I reported on this a couple of days ago.
Today it is raining AT THE NORTH POLE
Lightning strikes detected within 300 miles of North Pole amid escalating climate change emergency in Arctic
Today it is raining AT THE NORTH POLE
Lightning strikes detected within 300 miles of North Pole amid escalating climate change emergency in Arctic
Extraordinary
weather event comes just weeks after global sea levels rose
significantly in single month
12
August, 2019
Multiple
lightning strikes have been detected within 300 miles of the North
Pole, in the latest extraordinary weather event amid an escalating
climate change emergency.
The
bolts on Saturday, which were spotted by the US’s National Weather
Service (NWS), were the result of towering storm clouds that in lower
latitudes would amount to ordinary thunderstorms.
But polar lightning is so rare, due to temperatures usually being too low to allow the phenomenon, that the NWS decided to issue a public information statement over the weekend.
“A
number of lightning strikes were recorded between 4pm and 6pm today
within 300 miles of the North Pole,” it said.
According
to the statement, the thunderstorm was around 700 miles north of
Siberia’s Lena River Delta and the strikes hit the surface, which
was probably made up of sea ice or areas of open ocean waters mixed
with ice.
“This
is one of the furthest north lightning strikes in Alaska forecaster
memory,” the NWS stated after its office in Fairbanks, Alaska,
detected the incident.
The
thunderstorms at the top of the world struck in the midst of an
extreme summer that has featured record-low sea ice levels and
much-above-average temperatures across much of the Arctic Ocean,
including at the pole itself.
In
Greenland in late July and early August, an extreme weather event led
to record levels of ice melt into the sea, tangibly raising global
sea levels. A wildfire has been burning in western Greenland for more
than a month, illustrating the unusually dry and warm conditions
there.
Reached
by phone Monday morning, NWS Fairbanks meteorologist Ryan Metzger
hesitated to say that lightning so close to the pole has never been
seen before, in part because forecasters are not always looking
there.
“I
wouldn’t say it’s never happened before, but it’s certainly
unusual, and it piqued our attention,” Mr Metzger said.
He
said he was confident the strikes were not errors in the lightning
detection network, which spans the globe, because they tracked along
with the clouds’ movements.
The
lightning strikes mean that the atmosphere near the pole was unstable
enough, with sufficient warm and moist air in the lower atmosphere,
to give rise to thunderstorms.
The
loss of sea ice across the Arctic has led to sea surface temperatures
that are much above average for this time of year, which may be
contributing to unusually unstable air masses being pushed across the
central Arctic Ocean.
The
vast majority of Earth’s thunderstorms occur at lower latitudes,
where the combination of higher temperatures and humidity more easily
sparks such weather phenomena.
However,
as Alaska and other parts of the Arctic have warmed in response to
human-caused global climate change, there is evidence thunderstorms
are starting earlier in the year and are extending to areas that
previously rarely saw such events, such as Alaska’s North Slope.
One
reason to be cautious about interpreting the lightning as an
unprecedented event is that lightning can also occur in intense
nontropical storms that affect the Arctic, though no such large and
potent storm was present Saturday. This does make the weekend
lightning stand out, however.
The
Arctic climate has seemingly gone off the rails this summer. There is
no longer any sea ice present in Alaskan waters, with Bering Sea ice
having melted out beginning in February, and ice in the Chukchi Sea
already pulling back hundreds of miles north of the state.
Alaska
had its hottest month on record in July. Wildfires are burning across
the state, and fires in Siberia have sent plumes of dark smoke into
the Arctic, where soot particles can land on the ice and snow and
speed up melting.
In
July alone, the Greenland ice sheet poured 197 billion tons of water
into the North Atlantic, which was enough to raise sea levels by
0.5mm, or 0.02 inches, in a one-month time frame. On 1 August,
Greenland had its biggest single-day melt event on record, with 12.5
billion tons of surface ice lost to the sea.
Across
the Arctic, sea ice is at record to near-record low levels for this
time of year and is likely to end the melt season with one of the
five lowest ice extents on record in the satellite era, according to
the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado.
Sea-ice
extent is probably the lowest it has been in at least 1,500 years,
based on recent research.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/imageo/2019/08/12/lightning-crackles-in-arctic-thunderstorms-near-the-north-pole-in-almost-unheard-of-event/?fbclid=IwAR2YCxIRhWYURJOQdvOrRWO4QKa68aOCzexZJg09eWTFo1DYpItddbbXqfQ
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/imageo/2019/08/12/lightning-crackles-in-arctic-thunderstorms-near-the-north-pole-in-almost-unheard-of-event/?fbclid=IwAR2YCxIRhWYURJOQdvOrRWO4QKa68aOCzexZJg09eWTFo1DYpItddbbXqfQ
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