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Arctic sea ice drops to 2nd lowest level on record

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080827/ap_on_sc/sci_arctic_ice

Arctic sea ice drops to 2nd lowest level on record

WASHINGTON - More ominous signs Wednesday have scientists saying that a global warming "tipping point" in the Arctic seems to be happening before their eyes: Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is at its second lowest level in about 30 years.

The National Snow and Ice Data Center reported that sea ice in the Arctic now covers about 2.03 million square miles. The lowest point since satellite measurements began in 1979 was 1.65 million square miles set last September.

With about three weeks left in the Arctic summer, this year could wind up breaking that previous record, scientists said.

Arctic ice always melts in summer and refreezes in winter. But over the years, more of the ice is lost to the sea with less of it recovered in winter. While ice reflects the sun's heat, the open ocean absorbs more heat and the melting accelerates warming in other parts of the world.

Sea ice also serves as primary habitat for threatened polar bears.

"We could very well be in that quick slide downward in terms of passing a tipping point," said senior scientist Mark Serreze at the data center in Boulder, Colo. "It's tipping now. We're seeing it happen now."

Within "five to less than 10 years," the Arctic could be free of sea ice in the summer, said NASA ice scientist Jay Zwally.

"It also means that climate warming is also coming larger and faster than the models are predicting and nobody's really taken into account that change yet," he said.

Five climate scientists, four of them specialists on the Arctic, told The Associated Press that it is fair to call what is happening in the Arctic a "tipping point." NASA scientist James Hansen, who sounded the alarm about global warming 20 years ago before Congress, said the sea ice melt "is the best current example" of that.

Last year was an unusual year when wind currents and other weather conditions coincided with global warming to worsen sea ice melt, Serreze said. Scientists wondered if last year was an unusual event or the start of a new and disturbing trend.

This year's results suggest the latter because the ice had recovered a bit more than usual thanks to a somewhat cooler winter, Serreze said. Then this month, when the melting rate usually slows, it sped up instead, he said.

The most recent ice retreat primarily reflects melt in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska's northwest coast and the East Siberian Sea off the coast of eastern Russia, according to the center.

The Chukchi Sea is home to one of two populations of Alaska polar bears.

Federal observers flying for a whale survey on Aug. 16 spotted nine polar bears swimming in open ocean in the Chukchi. The bears were 15 to 65 miles off the Alaska shore. Some were swimming north, apparently trying to reach the polar ice edge, which on that day was 400 miles away.

Polar bears are powerful swimmers and have been recorded on swims of 100 miles but the ordeal can leave them exhausted and susceptible to drowning.

And the melt in sea ice has kicked in another effect, long predicted, called "Arctic amplification," Serreze said.

That's when the warming up north is increased in a feedback mechanism and the effects spill southward starting in autumn, he said. Over the last few years, the bigger melt has meant more warm water that releases more heat into the air during fall cooling, making the atmosphere warmer than normal.

On top of that, researchers were investigating "alarming" reports in the last few days of the release of methane from long frozen Arctic waters, possibly from the warming of the sea, said Greenpeace climate scientist Bill Hare, who was attending a climate conference in Ghana. Giant burps of methane, which is a potent greenhouse gas, is a long feared effect of warming in the Arctic that would accelerate warming even more, according to scientists.

Overall, the picture of what's happening in the Arctic is getting worse, said Bob Corell, who headed a multinational scientific assessment of Arctic conditions a few years ago: "We're moving beyond a point of no return."
 
so when was the lowest sea level on record?
 
so when was the lowest sea level on record?

I don't know, would have to look that up. Since right now there is less ice in the arctic than in most of recorded history, its likely ocean levels are higher now than they were, say, 10,000 years ago.

The biggest worry would be when the ice above sea level melts, like Greenland or Antarctica. That's when major sea level increases could occur.
 
so when was the lowest sea level on record?

Read the article again.

The National Snow and Ice Data Center reported that sea ice in the Arctic now covers about 2.03 million square miles. The lowest point since satellite measurements began in 1979 was 1.65 million square miles set last September.
 
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080828/arctic_ice_080827/20080830?hub=SciTech

Arctic ice melting and not coming back: scientist
Updated Sat. Aug. 30 2008 7:27 AM ET

Andy Johnson, CTV.ca News Staff

Arctic sea ice is melting at an alarming rate, and some scientists have little hope the downward trend can be reversed before the ice disappears altogether.


The National Snow and Ice Data Centre in Colorado released its latest ice report this week, showing ice coverage in the region is at its second lowest level in 30 years.


"It's very different from in the past when you had a low year and you tended to rebound. We haven't been doing that anymore," Julienne Stroeve, a research scientist at the centre, told CTV.ca.


As of this week, 2008 is in second place for the lowest amount of sea ice since satellite measurements were first taken in 1979.


