I was being a bit generous before.
Yes, thanks for the link. No problems.
But what did we get?
A scientific survey with raw data?
This is a story by an "explorer" and it is anecdotal and possibly very selective.
It gives some useful indication of changes in the climate experienced by some people but can they be useful in determining AGW?
There is a worrying aspect to this report in that the expedition didn't visit the Inuit, discuss things in general, note some disproportionate emphasis on changes related to warming and then formulate some ideas based on that discovery, ideas that could inform proper scientific research.
Instead the expedition set out to "prove" something they already "knew":
The 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometer) journey was the first in a series of planned expeditions called Global Warming 101 designed to raise awareness of the impacts of climate change in the polar regions.
In other words the expedition was designed to collect information, stories, anecdotes etc that supported a particular pre-conceived idea. They didn't take along any instruments to measure what they expected to find.
This doesn't mean suppressing any information, it just means asking questions that draw out only the information sought.
There is an episode of Yes Minister where Sir Humphrey explains how to make a survey deliver the result you want.
It is the easiest thing in the world to get the answers you need.
Given the objectives of this expedition it would be very surprising if they didn't find what they wanted, and especially if they chose where to go with some care.
If I wanted to prove the existence of UFOs through anecdotal evidence I could do it by finding and asking the right sort of people (whom I could find on the internet Roswell sites etc.).
....and more about the remote Inuit population living on the edge of the Arctic.
so note that it wasn't a complete survey of all Inuits with a prepared and tested questionnaire but a selective visit to "the edge of the Arctic"... whatever that means. A well chosen route?
Is there any pretence at gathering information from a true cross section of Inuit?
We don't know.
The article doesn't have a route map, it doesn't show where and when they spoke to people, it doesn't list their exact question and answers at each location.
This isn't to say that in any one fact the report is wrong. It isn't to say that the Arctic wasn't warming - at that time - just that it is rather short of anything that supports any one hypothesis or another.
But the telling statement was this: (I'm surprised they included it)
{quote]But "we have lived in this region for centuries and we will continue to," he added. "As the climate changes, we will adapt." [/quote]
Sensible man.
JMW