Arctic
sea ice cover remains low through October
“Higher
than average air temperatures have been observed over the ice-free
regions"
12
November, 2013
As
winter settled into the Arctic throughout October, sea ice cover
remains among the lowest in more than three decades, says new data
from the Colorado-based National Snow and Ice Data Center.
The
year 2013 marks the first October since 2009 where the sea ice extent
is more eight million square kilometres — that’s about 103,000
square kilometers of growth per day.
That
makes it the sixth lowest October for sea ice extent in the NSIDC’s
35-year satellite data record, more evidence of a long-term downward
trend in Arctic ice cover.
The
actual rate of ice growth is slower than last year’s, when ice
extent doubled during the month of October, although the ice cover is
more extensive overall than in 2012.
As
of early November, small areas of the Beaufort, Chukchi, and Kara
seas remained ice-free, while the East Siberian and Laptev seas have
completely frozen over.
“Higher
than average air temperatures have been observed over the ice-free
regions, while the rest of the Arctic is at near average to below
average temperatures,” the NSIDC said Nov. 6.
While
the sea ice cover was higher this past summer compared to previous
summers, it remained low compared to long-term data readings, leaving
larger regions of water open and able to absorb the sun’s energy
Before
the ocean can refreeze in the fall, it releases that excess heat back
to the atmosphere, creating higher than average air temperatures.
In
October, air temperatures remained two to four degrees higher than
average over much of the western and central Arctic, including
Greenland and the Canadian archipelago.
And
those temperatures appear to be having an impact on the ground too.
The
NSIDC’s more than 30 years of remote sensing data show that the
decline in sea ice extent corresponds to land surface warming in some
Arctic regions.
The
Arctic tundra in Nunavut and Greenland is getting greener as it
receives more summer warmth, although the NSIDC hasn’t noted that
increase in Alaska and Eurasia
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