Snow
and Arctic sea ice extent plummet suddenly as globe bakes
17
July, 2013
Temperature
difference from average during June around the globe (NASA)
NOAA
and NASA
both ranked June 2013 among the top five warmest (NOAA fifth warmest,
NASA second warmest) Junes on record globally (dating back to the
late 1800s). But, more remarkable, was the incredible snow melt
that preceded the toasty month and the sudden loss of Arctic sea ice
that followed.
The
amazing decline in Northern Hemisphere snow cover during May is a
story few have told, but is certainly worth noting. In April,
hefty Northern Hemisphere snow cover ranked 9th highest on record
(dating back to 1967), but then turned scant, plummeting to third
lowest on record during May. Half of the existing snow melted away.
“This
is likely one of the most rapid shifts in near opposite extremes on
record, if not the largest from April to May,” said climatologist
David Robinson, who runs Rutgers University Global
Snow Lab.
The
snow extent shrunk from 12.4 million square miles to 6.2 million
square miles in a month’s time. By June, just
2.3 million square miles of
snow remained in the Northern Hemisphere (a decline of 63 percent
from May), third lowest on record.
“In recent years it hasn’t seemed that unusual to have average or even above average winter snow extent rapidly diminish to below average values come spring,” Robinson said.
Northern
Hemisphere spring snow cover is in the midst of long-term free fall,
similar to its relative, summer Arctic sea ice extent.
You
may recall, late last summer the
Arctic sea ice extent dropped to its lowest level on record,
49 percent below the 1979-2000 average.
Temperature difference from normal over the high latitude Northern Hemisphere over first 10 days of July (National Snow and Ice Data Center)
It’s
not clear if 2013 levels will match 2012′s astonishing record low,
but – with temperatures over the Arctic Ocean 1-3 degrees above
average – the 2013 melt season has picked up in earnest during
July.
“During
the first two weeks of July, ice extent declined at a rate of 132,000
square kilometers (51,000 square miles) per day. This was 61% faster
than the average rate of decline over the period 1981 to 2010 of
82,000 square kilometers (32,000 square miles) per day,” the
National Snow and Ice Data Center writes on its website.
Despite
this rapid ice loss, the current mid-July 2013 sea ice extent is
greater than 2012 at the same time by about 208,000 square miles
NSIDC says.
2013
sea ice extent (blue line) compared to average (black line) and
record (dahsed green line). (National Snow and Ice Data Center)
….the
amount of easy-to-melt ice is starting to run out. Even though this
year’s ice pack consists of a record amount of first-year ice
[which melts most readily], the weather still plays an important
role. . . .
.
. . there’s no telling what could happen if the weather is very
conducive to melting/compacting/transport for a week or two….
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