54 Fahrenheit Above Average: Extreme Warming Event For Greenland, Baffin Bay Underway
At
the mouth of Baffin Bay just off the West Coast of Greenland today
hurricane force wind gusts are blowing in from the south.
27
November, 2017
This
roaring invasion of warm air originates
from the Central Atlantic along a latitude line south of the Azores.
It climbs hundreds of miles north to where it is intensified between
a grinding 975
mb low off Labrador and a massive 1042 mb high
squatting over Central Greenland. Temperatures in this warm air mass
range from near 50
degrees (F) over
Southwestern Greenland to around 40
degrees (F) over
the mouth of Baffin Bay. Or between 9 and 36 degrees (F) above normal
for this time of year.
(Hurricane
force wind gusts are driving a wedge of above freezing air into
Baffin Bay and over Western Greenland at a time when these regions
should be seeing well below freezing conditions. Image source: Earth
Nullschool.)
This
warm wind driven air mass is expected
to move north over the next 24 to 48 hours.
It will steadily blanket both glaciers and areas typically covered
with sea ice. And as it does so,it
will push temperatures above freezing for large sections of both
Baffin Bay and Western Greenland with
above 32 F readings progressing as far as the Petermann
Glacier.
What
this means is that temperatures will likely hit record ranges of
up to 54 degrees Fahrenheit above average in
some locations near the far northern extent of this expected warm air
invasion. Overall, Greenland itself is expected to see 15
degree (F) above average readings for the entire island.
This will generate brief surface melt conditions for parts of
Greenland during late November.
(Large
region of 20 to 30 C, or 36 to 54 F, above average temperatures is
predicted to blanket Greenland and the Canadian Archipelago after
moving north through Baffin Bay over the next two days. Image
source: Global
and Regional Climate Anomalies.)
Strong
warm air invasions of the Arctic at this time of year are a signal
coming from human-forced climate change. As the northern pole darkens
with winter, a global warming related phenomena called polar
amplification ramps
up. In addition, during recent years, we’ve seen warm air slots
tend to develop beneath strong ridging features in the upper level
Jet Stream. This year, the warm air slots have tended to form over
the Bering Sea along the Pacific side of the Arctic and progress
northward into the Chukchi. This has resulted in a large zone of ice
free waters for a typically frozen region between
Alaska and Siberia as
warm winds and storm force waves have continuously beat the ice back.
The
present warm air invasion for Greenland may be a signal that a
similar warm air slot is attempting to develop over Baffin Bay going
forward. Or it may be a fluke in the overall pattern. Watch this
space.
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