Credit: From the National Snow and Ice Data Center, courtesy J. Maslanik and C. Fowler, University of Colorado
Data released April 6 from the National Snow and Ice Data Center shows that the age of ice in the Arctic Ocean is declining. Ice less than a year old dominates the Arctic ice cap as the melt season begins.
The deep red color in the top right map shows the extent of multi-year ice, which has fallen to about 10 percent of the ice total according to NSIDC. The red color in the map at top left shows the average extent of multi-year ice for the period 1981-2000, when multi-year ice made up about 30 percent of the total.
There has been a small uptick in the volume of ice 1-2 years old (orange color) and it is possible some of this juvenile ice and ice less than a year old could survive the summer melt season, thereby slowly adding to the stock of more hardy multi-year ice. Or it could not survive.
The melting of Arctic Ocean ice has increased in recent years. In the period from 1979 to 2005 about 20 percent of the ice cap melted in summer, but in summer of 2007 another 20 percent disappeared. Ice cap melting in 2008 was not as severe as in 2007, but last summer's melt still left the ocean with the second-lowest sea ice extent on record.
Implications from loss of Arctic Ocean ice in summer revolve around potential changes in wind patterns and ocean circulation. As the white-colored heat reflecting sea ice disappears, more dark heat-absorbing water dominates the ocean, causing even further water temperature increases.
This unfolding change in Arctic Ocean ice cover could impact wind, weather, and precipitation patterns in northern hemisphere mid-latitudes, where hundreds of millions of people live and depend on reliable supplies and timing of rainfall for drinking and the growing of food crops.
Washington Post: New Data Show Rapid Arctic Ice Decline
Wall Street Journal: Polar Ice Cap Shrinks Further and Thins
Any details on the beadfort sea dispute? Will the usa be able to claim a substantial portion of predicacted oil reserves(hydrocarbons) and of course how much oil do you think exists throughout the arctic ocean? I read apr. 25 percent of the world's capacity. Which is a gigantic number(at least an additonal century worth and with the inclusion off the tar sands and of course shale oil(century's worth of oil) we have found a solution to the oil quagmire.
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