Duh! Guess what! Thin sea ice breaks up with high waves.
A bit of nonsense from Radio New Zealand and NIWA that proves nothing much – it doesn't take more than a bit of commonsense to know that Arctic (and Antarctic) ice will break up with large storms.
A bit of nonsense from Radio New Zealand and NIWA that proves nothing much – it doesn't take more than a bit of commonsense to know that Arctic (and Antarctic) ice will break up with large storms.
In
the meantime Prof Wadhams says it how it is.
Melting
Polar Ice Caps A "Ticking Timebomb" For Earth's Climate
System
Journalist
Dahr Jamail & Professor Peter Wadhams say the resulting release
of methane will lead to massive climate disruption, and that we have
reached a point of no return
Arctic
Ice Melt to release 1 trillion pieces of plastic into sea
Renee
Lewis
27
May, 2014
As
the Arctic ice melt accelerates due to climate change it could
release more than 1 trillion pieces of plastic into the ocean over
the next decade, possibly posing a major threat to marine life, a new
scientific report said.
The
report, titled “Global Warming Releases Microplastic Legacy Frozen
in Arctic Sea Ice,” said ice in some remote locations contains
at least twice as much plastic as previously reported areas
of surface water such as the Great
Pacific Garbage Patch
– an area of plastic waste estimated to be bigger than the state of
Texas.
Researchers
behind the report, published last week in the scientific
journal Earth’s Future, said they found the unusual
concentrations of plastics by chance while studying sediments trapped
in ice cores. The researchers are based at Dartmouth College in New
Hampshire.
Many
scientists and activists have raised alarms over the massive amount
of plastic waste building up in the world’s oceans. In the film
“Midway,” documentary maker Chris Jordan showed how tens
of thousands of baby albatrosses
are dying – their bodies filled with plastic most likely from the
Garbage Patch – on the Pacific atoll of Midway, one of the most
remote islands on the planet.
Increasing
ice melt due to climate change will likely release the even-higher
concentrations of plastic trapped in Arctic ice into the sea, and
thus into the food chain, the new report in Earth’s Future said.
“The
environmental consequences of microplastic fragments are not fully
understood, but they are clearly ingested by a wide range of marine
organisms including commercially important species,” the report
said.
The
term “microplastics” refers to tiny particles created as plastic
materials that break down but never biodegrade. They are being
increasingly found on surface waters and shorelines around the
world.
Plastic
materials are introduced to the ocean by various means, including
from cosmetic ingredients known as microbeads, from the release of
semi-synthetic fibers such as rayon from washing machines, and from
larger discarded plastic items. The plastics reach the sea via
sewers, rivers, and littering along coastlines or at sea.
Researchers
said in the new report that Arctic ice contains such high
concentrations of plastics because of the way sea ice forms. It
concentrates particulates from the surrounding waters, and the
particulates become trapped until the ice melts. Scientists said in
the report that they found 38-234 plastic particles per cubic meter
of ice in some parts of the Artic areas they studied.
In
the next decade the scientists predict that at least 2,000 trillion
cubic meters of Arctic ice will melt. If that ice contains the lowest
concentrations of microplastics reported in the study, this could
result in the release of more than 1 trillion pieces of plastic, the
report said.
Researchers
worry that a wide range of organisms could ingest the microplastics,
leading to physical injury and poisoning.
Plastic
products often contain potentially harmful additives to make them
last longer, the report said. Other studies have shown that small
fragments of plastic
can act a bit like magnets,
attracting pollutants from the environment and making them even more
toxic.
Other
recent scientific studies have
shown that tiny plastic “microbeads,” added to many body
cleansers and toothpastes, have been found in major lakes and other
waterways used for drinking water. The studies said the plastic balls
absorb toxic chemicals released into the environment, and are then
eaten by fish and thus introduced into the food chain.
Mass
production of plastic began in the 1940s, and by 2009 at least 230
million tons of plastic were produced each year – equivalent
to the weight of
a double-decker bus every two seconds.
NIWA
make “break through”(sic) in sea ice research
The modication to the headline is mine
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