagine a version of our Fig 2 (with the volcanos labeled on the figure) would be a strong candidate. But I'm not sure we'll gain much from being on the cover. And I don't want to give the impression we're grandstanding. What do you think? -Dave Begin forwarded message: From: [1]h.anthony@nature.com Date: April 9, 2008 11:06:14 AM BDT To: [2]davet@atmos.colostate.edu Subject: Decision on Nature manuscript 2008-01-00939A 9th April 2008 Dear Professor Thompson We are delighted to accept your manuscript "A large discontinuity in the mid 20th century in observed global-mean surface temperature" in Nature. Thank you for choosing to publish your interesting work with us. We will edit your manuscript to ensure that it is intelligible to our wide readership and that it conforms with house style. See [3]www.nature.com/nature/authors/get_published/index.html#a10 for an explanation of this process. We look particularly carefully at the titles of all papers to ensure that they are relatively brief and that indexing is accurate. Our subeditors are likely to send you the edited text for your approval before it is typeset. You will subsequently receive a PDF proof of the layout, including the figures. When you receive your proof, we suggest you send it to your co-authors for them to check, but please coordinate these changes among the co-authors so that only one author communicates with Nature and only one set of corrections is sent. The corresponding (or other single designated) author is responsible on behalf of all co-authors for the accuracy of all content, including spelling of names and current affiliations of all your coauthors, so please ensure t hese are checked carefully. If one of your co-authors or art staff at your institution would be the most appropriate person to deal with artwork format matters, please email [4]art@nature.com now with the relevant details (including manuscript number and corresponding author's name). Acceptance of your manuscript is conditional on all authors' agreement with our publication policies (see [5]www.nature.com/nature/authors/policy/index.html). In particular, your manuscript must not be published elsewhere and there must be no announcement of this work to any media outlet until the publication date (the day on which it is uploaded onto our web site). We will inform you by email as soon as your manuscript is scheduled for publication, which will be after we have received your proof corrections. Advice about media relations is available from Nature's press office at [6]press@nature.com. We welcome the submission of potential cover material related to your manuscript; suggestions should be sent to Nature Editorial production department in London, as hard copies and as electronic files on a separate disk to the main paper (please include a caption of no more than 40 words: images should be 300 dpi at 210 x 297 mm in either TIFF or JPEG format). All material should be labelled with your name and manuscript reference number. We cannot promise that your cover suggestion will be used, as competition is intense. If you have not already done so, we invite you to upload the step-by-step protocols used in this manuscript to the Protocols Network, part of our on-line web resource, natureprotocols.com. If you complete the upload by the time you receive your manuscript proofs, we can insert links in your article that lead directly to the protocol details. Your protocol will be made freely available upon publication of your paper. By participating, you are enabling researchers to more readily reproduce or adapt the methodology you use. Natureprotocols.com is fully searchable, providing your protocols and paper with increased utility and visibility. Please submit your protocol to [7]http://protocols.nature.com/manuscripts. After entering your nature.com username and password you will need to enter your manuscript number (2008-01-00939A). Further information can be found at [8]www.natureprotocols.com. An online order form for reprints of your paper is available at [9]www.nature.com/nature/authors/submissions/final/forms.html. All co-authors, authors' institutions and authors' funding agencies can order reprints using the form appropriate to their geographical region. To obtain the special author reprint rate, orders must be made within 3 weeks of the publication date. After that, reprints are charged at the normal (commercial) rate. If you, your coauthors or your institutions wish to order up to 10 copies of the issue of Nature in which your article is published, please order them via your reprint order form. With kind regards Helen Anthony On behalf of Karl Ziemelis Physical Sciences Editor, Nature Nature's author and policy information sites are at [10]www.nature.com/nature/submit/. * NPG's author and referees' website ( [11]www.nature.com/authors) contains information about and links to policies, services and author benefits. See also [12]http://blogs.nature.com/nautilus, our blog for authors, and [13]http://blogs.nature.com/peer-to-peer, our blog about peer-review. This email has been sent through the NPG Manuscript Tracking System NY-610A-NPG&MTS -------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------- David W. J. Thompson [14]www.atmos.colostate.edu/~davet Dept of Atmospheric Science Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA Phone: 970-491-3338 Fax: 970-491-8449 Prof. Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090 School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784 University of East Anglia Norwich Email [15]p.jones@uea.ac.uk NR4 7TJ UK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------- David W. J. Thompson [16]www.atmos.colostate.edu/~davet Dept of Atmospheric Science Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA Phone: 970-491-3338 Fax: 970-491-8449 Prof. Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090 School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784 University of East Anglia Norwich Email p.jones@uea.ac.uk NR4 7TJ UK ----------------------------------------------------------------------------