[Vision2020] NSIDC: 2010 Arctic Sea Ice Decline Highest for Month of May During Satellite Record.

Ron Force rforce2003 at yahoo.com
Sat Jun 19 22:28:09 PDT 2010


The scientific article itself was less assured than the press report:

http://epic.awi.de/Publications/Haa2010b.pdf

"However, the volume of older ice may have been less overall due
to a lower areal coverage, and because our surveys were still spatially limited"

As others point out, one year does not make a trend;
http://www.skepticalscience.com/Has-Arctic-sea-ice-returned-to-normal.html

Ron Force
Moscow ID USA



________________________________
From: Paul Rumelhart <godshatter at yahoo.com>
To: Ted Moffett <starbliss at gmail.com>
Cc: Moscow Vision 2020 <vision2020 at moscow.com>
Sent: Sat, June 19, 2010 3:53:13 PM
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] NSIDC: 2010 Arctic Sea Ice Decline Highest for Month of May During Satellite Record.


A recent series of measurements of the Arctic suggests that the melting 
is not as severe as has been reported.  A group of scientists supported 
largely by the German government have flown a modified DC-3 trailing an 
airborne probe that uses a series of electromagnetic signals to measure 
the thickness of the ice.  The probe measured ice thickness every five 
meters along it's 2,412 kilometer journey.

Geophysicist Christian Haas of the University of Alberta has stated that 
the ice is "in some ways in better shape going into the melt season than 
it has been for a couple of years." and that "we have more thick ice 
going into the summer than we did in 2009 and 2008."

Here is the story as reported by canada.com: 
http://www.canada.com/Scan+Arctic+dispels+melting+gloom+researcher+says/3175785/story.html

I don't expect to hear much about this in the media, since it goes 
against the narrative they have been painstakingly building for years.

