P. Rampal, J. Weiss, & D. Marsan: New insight into decline of Arctic Sea ice cover

Dear Readers,

I can't help but add my own snarky comment about the results of this research. Last year, it was all too obvious (to me) from my daily, nay hourly, perusal of the satellite images from the Arctic that the multi-year sea ice had all but left the Arctic Ocean. Now, the British investigators have returned from their trek to the North Pole and have reported that they didn't find any multi-year ice on their route! I am commenting now about this because last year I wrote in a realclimate thread on the sea ice that the multi-year was all but gone because it had moved out between Greenland and Svalbard, and I was told (not by the realclimate people) that this was impossible because the sea ice does not move that fast. So, here it is, my snarky comment, sorry. [Do I need to also mention that during 2007, watching the water vapor satellite photo 24-hour animations I could see large hurricane and typhoon systems being sucked up to the Arctic? I went on and on about this in various threads, with no support from the illuminati. Now, papers are being published, which show that this occurred and that the resulting energy and heat entered the Arctic Ocean, as I had seen (I mean, really, this is not rocket science -- huge hot storms go up to the Arctic for months on end -- what else is to be expected except melting sea ice, come on!]

New insight into decline of Arctic Sea ice cover

ScienceDaily (May 15, 2009) — The mechanical behavior of the Arctic sea ice cover appears to favor its rapid decline. Scientists from INSU-CNRS, Université J. Fourier and Université de Savoie have analyzed the trajectories of drifting buoys anchored in the ice and found that the mean drift rate and deformation rate of Arctic sea ice has strongly increased over the last three decades. These effects, related to the mechanical properties of the cover, contribute to the faster-than-expected decline of Arctic sea ice.

This work is published in the 14 may 2009 issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research – Oceans.

Scientists from the Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Géophysique de l’Environnement of Grenoble (CNRS/Université J. Fourier) and the Laboratoire de Géophysique Interne et Tectonophysique of Chambéry (CNRS-Université J. Fourier-Université de Savoie), inspired by the 2006-2007 expedition of the polar schooner Tara, which drifted along the transpolar drift more than twice as fast as Nansen’s Fram ship 115 years earlier, analyzed the trajectories of more than 600 buoys anchored into the ice over the last 30 years1. They observed a substantial increase in the mean drift rate of the sea ice, equivalent to +10% per decade. Looking at the dispersion rate of the buoys, they also measured a strong increase in the mean deformation rate of the sea ice, equivalent to +50% in both winter and summer. This combined acceleration of Arctic sea ice drift and deformation appears to be related to, and would actually strengthen, the thinning of the cover.

A close link between sea ice deformation and fracturing had previously been revealed by scientists from LGGE(2). Increased deformation leads to greater fracturing, which in turn leads to Arctic ocean warming through solar radiation in summer. This process accelerates sea ice thinning in summer and delays refreezing in early winter, decreasing the mechanical strength of the cover and leading to even more fracturing and greater drift speed and deformation. In addition, a more fractured, and hence more mobile, sea ice cover will be exported at a faster rate out of the Arctic towards the Atlantic. These two effects, combined with the mechanical properties of the sea ice cover,probably participate to the general decline of the Arctic sea cover.

The spectacular, and largely unexpected, sea ice shrinkage observed in the summer of 2007 might be a good illustration of the interplay between sea ice deformation and decline, as the exceptional deformation rates measured by scientists in the winter of 2006-2007 most likely contributed to the levels of deformation measured the following summer and therefore to the observed shrinkage.

These complex processes and interactions, which are difficult to model in climate simulations, might partly explain why scientists have been unable to calculate the rate of decline of the Arctic sea ice cover.

1Dataset from the International Arctic Buoy Program (http://iabp.apl.washington.edu/). These buoys were originally launched to record sea level pressures and air temperatures over the Arctic.

  1. Rampal, P., Weiss, J. & Marsan, D. 2009. Positive trend in the mean speed and deformation rate of Arctic sea ice, 1979–2007. Journal of Geophysical Research, 114 (C5), C05013; DOI: 10.1029/2008JC005066
  2. Weiss, J., Schulson, E. M., & Stern, H. L. 2007. Sea ice rheology from in-situ, satellite and laboratory observations: Fracture and friction. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 255 (1-2), 1; DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2006.11.033