Warm
water extends from Laptev Sea to North Pole
30
September, 2014
The
NOAA NESDIS image below shows sea surface temperature anomalies of
well over 1ºC extending to the North Pole
The image below gives a world view, showing SST anomalies at the top end of the scale in the Laptev Sea.
The
top end of the scale on the above image is 5ºC (or 9ºF). The
visualization below uses a much higher scale. Even this higher-end
scale doesn't appear to fully capture the dire situation we are in.
Above
image shows warm water entering the Arctic Ocean through the Bering
Strait and from the North Atlantic. For months to come, the Gulf
Stream will keep pushing warm water into the Arctic Ocean (i.e. water
that is warmer than the water in the Arctic Ocean). It takes some
time (i.e. months) for the warm water from the north Atlantic to
arrive in the Arctic Ocean.
.
This year, there is even more ocean heat present, especially in the north Atlantic and the north Pacific. On September 29, 2014, methane levels as high as 2641 parts per billion were recorded and it looks like worse is yet to come.
The
image below, from another
earlier post,
shows methane eruptions from the seafloor of the Arctic Ocean on
October 31, 2013.
The
image below, from
yet another earlier post,
shows methane levels as high as 2662 parts per billion on
November 9, 2013.
This year, there is even more ocean heat present, especially in the north Atlantic and the north Pacific. On September 29, 2014, methane levels as high as 2641 parts per billion were recorded and it looks like worse is yet to come.
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