North
Pole Now a Lake
23
July, 2013
Instead
of snow and ice whirling on the wind, a foot-deep aquamarine lake now
sloshes around a webcam stationed at the North Pole. The meltwater
lake started forming July 13, following two weeks of warm weather in
the high Arctic.
In early July, temperatures were 2 to 5 degrees Fahrenheit (1 to 3
degrees Celsius) higher than average over much of the Arctic Ocean,
according to the National Snow & Ice Data Center.
Meltwater
ponds sprout
more easily on young, thin ice, which now accounts for more than
half of the Arctic's sea ice. The ponds link up across the smooth
surface of the ice, creating a network that traps heat from the sun.
Thick and wrinkly multi-year ice, which has survived more than one
freeze-thaw season, is less likely sport a polka-dot network of ponds
because of its rough, uneven surface.
July
is the melting month in the Arctic, when sea ice shrinks fastest. An
Arctic
cyclone, which can rival a hurricane in strength, is forecast for
this week, which will further fracture the ice and churn up warm
ocean water, hastening the summer melt. The Arctic hit a record low
summer ice melt last year on Sept. 16, 2012, the smallest recorded
since satellites began tracking the Arctic ice in the 1970s.
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