Paul



Ted Moffett wrote:
> Through May, 2010 has seen the highest average global temperatures in 
> the National Climate Data Center record, since 1880 ( 
> http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2010/20100615_globalstats.html ).
>  
> And May set a record for the May monthly rate of Arctic sea ice 
> decline during the satellite record, starting in 1979 
> (  http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/faq.html ) according to the 
> National Snow Ice Data Center ( http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/ , 
> http://nsidc.org/images/arcticseaicenews/20100608_Figure2.png ,
> http://nsidc.org/images/arcticseaicenews/20100608_Figure4.png ).
>  
> For the anthropogenic climate change skeptics who have emphasized that 
> the warmest years for global average temperatures are 1998 and/or 
> 2005, and since temperatures have declined or leveled, and that Arctic 
> sea ice has "recovered" from the record low of 2007, indicating global 
> warming is not progressing, they may need to construct more powerful 
> confirmation bias filters, if 2010 trends continue as they have.  We 
> are on course in 2010 to set a new warmest annual average global 
> temperature year, and Arctic sea ice also is on track to tie or exceed 
> the previous record low of 2007.
>  
> Of course, these trends could change substantially.
> ----------------------------------------------
>
>
>   June 8, 2010
>
>
>   Arctic sea ice extent declines rapidly in May
>
> In May, Arctic air temperatures remained above average, and sea ice 
> extent declined at a rapid pace. At the end of the month, extent fell 
> near the level recorded in 2006, the lowest in the satellite record 
> for the end of May. Analysis from scientists at the University of 
> Washington suggests that ice volume has continued to decline compared 
> to recent years. However, it is too soon to say whether Arctic ice 
> extent will reach another record low this summer—that will depend on 
> the weather and wind conditions over the next few months.
>
> *Overview of conditions*
>
> Arctic sea ice extent averaged 13.10 million square kilometers (5.06 
> million square miles) for the month of May, 500,000 square kilometers 
> (193,000 square miles) below the 1979 to 2000 average. The rate of ice 
> extent decline for the month was -68,000 kilometers (-26,000 square 
> miles) per day, almost 50% more than the average rate of -46,000 
> kilometers (18,000 square miles) per day. This rate of loss is the 
> highest for the month of May during the satellite record.
>
> Ice extent remained slightly above average in the Bering Sea, and 
> below average in the Barents Sea north of Scandinavia, and in Baffin Bay.
>
> *Conditions in context*
>
> As we noted in our May post, several regions of the Arctic experienced 
> a late-season spurt in ice growth. As a result, ice extent reached its 
> seasonal maximum much later than average, and in turn the melt season 
> began almost a month later than average. As ice began to decline in 
> April, the rate was close to the average for that time of year.
>
> In sharp contrast, ice extent declined rapidly during the month of 
> May. Much of the ice loss occurred in the Bering Sea and the Sea of 
> Okhotsk, indicating that the ice in these areas was thin and 
> susceptible to melt. Many polynyas 
> <http://nsidc.org/cgi-bin/words/word.pl?polynya>, areas of open water 
> in the ice pack, opened up in the regions north of Alaska, in the 
> Canadian Arctic Islands, and in the Kara and Barents and Laptev seas.
>
> The polynyas are clearly visible in high-resolution passive microwave 
> images from the Advanced Microwave Sounding Radiometer (AMSR-E) 
> <http://www.iup.uni-bremen.de:8084/amsr/amsre.html> aboard NASA’s Aqua 
> satellite. What do current ice conditions mean for the minimum ice 
> extent this fall? It is still too soon to say: although ice extent at 
> present is relatively low, the amount of ice that survives the summer 
> melt season will be largely determined by the wind and weather 
> conditions over the next few months.
>
> *May 2010 compared to past years*
>
> Average ice extent for May 2010 was 480,000 square kilometers (185,000 
> square miles) greater than the record low for May, observed in 2006, 
> and 500,000 square kilometers (193,000 square miles) below the average 
> extent for the month. The linear rate of decline for May over the 1979 
> to 2010 period is now -2.41% per decade.
>
> The rate of decline through the month of May was the fastest in the 
> satellite record; the previous year with the fastest daily rate of 
> decline in May was 1980. By the end of the month, extent fell near the 
> level recorded in 2006, the lowest in the satellite record for the end 
> of May. Despite the rapid decline through May, average ice extent for 
> the month was only the ninth lowest in the satellite record.
>
> *Persistent warmth in the Arctic*
>
> Arctic air temperatures averaged for May were above normal, continuing 
> the temperature trend that has persisted since last winter. 
> Temperatures were 2 to 5 degrees Celsius (4 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit) 
> above average across much of the Arctic Ocean. A strong anticyclone 
> centered over the Beaufort Sea produced southerly winds along the 
> shores of Siberia (in the Laptev and East Siberian seas), resulting in 
> warmer-than-average temperatures in this area. The Canadian Arctic 
> Islands were an exception to the general trend, with temperatures 
> slightly cooler than average over much of the region.
>
> *Models indicate low ice volume*
>
> Ice extent measurements provide a long-term view of the state of 
> Arctic sea ice, but they only show the ice surface. Total ice volume 
> is critical to the complete picture of sea ice decline. Numerous 
> studies indicate that sea ice thickness and volume have declined along 
> with ice extent; unfortunately, there are no continuous, Arctic-wide 
> measurements of sea ice volume. To fill that gap, scientists at the 
> University of Washington have developed regularly updated estimates of 
> ice volume, using a model called the Pan Arctic Ice Ocean Modeling and 
> Assimilation System (PIOMAS) 
> <http://psc.apl.washington.edu/ArcticSeaiceVolume/IceVolume.php>.
>
> PIOMAS uses observations and numerical models to make ongoing 
> estimates of changes in sea ice volume. According to PIOMAS, the 
> average Arctic sea ice volume for May 2010 was 19,000 cubic kilometers 
> (4,600 cubic miles), the lowest May volume over the 1979 to 2010 
> period. May 2010 volume was 42% below the 1979 maximum, and 32% below 
> the 1979 to 2009 May average. The May 2010 ice volume is also 2.5 
> standard deviations below the 1979 to 2010 linear trend for May 
> (–3,400 cubic kilometers, or -816 cubic miles, per decade).
>
> PIOMAS blends satellite-observed sea ice concentrations into model 
> calculations to estimate sea ice thickness and volume. Comparison with 
> submarine, mooring, and satellite observations help increase the 
> confidence of the model results. More information on the validation 
> methods and results is available on the PIOMAS ice volume Web site 
> <http://psc.apl.washington.edu/ArcticSeaiceVolume/IceVolume.php>.
>
> *Further Reading*
>
> The SEARCH Sea Ice Outlook 
> <http://www.arcus.org/search/seaiceoutlook/>, an international, 
> community-wide discussion of the upcoming September Arctic sea ice 
> minimum, is slated to be published in June 2010.
>
> Gridded ICESat data are now available from the NASA Jet Propulsion 
> Laboratory <http://rkwok.jpl.nasa.gov/icesat/index.html>. This data 
> provide an estimate of sea ice thickness based on elevation 
> measurements, from 2004 to 2008.
>
> *References *
>
> Schweiger, Axel , Jinlun Zhang, Mike Steele, et al. Pan Arctic Ice 
> Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System (PIOMAS). 
> http://psc.apl.washington.edu/ArcticSeaiceVolume/IceVolume.php
>
> /For previous analyses, please see the drop-down menu under Archives 
> in the right navigation at the top of this page. /
>
> /-------------------------------------------/
>
> /Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett/
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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