Here
is a somewhat more optimistic view of the Arctic death spiral than that of Guy McPherson or the Arctic Methane Energency Group, justaposed with the idiotic statements of arch-denier,
Christopher Monkton.
Also some emphasis on the Antarctic, of interest to those in the Southern Hemisphere.
For what it's worth, if I saw Monkton I'd probably (like David Suzuki) retreat quickly, although not for the reasons he gives.
Also some emphasis on the Antarctic, of interest to those in the Southern Hemisphere.
For what it's worth, if I saw Monkton I'd probably (like David Suzuki) retreat quickly, although not for the reasons he gives.
Arctic
Sea Ice: The Death Spiral Continues
Here is the interview with Lord Monkton that is referred to -
And
here is the answer to his claim that Antarctic ice cover is
increasing -
Antarctic
ice melting from below, reveals satellite (+video)
Antarctica's
ice shelves are being melted away by warm ocean currents underneath,
shows data collected from a NASA satellite.
Warm ocean currents attacking the underside of ice shelves are the dominant cause of recent ice loss from Antarctica. This animation shows the circulation of ocean currents around the western Antarctic ice shelves. The shelves are indicated by the rainbow color; red is thicker (greater than 550 meters), while blue is thinner (less than 200 meters).
26
April, 2013
Data
collected from a NASA
ice-watching satellite reveal that the vast ice shelves extending
from the shores of western Antarctica
are being eaten away from underneath by ocean currents, which have
been growing warmer even faster than the air above.
The
animation above shows the circulation of ocean currents around the
western Antarctic ice shelves. The shelf thickness is indicated by
the color; red is thicker (greater than 550 meters), while blue is
thinner (less than 200 meters).
Launched
in January 2003, NASA’s ICESat (Ice,
Cloud and land Elevation Satellite) studied the changing mass and
thickness of Antarctica’s ice from its location in polar orbit. An
international research team used over 4.5 million surface height
measurements collected by ICESat’s GLAS (Geoscience Laser Altimeter
System) instrument from Oct. 2005 to 2008. They concluded that
20 of the 54 shelves studied — nearly half — were losing
thickness from underneath.
Most
of the melting ice shelves are located in west Antarctica, where the
flow of inland glaciers to the sea has also been accelerating — an
effect that can be compounded by thinning ice shelves which, when
grounded to the offshore seabed, serve as dams to hold glaciers back.
Melting
of ice by ocean currents can occur even when air temperature remains
cold, maintaining a steady process of ice loss — and eventually
increased sea level rise.
“We
can lose an awful lot of ice to the sea without ever having summers
warm enough to make the snow on top of the glaciers melt,” said
Hamish Pritchard of the British
Antarctic Survey
in Cambridge
and the study’s lead author . “The oceans can do all the
work from below.”
The
study also found that Antarctica’s winds are shifting in response
to climate change.
“This
has affected the strength and direction of ocean currents,”
Pritchard said. “As a result warm water is funnelled beneath the
floating ice. These studies and our new results suggest Antarctica’s
glaciers are responding rapidly to a changing climate.”
ICESat
completed operations in 2010 and was decommissioned in August of that
year. Its successor ICESat-2 is anticipated to launch in 2016.
Read
more on NASA’s news release here.
Antarctic,
with the Antarctic Peninsula highlighted. [NASA]
Melting
in Antarctica is worst in 1,000 years
The
amount of ice melting on the Antarctic Peninsula has increased
dramatically in recent decades.
Al-Jazeera,
14
April, 2013
For
the first time, scientists have managed to demonstrate that ten times
more ice melts in the summer months on the Antarctic Peninsula now
than it did 600 years ago.
The
Antarctic Peninsula is the biggest and most prominent peninsula in
Antarctica. It consists of a rugged mountain chain, which rises more
than 2000 m high.
Unlike
the majority of the continent, the ice on the peninsula experiences a
degree of melting every summer. Over recent decades the amount of ice
which has melted has been increasing.
It
has been known for some time that temperatures across the Antarctic
Peninsula have risen dramatically. Over the past fifty years there
has been an increase of 2.8C, making this the most rapidly warming
region in the Southern Hemisphere. This is over five times the global
average and comparable to rapidly warming regions of the Arctic.
At
the same time, around 25,000 km2 of ice have been lost from ten
floating ice shelves on the Antarctic Peninsula. This is particularly
significant as it takes a long time to replenish snow and ice in this
part of the world.
With
under 250 mm of precipitation per year, Antarctica is officially
classed as a desert. In fact, some parts of the continent haven’t
seen any rain or snow for many years. Across the Antarctic Peninsula,
the snow and ice simply melts and refreezes. Currently the ice that
is lost to melting far exceeds that which is replenished in a year.
The
latest research, a joint project by the Australian National
University and the British Antarctic Survery and published in Nature
Geoscience, looks at a 364 m ice core, which was extracted from the
northern tip of the peninsula. Visible layers of this tube of ice
show where the ice melted, then refroze. By measuring the thickness
of the layers and analysing the gases contained in the ice,
researchers were able to determine the changes in temperatures in the
region over the last 1,000 years.
The
ice core demonstrated that the current level of melting was
unprecedented in the last 1,000 years, and ten times more than it was
600 years ago.
The
climate of Antarctica is hugely complex. Although there are record
levels of glacier and ice melting, there also appears to be an
increase in the sea ice in the surrounding waters.
Just
seven months ago satellites captured images of more ice floating
around the continent than at any other time in history.
The
increase in sea ice is thought to be caused by the increased amounts
of melting ice. This melted ice runs into the sea, but does not mix
with the water already in the ocean. Instead the water forms a
separate, colder, layer on the surface of the ocean. This can protect
sea ice from coming into contact with the warmer seas below and
therefore prevent it melting.
It
is also thought that a change in wind direction could have increased
the extent of sea ice. Winds can both physically moving the ice, and
can cause the sea surface to warm or cool. The increase in sea ice is
not uniform around the Antarctic coast line, therefore the winds are
also likely to have had some effect.
With
the complex climate of Antarctica, and the uncertainty of the future
of the climate, it is difficult to predict what this latest study
means for the continent.
It
is believed that the continent will continue to warm rapidly,
particularly in summer, increasing the vulnerability of the delicate
ecosystem of the continent.
The
global significance of this is difficult to assess. However, the
warming of the Antarctic Peninsula is amongst the highest seen
anywhere on Earth in recent times, and is a reminder of the
rationality of climate change that can be expected in the future.
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