The map below is for comparing with Jeremy Bloxham's 1995 deep gepmag shifts map. Click the "Core-mantle mag shifts" page link above
Three problems remain.
1) Though the projections are a lot closer, unfortunately in the new one, Africa is where South America is on the other. The globe declines to spin to fix it, though I have asked nicely.
2) If you look at the other maps fromn the same site, for different microwave bandwidths, they do not help my case at all. I dunno why. So, while I am scratching my head about that, I picked the one that does look good. Probably a scientifically fraudulent act, but at least I am being up front about it. Go see the site shown below for the non-compliant maps.
3) The northern hemisphere maximum temp anomaly is not a bad fiit to the deep mag shifts map anomaly, but the temp hotspot has drifted away to the west of the Antarctic Peninsula. I think we can cope with that, as it does seem that the mag anomaly is drifting westwards. Bloxham's map modells the last few hundred years, whereas the satellite air temp map is for 1987 - 2007. The mag anomaly seems top be drifting westwards. I think.
On the IPCC's AGW model, the southern hemisphere picture is inexplicable. As is the northern, in fact. Perhaps vast herds of penguins have, all unnoticed, bought underwater SUV's. And perhaps most of them are presently at a Grand Prix somewhere on the Lena Rive in eastern Siberia. I am at a loss to explain the heating pattern otherwise, if we have to stick with AGW..

Figure 5. Color coded map of decadal trends in MSU/AMSU channel TTS (1987 - 2007). Data poleward of 82.5° are not available and are shown in white. This channel is affected by both tropospheric warming, and stratospheric cooling.
This is from http://www.remss.com/msu/msu_data_description.html
Note that the maps given there as Figures 3 and 4 help my case not a jot. Figure 6 is fine, it is simply a toned-down version of Figure 5.