A 
            Million-Year El Nio?
            New York Times Selective 
            in Article on Climate Studies
by  
            Megan Alvarez
June 26, 2005	
            
     
            In a Friday, June 24, 2005, article entitled Researchers Say Ocean 
            Evidence Points to a Million-Year El Nio by Kenneth Chang, the 
            Times reported on two conflicting studies about global warming, but 
            only one of them was deemed worthy enough for the headline and 
            two-thirds of the article. 
     The article began, The last time the earth was warm 
            the waters of the Pacific Ocean may have been stuck in an El Nio 
            pattern that lasted more than a million years, making a 
            not-so-subtle assumption that the earth today is warm and that the 
            last time this happened, it was disastrous. 
     The article focused on a new study by Dr. Michael Wara 
            while he was a graduate student at the University of California, 
            Santa Cruz. Wara studied the changes in water temperature during a 
            period 4-3.5 million years ago, known as Pliocene, in which global 
            temperatures averaged about 5 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than todays 
            temperatures. Thus, wrote Chang, scientists look to the Pliocene 
            for clues about how the earths current warming trend could affect 
            climate. Again, Chang aruged that the earth is warming, ignoring 
            any debate about global warming.
     This debate, however, is widespread and touch on 
            various aspects of the global warming debate, none of which Chang 
            chose to recognize. One of the most disputed issues is whether the 
            earth is actually warming. While many reports, like Changs simply 
            accept this, scientists are still debating this point. One of the 
            most notable opponents of global warming and the Kyoto Treaty, Dr. 
            S. Fred Singer, president of The Science & Environmental Policy 
            Project, has pointed out that data collected from weather balloons 
            and satellites from 1979 until the present show no sign that the 
            earth is warming. 
     Chang, however, spent the bulk of his article on 
            dangers implied from the Wara study and did not offer any reports to 
            the contrary until deep in the article, and then only briefly. Chang 
            then acknowledged another study published three months ago by 
            researchers from the University of Oxford in England conducted in 
            the same area as Waras study, using the same techniques as Waras 
            study, that found no evidence of a million-year El Nio.
     Information on this study, however, was buried near the 
            end of Changs article, while Waras study captured the headline and 
            the first seven paragraphs of the story. At the end, Chang did quote 
            Dr. David Lea, a professor of geological sciences at the University 
            of California at Santa Barbara who did not participate in either 
            study, but who said, I think the evidence probably is more 
            supportive of the second paper, but I dont think its definitive.
     That meant the Times had gone out of its way to ignore 
            one study and report another on the same topic that the expert it 
            quoted didnt believe. Both studies had been published in Science 
            magazine, yet the Times only found the one discussing a 
            million-year-long el Nio to be worth reporting. 
     This article is part of an ongoing trend in global 
            warming reporting documented in BMIs special report Destroying 
            America to Save the World. The report provided sound evidence of 
            the slanted nature of media coverage in the global warming debate. 
            The Times article was the latest example of this trend.