Dire warning over rapid Arctic sea ice melt

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Sep 14, 2011, 5:21:40 PM9/14/11
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Perilous Times and Climate Change

Dire warning over rapid Arctic sea ice melt


Sea-ice coverage across the Arctic Ocean has dwindled to its second-lowest level since satellite records started in 1979, the National Snow and Ice Data Centre said, days after another study said ice melt was at its worst levels ever.


8:00AM BST 14 Sep 2011
The Telegraph UK

Areas of the Arctic with at least 15 per cent sea-ice as of Saturday totalled 1.68 million square miles, slightly above the record-low of 1.61 million square miles recorded in 2007.

Yet to be determined is whether the sea-ice cover will be the lowest for the year. Annual minimums are usually reached around mid-September.

"We're getting close, but there's still the potential for further loss of ice," said Walt Meier, a research scientist at the Boulder, Colorado-based National Snow and Ice Data Centre.

Ice coverage could diminish either through more melt or from winds or both, Mr Meier said. However, some areas, including those near the North Pole, were showing signs of ice growth, he said.

"Probably there's a little bit of both going on - there's melting and refreezing," he said.

At least one other institution has reported that this year's Arctic ice coverage was the lowest on record. A report issued last week by the University of Bremen in Germany said sea-ice coverage on Sept. 8 fell below the 2007 minimum.

The University of Bremen researchers use finer-resolution measurements that can better distinguish smaller areas of ice and open water, Meier said. But that university's methodology also has some drawbacks, he said.

Under either measurement, however, Arctic ice cover has diminished dramatically over recent decades. Saturday's coverage, as measured by the National Snow and Ice Data Centre, was only about two-thirds the average coverage measured from 1979 to 2000.

Reduced sea ice is believed to have cascading impacts on climate in the circumpolar north and even lower latitudes.

According to an academic study released on Tuesday by the US Geological Survey, Yupik Eskimo residents in southwestern Alaska are living with some of those affects.

The study, published in the current edition of the journal Human Organisation, examined observations of elders and longtime hunters in two Lower Yukon River villages.

The residents detailed dramatic changes over the years in river-ice thickness, a public-safety risk because no roads connect villages in that part of Alaska, and residents in winter travel over river ice.

The residents also testified to changing ranges for several animals, particularly moose and beavers, changes in vegetation and concerns about reduced availability of driftwood that used to be pushed downstream by powerful currents of spring meltwater.
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