And with several weeks left in the melt season, 2008 could still surpass September 2007 for the lowest amount of sea ice since satellite measurements were first taken in 1979.


At last measure on Aug. 26, Arctic sea ice coverage was at 5.26 million square kilometers -- a decline of 2.06 million square kilometres from the beginning of August.


In September of last year, a record low was recorded, with 5.69 million square kilometres of sea ice recorded.


It's not a benchmark that Stroeve is proud of, but she's also not surprised by the chilling picture the numbers provide.


"I guess the main thing people should understand is this is just a continuation of that long term downward trend. I think whether or not we break the record it's just the continuation of what we've been seeing since 2002, where every year we're losing ice and we're not recovering at all," she said.


Much of the ice coverage in the Arctic normally melts each summer and reforms in winter. However, Stroeve said more and more of that ice is being lost to the sea, and failing to reform in winter.


The result is a sort of reverberating effect. Ice serves to reflect up to 80 per cent of the suns rays, and heat, back into space, helping keep the Arctic cool. But as the ice disappears, more and more of the sun's heat is absorbed in the ocean, then released to the air during fall cooling. That speeds up the warming process and makes the ice melt even faster.


Last year was a particularly bad year for sea ice in the Arctic, Stroeve said. Heavy storm conditions took a toll on ice off the coasts of Siberia and Alaska, unusually clear skies and warm ocean and atmospheric temperatures created a "perfect storm."


"You had a lot of things that happened together that caused a lot of ice loss," Stroeve said.


"But had that perfect storm happened say in the 1970s, you probably wouldn't have lost so much ice like you did last year. And the key thing seems to be the ice is just becoming really thin and it's that much more vulnerable to natural variability."


Other experts said the ice has reached a tipping point, and melt will be much more severe from here on in. Stroeve said she wouldn't characterize it as such, but said projection models have shown that with ice thinning at its current rate, it could all disappear -- in summer -- within a decade.


The most immediate effect of the ice loss, Stroeve said, is that animals that depend on the ice, such as polar bear and seals, are finding it harder and harder to survive as the winter ice shrinks, and takes longer to refreeze in the fall.


Observers from the U.S. federal government doing a whale survey in mid August reported seeing nine polar bears swimming off Alaska's northwest coast.


The bears were between 20 and 100 kilometres from shore. Some were swimming north, apparently trying to reach the polar ice shelf, which was more than 600 kilometres distant.


While polar bears have been known to swim 100 kilometres, but can often become dangerously weak from the ordeal.


Stroeve said she has also heard reports of seals being spotted further north than ever before as they travel further and further north to find ice.


"It's scary. It's such a huge change that's happening very quickly and it makes me very sad because I just can't see how the species that rely on the ice can survive this," Stroeve said.


While scientists have developed climate models to predict the future of ice in the Arctic, little is known about how those changing temperatures and conditions will play out in more southerly latitudes.


"That's the area I think science needs to go into next. We don't really know what this is all going to mean. We know everything is connected, so when you change one part everything is affected. But how exactly it's going to play out is still not very clear," Stroeve said.
 
At the end of August, it still looks quite frozen up there:

http://rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/...efl1_143.A2008242195501-2008242200000.4km.jpg


Arctic ice melting and not coming back: scientist

Hope he can prove that. This winter, the ice will return.

A thirty year record is not all of history. If polar bears managed to survive through the Medieval Warm Period, they can make it through this wave of cyclical warming and cooling.


showing ice coverage in the region is at its second lowest level in 30 years.

Of course it begs the question as to why there is almost half a million more square kilometres of ice than last year?

The average air temperature in the Arctic has been cooler in 2008 than 2007. The variability in the ice cover is due to changes in ocean oscillations, and not warmer air temperatures.



This article shows that periodic warming of the Arctic waters is not unprecedented. It was also taking place in the 1920's.

http://docs.lib.noaa.gov/rescue/mwr/050/mwr-050-11-0589a.pdf



A decade later, navigation in the Arctic region was considerably easier. Note the March, 1933 date of the abstract

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v131/n3306/abs/131359a0.html

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstr...B828FF1D3&scp=9&sq=pole+circumnavigation&st=p

Then it cooled off starting around 1940.



Presently, it's cooler other places today as well:

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,24272221-2682,00.html

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/coldest-august-in-64-years/2008/08/31/1220121034021.html
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080903/ap_on_re_ca/arctic_ice_shelf


19-square-mile ice sheet breaks loose in Canada

By CHARMAINE NORONHA, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 31 minutes ago


TORONTO - A chunk of ice shelf nearly the size of Manhattan has broken away from Ellesmere Island in Canada's northern Arctic, another dramatic indication of how warmer temperatures are changing the polar frontier, scientists said Wednesday.

Derek Mueller, an Arctic ice shelf specialist at Trent University in Ontario, told The Associated Press that the 4,500-year-old Markham Ice Shelf separated in early August and the 19-square-mile shelf is now adrift in the Arctic Ocean.

