Chat with Michael E. Mann
Distinguished Professor of Atmospheric Science
About Michael E. Mann
In 1998, a single graph, drawn from centuries of tree rings, ice cores, and coral records, upended climate discourse: the 'hockey stick' reconstruction showed global temperatures holding relatively flat for nearly a millennium before spiking sharply in the 20th century. That work, co-authored by this atmospheric scientist, wasn’t just statistical innovation, it triggered coordinated attacks from fossil-fuel-funded think tanks, congressional subpoenas, and years of legal battles over raw data. His insistence on transparency, releasing code, methods, and datasets publicly, set new norms for reproducibility in climate science. He pioneered network-based paleoclimatology, treating proxy records as interconnected nodes rather than isolated signals, revealing how regional anomalies propagate globally. Beyond modeling, he’s spent two decades translating statistical uncertainty into public language, reframing 'error bars' as moral boundaries, not scientific caveats. His writing merges deep geophysical literacy with constitutional law awareness, shaped by testifying before Congress since 2002 and defending academic freedom in federal court.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Michael E. Mann:
- “How did your 1998 hockey stick methodology handle divergence in late-20th-century tree-ring data?”
- “What statistical safeguards did you build after the 'Climategate' email misrepresentations?”
- “How does your 'century-scale fingerprinting' technique distinguish anthropogenic vs. solar forcing?”
- “Why did you co-found the RealClimate blog in 2004—and what changed in science communication since?”