PhillyTablet Inquirer Daily News
philly.com
email
font size
comments
0
options
 
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
2009 sea ice minimum (NASA picture)

The National Snow and Ice Data Center, which tracks sea ice in the Arctic, has just released its annual report, showing the area covered by ice is the third-lowest since satellite measurements began in 1979.

Following is their report:

U.S. satellite measurements show Arctic sea ice extent in 2009 – the area of the Arctic Ocean covered by floating ice – was the third lowest since satellite measurements were first made in 1979. The ice area at minimum was an increase from the past two years, but still well below the average for the past 30 years.

Arctic sea ice reached its minimum extent around September 12, as shown in the image and video below/above. According to scientists affiliated with the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), sea ice coverage dropped to 5.10 million square kilometers (1.97 million square miles) at its minimum. The ice cover was 970,000 square kilometers (370,000 square miles) greater than the record low of 2007 and 580,000 square kilometers (220,000 square miles) greater than 2008.

NSIDC is sponsored by several U.S. government agencies, including NASA. Ice data are derived from measurements made by U.S. Department of Defense and NASA satellites, with key work in interpreting the data and developing the 30-year history done by scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

"The changes from year to year are interesting since there has been large variability," said Josefino Comiso, a sea ice expert at NASA Goddard. "But we need to look at several years of data to examine the long-term trends."

"Our three decades of continuous satellite measurements show a rapid decline of about 11.6 percent per decade," Comiso said. Arctic sea ice has declined about 34 percent since measurements were first made in the late 1970s.

The four lowest ice extents on record have occurred between 2005 and 2009, with the record minimum reached during a dramatic drop in ice cover in 2007 that was exacerbated by unusual polar winds.

Several recent studies based on data from NASA's ICESat and QuikScat satellites have shown that, in addition to shrinking geographic ice coverage, the amount of multi-year ice cover – thicker ice that survives more than one summer -- has been declining in recent years.

"The oceans are crucial to Earth's climate system, since they store huge amounts of heat," said Comiso. "Changes in sea ice cover can lead to circulation changes not just in the Arctic Ocean, but also in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. If you change ocean circulation, you change the world's climate."

Changes in the Arctic ice cover could also mean a new paradigm for life in the sea. "The waters at high latitudes are some of the most biologically productive in the world because of the presence of sea ice," Comiso added. "Many of our richest fisheries are the seas around the Arctic Ocean, and we don't know what the consequences might be if the seasonal sea ice disappears in these regions." 

Below is an animation showing the retreat of the sea ice from July through Sept. 12. For more information and other videos, click here: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/seaicemin09.html
 


Posted by Sandy Bauers @ 2:32 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
Comments   


0 comments
About Sandy Bauers
Sandy Bauers is the environment reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where she has worked for more than 20 years as a reporter and editor. She lives in northern Chester County with her husband, two cats, a large vegetable garden and a flock of pet chickens.

GreenSpace - her column about how to reduce your carbon footprint in everyday life - appears every other Monday in Health & Science.

Follow on Twitter

Blog Roll
 
Facts of the Day Former DEP secretary John Hanger
 
WolfeNotes NJ environmental policy expert Bill Wolfe
 
PennFuture Pennsylvania environmental advocacy
 
A Rube With a View NJ wildlife and conservation expert Larry Niles
 
View From the Cape What’s happening birdwise at Cape May
 
Beverly Milestone Maisey Environmental issues and Transition Cheltenham
 
My Plastic-Free Life California’s Beth Terry goes without
 
GreenFaith Interfaith Partners for the Environment
 
LA Times Greenspace blog
 
B’More Green Baltimore Sun’s environmental blog
 
Blue Marble Mother Jones' enviro blog
Websites
 
All about Philly recycling
 
RecycleNOW Philadelphia
 
Next Great City Philly urban sustainability
 
Mayor’s Office of Sustainability
 
Transition Town Media
 
Transition Cheltenham
 
Wissahickon Growing Greener
 
Sustainable Delaware County
 
One If By Land Bucks County Citizen journalism on the environment.
 
PhillyCompost
 
Regional air quality partnership
 
Philadelphia Air Management Services
 
Clean Air Council in Philadelphia
 
Clean Water Action in PA
 
Sierra Club, NJ Chapter
 
Sierra Club, Pennsylvania Chapter
 
Energy Coordinating Agency
 
Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission
 
Delaware River Basin Commission
 
Academy of Natural Sciences’ Center for Environmental Policy
 
Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future
 
Pennsylvania Environmental Council
 
PennEnvironment
 
Delaware Riverkeeper Network
 
Philly Rivercast A daily forecast of water quality in the Schuylkill River
 
Environment New Jersey
 
New Jersey Environmental Federation
 
NJ PIRG
 
NJ’s American Littoral Society
 
NJ’s Clean Ocean Action
 
The Nature Conservancy, Pennsylvania Chapter
 
NJ Pinelands Commission
 
Pinelands Preservation Alliance
 
New Jersey Audubon Society
 
Bucks County Audubon Society
 
Valley Forge Audubon Society
 
Wyncote Audubon Society
 
Delaware Valley Ornithological Club
 
Pennsylvania Center for Environmental Education
 
Philly’s Women’s Health and Environmental Network
 
Dumpster Divers of Philadelphia
 
Environmental news and commentary from grist.org
 
National Geogoraphic’s Green Guide
 
Treehugger green living site
 
The Daily Green
 
Green Living from the Natural Resources Defense Countil