Arctic
sea ice has shown large falls in thickness in many areas over the
course of May 2014, as shown on above image. The animation below
compares the situation between May 2, 2014, and May 30, 2014 (the
latter one as forecast by Naval Research Laboratory on May 23, 2014).
Ice thickness is in meters.
Thickness
is an important indicator of the vulnerability of the ice. If only
looking at sea ice extent, one might (wrongly) conclude that sea ice
retreat was only minor and that everything looked fine. By contrast,
when looking at thickness, it becomes evident that large falls have
occurred over the course of May 2014.
Falls
at the edges of the sea ice can be expected at this time of the year,
but the large fall closer to the center is frightening. On the one
hand, it appears to reflect cyclonic weather and subsequent drift of
the ice. On the other hand, it also indicates how vulnerable the sea
ice has become. Last year, a large area showed up at the center of
the sea ice where the ice became very thin, as discussed in July 2013
in the post Open
Water at North Pole and
again in the September 2013 post North
Hole.
The
appearance of huge weak areas at the center of the sea ice adds to
its vulnerability and increases the prospect of total sea ice
collapse, in case of one or more large cyclones hitting the Arctic
Ocean later this year. To highlight the dangerous situation, the main
image from a post
earlier this month is
again added below.
Adding
to the concerns are huge sea surface temperature anomalies, as
illustrated by the
image below,
showing anomalies at May 23, 2014, and created by Harold
Hensel with
ClimateReanalyzer and Google Earth.
[ click on image to enlarge ] |
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