"The Markham Ice Shelf was a big surprise because it suddenly disappeared. We went under cloud for a bit during our research and when the weather cleared up, all of a sudden there was no more ice shelf. It was a shocking event that underscores the rapidity of changes taking place in the Arctic," said Mueller.

Mueller also said that two large sections of ice detached from the Serson Ice Shelf, shrinking that ice feature by 47 square miles — or 60 percent — and that the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf has also continued to break up, losing an additional eight square miles.

Mueller reported last month that seven square miles of the 170-square-mile and 130-feet-thick Ward Hunt shelf had broken off.

This comes on the heels of unusual cracks in a northern Greenland glacier, rapid melting of a southern Greenland glacier, and a near record loss for Arctic sea ice this summer. And earlier this year a 160-square mile chunk of an Antarctic ice shelf disintegrated.

"Reduced sea ice conditions and unusually high air temperatures have facilitated the ice shelf losses this summer," said Luke Copland, director of the Laboratory for Cryospheric Research at the University of Ottawa. "And extensive new cracks across remaining parts of the largest remaining ice shelf, the Ward Hunt, mean that it will continue to disintegrate in the coming years."

Formed by accumulating snow and freezing meltwater, ice shelves are large platforms of thick, ancient sea ice that float on the ocean's surface but are connected to land.

Ellesmere Island was once entirely ringed by a single enormous ice shelf that broke up in the early 1900s. All that is left today are the four much smaller shelves that together cover little more than 299 square miles.

Martin Jeffries of the U.S. National Science Foundation and University of Alaska Fairbanks said in a statement Tuesday that the summer's ice shelf loss is equivalent to over three times the area of Manhattan, totaling 82 square miles — losses that have reduced Arctic Ocean ice cover to its second-biggest retreat since satellite measurements began 30 years ago.

"These changes are irreversible under the present climate and indicate that the environmental conditions that have kept these ice shelves in balance for thousands of years are no longer present," said Mueller.

During the last century, when ice shelves would break off, thick sea ice would eventually reform in their place.

"But today, warmer temperatures and a changing climate means there's no hope for regrowth. A scary scenario," said Mueller.

The loss of these ice shelves means that rare ecosystems that depend on them are on the brink of extinction, said Warwick Vincent, director of Laval University's Centre for Northern Studies and a researcher in the program ArcticNet.

"The Markham Ice Shelf had half the biomass for the entire Canadian Arctic Ice Shelf ecosystem as a habitat for cold, tolerant microbial life; algae that sit on top of the ice shelf and photosynthesis like plants would. Now that it's disappeared, we're looking at ecosystems on the verge of distinction,' said Mueller.

Along with decimating ecosystems, drifting ice shelves and warmer temperatures that will cause further melting ice pose a hazard to populated shipping routes in the Arctic region — a phenomenon that Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper seems to welcome.

Harper announced last week that he plans to expand exploration of the region's known oil and mineral deposits, a possibility that has become more evident as a result of melting sea ice. It is the burning of oil and other fossil fuels that scientists say is the chief cause of manmade warming and melting ice.

Harper also said Canada would toughen reporting requirements for ships entering its waters in the Far North, where some of those territorial claims are disputed by the United States and other countries.
 
From DailyTech

Arctic Sees Massive Gain in Ice Coverage

Data from the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) has indicated a dramatic increase in sea ice extent in the Arctic regions. The growth over the past year covers an area of 700,000 square kilometers: an amount twice the size the nation of Germany.

With the Arctic melting season over for 2008, ice cover will continue to increase until melting begins anew next spring.

The data is for August 2008 and indicates a total sea ice area of six million square kilometers. Ice extent for the same month in 2007 covered 5.3 million square kilometers, a historic low. Earlier this year, media accounts were rife with predictions that this year would again see a new record. Instead, the Arctic has seen a gain of about thirteen percent.

William Chapman, a researcher with the Arctic Climate Research Center at the University of Illinois, tells DailyTech that this year the Arctic was "definitely colder" than 2007. Chapman also says part of the reason for the large ice loss in 2007 was strong winds from Siberia, which affect both ice formation and drift, forcing ice into warmer waters where it melts.

Earlier predictions were also wrong because researchers thought thinner ice would melt faster in subsequent years. Instead, according to the NSIDC, the new ice had less snow coverage to insulate it from the bitterly cold air, resulting in a faster rate of ice growth.

Most concern has focused on the Arctic regions, rather than Antarctica. Recent research has indicated Antarctica is on a long-term cooling trend, for reasons which remain unclear.

Earlier this year, concerns over global warming led the US to officially list the polar bear a threatened species, over objections from experts who claimed the animal's numbers were increasing.

http://www.dailytech.com/Article.aspx?newsid=12851&red=y#340331
 

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