See below for the National Snow and Ice Data Center update. While sea ice extent averaged for June 2008 was similar to last year, there were pronounced differences in the spatial pattern of the retreat through the month. Last year, open water quickly developed along the coasts of the Chukchi and Laptev seas. This year, an unusually large polynya has opened in the Beaufort Sea, and there is significantly less sea ice in Hudson Bay and Baffin Bay. June 2008 compared to past Junes June sea ice extent is very similar to last year and is now the third lowest on record. It lies very close to the linear trend line for all average June sea ice extents since 1979, which indicates that the Arctic is losing an average of 41,000 square kilometers (15,800 square miles) of ice per year in June. Last year, the rapid melt leading to the record-breaking minimum extent began in July. Early onset of melt Preliminary satellite data shows us that surface melt began earlier than usual over the western and central Arctic Ocean and Baffin Bay. Last year was fairly typical except for significant early melt in the Laptev and Barents seas. This year, sea ice in the Beaufort Sea began to melt on average 15 days earlier than normal, and 15 days earlier than last year. Surface melt in the Chukchi and East Siberian seas was 6 days earlier than normal, and 14 days earlier than in 2007. In the central Arctic Ocean, melt began around June 9th, which was 12 days earlier than normal and 9 days earlier than the year before. In Baffin Bay, surface melt began 14 days earlier than last year and was 16 days earlier than normal. Areas where melt occurred later, compared to last year, are confined to the margins of the ice cover. These preliminary results will be updated as more data becomes available. Why earlier melt matters What are the implications of this year's earlier-than-normal melt onset? As melting begins, the layer of snow on top of the ice becomes wet and then disappears, leaving bare ice and ponded water. Each of these changes reduces the reflectance of the surface—increasing absorption of solar energy, further reducing reflectance, and promoting even stronger melt. This is known as the ice-albedo feedback. Early melt onset exposes the snow and ice to more days with low reflectance. It also increases the exposure during the critical early summer season, when solar energy is at its peak. As colleague Don Perovich of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory notes, this combination enhances ice-albedo feedback. Perovich calculated that in 2007, some areas of the Arctic absorbed eight times as much heat because of the ice-albedo feedback, contributing heavily to last year’s record-breaking melt. The combination of ice-albedo feedback and early melt onset in 2008 sets the stage for significant ice losses this summer. Three of the most important factors in sea ice losses are melt onset, cloud conditions throughout the melt season, and atmospheric circulation throughout the melt season. With melt onset having occurred earlier than usual, cloud and atmospheric conditions over the next two months come to the forefront. To learn more about cloud conditions and atmospheric circulation, read “More on the sea ice-atmosphere connection” in our June analysis.
QuikSCAT images from the Polar View project at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), see also the many sources of ice info on these pages:
(1) http://www.seaice.dk/
(2) http://www.seaice.dk/latest-ice.html
July 16, 2008 -- Click on the image to enlarge the detail.
Link to updated images: http://www.seaice.dk/iwicos/latest/
Link to above image (click on image to enlarge it -- notice meltback on Greenland): http://manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/ice_image21/D08198.NHEAVEH.GIF
Link to above image (click to enlarge the detail): http://igloo.atmos.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/test/print.sh?fm=07&fd=17&fy=2007&sm=07&sd=17&sy=2008
From the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC):
July 2, 2008: Melt onset earlier than normal
Arctic sea ice extent for June 2008 is close to that for 2007, which went on to reach the lowest minimum since at least 1979. More notably, however, satellite data indicate that melt began significantly earlier than last year over most of the Arctic Ocean. The large area of the Arctic Ocean covered by first-year ice (described in our June analysis), coupled with the early onset of melting, may mean more rapid and more severe summer ice retreat than last year.
Overview of conditions
Arctic sea ice extent averaged for June stood at 11.44 million square kilometers (4.42 million square miles), 0.72 million square kilometers (0.25 million square miles) less than the 1979 to 2000 average for the month. This is very slightly (0.05 million square kilometers; 0.02 million square miles) lower than the average extent for June 2007, but not the lowest on record, which occurred in June 2006.
While the monthly average was slightly less than June 2007, on a daily basis, sea ice extent appears slightly higher than 2007 for most of the month. This apparent contradiction arises because of the monthly averaging calculation and because some days may have areas of missing data. To be included as an ice-covered region in the monthly average, the average concentration for that region must exceed 15%. So if the concentration is 15% for 29 days, but less than 15 percent for 1 day, it will not be included in the average ice extent for the month. Also, since ice extent decreases during June, if there is slightly more missing data in the early part of the month the monthly average could slightly underestimate the sea ice extent.
June sea ice extents in 2008 and 2007 are essentially identical, and near the lowest values for June ever recorded by satellite for the Arctic.
Conditions in context
Written by fatih al-farahat in
Arctic ice melt,
Greenland ice melt
Arctic Sea ice well on its way to disappearing this summer, Part III
Links Global Warming
Popular Posts
-
This paper can be reviewed in full through the link. Of particular interest, the scholars prepared their paper on the petroglyphs without b...
-
Trapping carbon dioxide or switching to nuclear power not enough to solve global warming problem, experts say ScienceDaily , July 13, 2009 —...
-
It has been possible in the USA for money to emasculate any regulatory regime. That should bother you. The information coming out of the ...
-
Earth's most prominent rainfall feature creeping northward ScienceDaily , July 1, 2009 — The rain band near the equator that determines...
-
by Andy Coghlan, NewScientist Environment , 20 August 2008 FEELING blue about climate change? Don't despair. Psychologists say they can ...
-
These articles are posted in cryptomundo and include a large number of illustrations that will be well worth perusing once the text has been...
-
Readers, be sure an update your link to the graph of the annual tornado statistics. NOAA appears to be changing things around, perhaps even...
-
The bee story continues with the UK now doing acomplete review of the neonicotinoid situation. It is reminiscent of the foot-dragging tha...
-
Climate change is a hoax...or is IT! By Drew Sheneman/The Star-Ledger December 08, 2009, 11:24AM View f...
-
Journal of Climate , Vol. 20, Issue 21 (Nov. 2007) 5391-5400 , DOI: 10.1175/2007JCLI1764.1 The Role of Poleward-Intensifying ...
Blog Archive
-
►
2010
(3220)
- December (224)
- November (402)
- October (532)
- September (548)
- August (403)
- July (399)
- June (196)
- May (96)
- April (96)
- March (86)
- February (101)
- January (137)
-
►
2009
(1837)
- December (344)
- November (203)
- October (160)
- September (172)
- August (125)
- July (195)
- June (131)
- May (69)
- April (73)
- March (90)
- February (150)
- January (125)
-
▼
2008
(535)
- December (57)
- November (16)
- October (79)
- September (39)
- August (69)
- July (67)
- June (38)
- May (43)
- April (53)
- March (42)
- February (14)
- January (18)
Feedjit
this blog learn to you all people in the world to keep our earth
Powered by Blogger.
Post a Comment