For
the sake of completion
North
Pole 'Lake' Vanishes
Meltwater
lake drained through a crack in underlying ice floe
Image
from one of the North Pole Environmental Observatory webcams, taken
Monday, July 29. (Credit: North Pole Environmental Laboratory)
AOL,
6
August, 2013
Like a politician whose peccadillos lead to "family time," the North Pole lake has had its fill of Internet notoriety. The stunning blue meltwater lake that formed on the Arctic ice disappeared on Monday (July 29), draining through a crack in the underlying ice floe.
Now,
instead of 2 feet (0.6 meters) of freshwater slopping against a
bright-yellow buoy, a remote webcam shows only ice and clouds.
Though
the North
Pole lake's 15
minutes of fame focused worldwide attention on global warming's
effects on Arctic sea ice, the melting is actually part of an annual
summer thaw, according to researchers who run the North Pole
Environmental Observatory. "The formation of these ponds and
their disappearance is part of a natural cycle," said Axel
Schweiger, head of the Applied Physics Laboratory's Polar Science
Center at the University of Washington, which helps run the
observatory.
The
lake, about the size of an Olympic swimming pool, started forming in
mid-July, LiveScience first reported on July 23. The size and timing
of the lake are typical for this time of year and location, the
researchers said.
However,
scientists at the observatory and elsewhere are studying the Arctic's
meltwater ponds to
understand how global warming is changing their total extent.
"It's
important to recognize that these ponds may be linked to global
warming, but the questions are more: How many and how deep they are,
and when they appear and when they drain," Schweiger told
LiveScience.
For
instance, warmer temperatures in the Arctic already
cause surface melting to start earlier on the ice, so the ponds are
forming sooner than they used to, Schweiger said. But other factors
play a role, such as snow cover and ice thickness. "It's a very
open research question," he said.
The
observatory has tracked yearly ice changes in the Arctic since 2000.
Every spring, scientists fly to the North Pole and anchor buoys with
remote webcams into ice floes. The buoys then drift with the ice.
[Image
Gallery: Back-Breaking Science at the Earth's Poles]
When
the meltwater lake appeared in mid-July, the buoys were about 375
miles (600 kilometers) south of the geographic North Pole. Their
journey from April to July put the buoys on parallel to the magnetic
North Pole, which is currently west of Greenland.
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