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Sunday, 2 August 2020

The Arctic ice after the second largest cyclone in history


The Arctic ice after the 


second largest cyclone in 

history



arctic-cyclone-satellite2

A 970 mB cyclone, that formed over northeast Siberia and entered the Beaufort 
Sea at the beginning of the week has decimated the already damaged Arctic 
sea ice and threatens, AT THE VERY LEAST, any ice short of the 90N parallel. 

To say any more than that would be educated speculation.


A very impressive <970 mbar cyclone over the Arctic ocean, the sea-ice extent at a record low


Here is my video - 



This is how it looks today.



This was the storm on the 29th July



Sea ice EXTENT is at its all-time low for this time of year.  The 2012 record has been beaten.


Here are some representations of sea ice concentration -

From Climate Reanalyzer


From the University of Bremen


This is the sea ice thickness from the US Navy site. Only the area in turquoise represents thicker ice, of 2 metre thickness.


From this you can see just how quickly a metre of ice can disappear.


This (from Climate Reanalyzer), shows sea ice temperature anomalies.


Most water around the sea ice perimeter is 0-10 degrees Celsius


There is an unprecedented level of surface methane emissions, especially in the Russian Arctic. From CAMS


These photos show just how the ice has broken from the churning action of the storm - NASA Worldview


Zooming in...


From 27 July - the ice is retreating away from the shore of the Canadian north and Greenland.


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