Antarctic
Sea Ice Extent Hits New Record Low
Today’s news comes at a time when the sun is just starting to return to the continent and the South Pole is still in darkness.
Today
Robert Fanney reported that Antarctic Sea
Ice Extent Hits New Record Low for the Day.
Margo has also done an exhaustive report in which she talks at length about the situation in Antarctica.
Margo has also done an exhaustive report in which she talks at length about the situation in Antarctica.
This is in addition to a report that I did a couple of weeks ago -
Today’s news comes at a time when the sun is just starting to return to the continent and the South Pole is still in darkness.
The following,which comes from Zack Labe shows the global sea ice anomaly.
The purple represents Antarctica.
The purple represents Antarctica.
This is the sea ice extent for Antarctica on 13 September.
Here is the sea ice concentration.
And here is the thickness for 14 September as registered by the US Navy.
And a .gif showing changes in the last 30 days.
THE
HOLE IN THE OZONE LAYER
However, this short video shows that this is not happening and it appears to be getting bigger.
We shall be monitoring this over the next weeks and months.
Iceberg
A68A, that broke off from Larsen B a year ago is on the move
A year ago, in July 2017 a large iceberg calved off the Larsen C ice shelf
Satellite
data confirms ‘calving’ of trillion-tonne, 5,800 sq km iceberg
from the Larsen C ice shelf, dramatically altering the landscape.
It became stuck and has remained so since then to the last week or so.
Here are couple of stories that came out about this.
Just
over a year ago in July 2017 iceberg A68 calved from the Larsen C Ice
Shelf.
I appeared on BBC News before it actually calved explaining
what was happening.
At
first A68 was slow to move and as I predicted back then, it likely
got stuck on the sea bed (we say "grounded"). It has stayed
pretty much in the same place through to July 2018.
But
now A68 has started to swing northwards.
As
the light is coming back to Antarctica, at high latitudes visual
imagery is very washed out. But if we look at other data such as the
brightness temperature, you can see some striking features.
Margo has been monitoring this recently from NASA Worldview and put together the following report:
Fracturing
of sea ice in the Ross Sea
US Navy data indicates that ice in the region is about a metre thick.
My suspicion is that this melt season in Antarctica is going to be a rocky ride.
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