From
Paul Beckwith
The
Great Arctic Flush
The
"Great #Arctic Flush" to occur in days if
US/European weather forecasts are correct
A
massive cyclone is forecast to develop in the Arctic, as shown on the
image below, from the Naval
Research Laboratory.
Within 2 weeks the Arctic Ocean will be completely transformed. The cyclone that appears 6 days out on both the US and European ten day forecasts will massacre the sea ice in what I call "The Great Arctic flush".
Within 2 weeks the Arctic Ocean will be completely transformed. The cyclone that appears 6 days out on both the US and European ten day forecasts will massacre the sea ice in what I call "The Great Arctic flush".
The
image below is a forecast for speed and drift on July 27, 2013. More
images, including animations, on Arctic sea ice can be viewed
at http://www7320.nrlssc.navy.mil/hycomARC/arctic.html
Last
August, a massive cyclone formed over the Arctic Ocean and destroyed
800,000 square km of ice in about a week. The predicted cyclone looks
to be as strong as the one in early August, 2012. Problem is, the ice
is much weaker, thinner and fractured this year; including all the
ice just north of the Canadian
Arctic Archipelago that
is 4 or 5 meters thick; this ice is mobile, broken, fractured ice
piled up into ridges; it is not multiyear ice (MYI) at all.
Above
image, from the Naval
Research Laboratory is
a prediction of ice speed and drift a week from now, showing the
motion of the ice, the darker and redder the faster, the ice is being
set in motion by the cyclone above. Since the Coriolis
force flings
things to the right, the ice is all sent to the outside of the
rotation, into the warmer surrounding water as well as the Atlantic
Ocean. The storm surge of a foot or two over the entire basin
(highest near the cyclone eye) will draw in warm water from the
Pacific via the Bering Strait and from the Atlantic via the Fram
Strait.
It will also mix the fresh water on the surface from melting ice with
warmer saltier water from below. It will also generate lots of
churning and grinding of the ice and waves several meters high. Warm
and smoky air that is filled with ash and black carbon from burning
fires in the far north will drop the albedo of the ice and increase
the solar absorption.
When
I forecast zero sea ice at the end of the melt season this summer, I
fully expected at least one or more of these massive cyclonic storms.
Last year it occurred in early August, and lasted for about 8 days.
In the rest of the melt season last year no other huge cyclone
developed, although several small ones did. Perhaps the cyclone
disturbed the ocean conditions enough to prevent subsequent ones
occurring.
We shall see this year...
Paul,
ReplyDeleteTo paraphrase: You are saying that the thick ice will get pulled off the archipelago and then swept int the Fram Straight. And you are also saying that the thin and loosely concentrated ice in the central basin will become swamped by sea water from the cyclone and then melt out leaving a massive hole in the middle of an arctic donut. Correct? And, I would expect if that happened, we would be left with three or 4 massive but thin ice sheets, perhaps unconnected to each other, floating freely in the arctic ocean.
Comment?