NASA
Finds Thickest Parts of Arctic Ice Cap Melting Faster
NASA,
29
Febraury, 2012
This
interactive illustrates how perennial sea ice has declined from 1980
to 2012. The bright white central mass shows the perennial sea ice
while the larger light blue area shows the full extent of the winter
sea ice including the average annual sea ice during the months of
November, December and January. The data shown here were compiled by
NASA senior research scientist Josefino Comiso from NASA's Nimbus-7
satellite and the U.S. Department of Defense's Defense Meteorological
Satellite Program.
Credit:
NASA/Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio.
GREENBELT,
Md. -- A new NASA study revealed that the oldest and thickest Arctic
sea ice is disappearing at a faster rate than the younger and thinner
ice at the edges of the Arctic Ocean’s floating ice cap.
The
thicker ice, known as multi-year ice, survives through the cyclical
summer melt season, when young ice that has formed over winter just
as quickly melts again. The rapid disappearance of older ice makes
Arctic sea ice even more vulnerable to further decline in the summer,
said Joey Comiso, senior scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Md., and author of the study, which was recently
published in Journal of Climate.
The
new research takes a closer look at how multi-year ice, ice that has
made it through at least two summers, has diminished with each
passing winter over the last three decades. Multi-year ice "extent"
– which includes all areas of the Arctic Ocean where multi-year ice
covers at least 15 percent of the ocean surface – is diminishing at
a rate of -15.1 percent per decade, the study found.
There’s
another measurement that allows researchers to analyze how the ice
cap evolves: multi-year ice "area," which discards areas of
open water among ice floes and focuses exclusively on the regions of
the Arctic Ocean that are completely covered by multi-year ice. Sea
ice area is always smaller than sea ice extent, and it gives
scientists the information needed to estimate the total volume of ice
in the Arctic Ocean. Comiso found that multi-year ice area is
shrinking even faster than multi-year ice extent, by -17.2 percent
per decade.
"The
average thickness of the Arctic sea ice cover is declining because it
is rapidly losing its thick component, the multi-year ice. At the
same time, the surface temperature in the Arctic is going up, which
results in a shorter ice-forming season," Comiso said. "It
would take a persistent cold spell for most multi-year sea ice and
other ice types to grow thick enough in the winter to survive the
summer melt season and reverse the trend."
Scientists
differentiate multi-year ice from both seasonal ice, which comes and
goes each year, and "perennial" ice, defined as all ice
that has survived at least one summer. In other words: all multi-year
ice is perennial ice, but not all perennial ice is multi-year ice (it
can also be second-year ice).
Comiso
found that perennial ice extent is shrinking at a rate of -12.2
percent per decade, while its area is declining at a rate of -13.5
percent per decade. These numbers indicate that the thickest ice,
multiyear-ice, is declining faster than the other perennial ice that
surrounds it.
As
perennial ice retreated in the last three decades, it opened up new
areas of the Arctic Ocean that could then be covered by seasonal ice
in the winter. A larger volume of younger ice meant that a larger
portion of it made it through the summer and was available to form
second-year ice. This is likely the reason why the perennial ice
cover, which includes second year ice, is not declining as rapidly as
the multiyear ice cover, Comiso said.
To see full article on this, Year 2012 set to break all records GO HERE
To see full article on this, Year 2012 set to break all records GO HERE
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