Bering
Sea loses half its sea ice over two weeks
PRI,
22
February, 2018
The
Bering Sea has lost roughly half its sea ice over the past two weeks
and has more open water than ever measured at this time of year.
“This
is unprecedented,” said Brain Brettschneider, a climate researcher
at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. “The amount of ice is less
than it’s ever been during the satellite era on any date between
mid-January and early May.”
This
comes as much of western Alaska, including places like Saint Paul
Island and Utqiaġvik, formerly known as Barrow, is in the midst of
its warmest winter in recorded history.
The
community of Umiat measured unofficial temperatures 45 degrees
Fahrenheit above normal on Tuesday, according to Rick Thoman, a
National Weather Service meteorologist in Alaska.
These
kinds of temperatures cause melt in the permafrost and “change the
identity” of Alaska, Brettschneider said.
A
lack of sea ice around the western edge of Alaska leaves the
coastline open to the battering energy of storms rolling in from the
Bering Sea.
“The
sea ice along the coast really protects the shoreline,”
Brettschneider said. “So when you lose that ice, (the land) becomes
highly susceptible to severe erosion.”
A
Facebook video posted
Tuesday from Diomede, Alaska, on the far western tip of the state,
shows huge waves crashing into a small building on the rocky coast.
The Native Alaskan village of Kivalina, one of the first communities in the US expected to relocate due to climate change, is being impacted by that kind of erosion.
Warm
temperatures in high latitudes ultimately don't just affect Alaskans
or others who live near the poles.
The
temperature differential between the poles and tropics create the jet
stream, which drives weather patterns in the northern hemisphere.
“When
you have a warmer Arctic, you lessen the thermal gradient across from
the equator to the Arctic, and that changes where low pressure
patterns set up,”
Brettschneider said. “There’s this whole
cascading set of impacts that affect the entire hemisphere, and in
fact the entire globe, when you heat up the Arctic."
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