environmentalresearchweb.org, November 27, 2009
Satellite images of healthy sea ice prove to be thin "rotten" ice up close
The results of the study have now been accepted for publication in the peer reviewed journal Geophysical Research Letters, of the American Geophysical Union. "These are very significant findings since the scientists and public all thought that sea ice was recovering since the minimum extent in 2007," says Barber, a professor of Environment and Geography and Canada Research Chair in Arctic System Science.
In September 2009 Barber and others went to various points in the southern Beaufort Sea aboard the research vessel (NGCC) Amundsen. They discovered the multiyear sea icescape was not as ubiquitous as it appeared in satellite remote sensing data. And much of the multiyear ice, which is integral to maintaining the ecosystem and its inhabitants, was so heavily decayed the Amundsen easily broke through floes six to eight meters thick. Indeed, through most of the journey the Amundsen sailed at an average speed of 24km/h; its open water cruising speed is about 25km/h.
"Ship navigation across the pole is imminent as the type of ice which resides there is no longer a barrier to ships in the late summer and fall," Barber says.
So why have satellites been fooled? When studying sea ice, satellites shoot microwaves at the icescape and, among other things, record how they scatter. Each variety of ice was thought to have its own unique scattering characteristics, which researchers could read to determine where certain species of ice reside. But Barber and his colleagues discovered that multiyear ice and the "rotten" ice have similar near-surface temperatures, similar near-surface salinities, and both have similar open water and new sea ice fractions at the surface. So when satellites try to identify who's who, the microwaves behave similar enough that cases of mistaken identity abound.
"Our results are consistent with ice age estimates that show the amount of multiyear sea ice in the northern hemisphere was the lowest on record in 2009 suggesting that multiyear sea ice continues to diminish rapidly in the Canada Basin even though 2009 aerial extent increased over that of 2007 and 2009," the paper concludes.
"This has significant implications for assessment of the speed of global climate change impacts in the Arctic and for increased shipping and industrial development in the Arctic," says Barber.
For media interested in using video of Dr. Barber talking about his study and footage taken from the Arctic right click and save the following:
http://umanitoba.ca/admin/public_affairs/videos/barber_sea_ice.mov
http://umanitoba.ca/admin/public_affairs/videos/arctic_footage_1.mp4
http://umanitoba.ca/admin/public_affairs/videos/arctic_footage_2.mp4
Source: University of Manitoba
Link: http://environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/article/yournews/41112
3 comments:
Thanks once again, Tenney. I've come to rely on you for a real-time view of what's being discovered. I'm starting to feel like I'm living in a fifties sci-fi movie.
And here are these video clips for the 'media', who are busy 'reporting' on the damned emails.
Lynn
Thanks, Lynn.
I remember reading about thicker ice growing back north of Canada, and I really thought that was pretty weird, after having seen what I had seen on the satellite images from various sources that I was staring at almost every day.
Here is a new video on melting on Greenland that has exposed ice that is 60,000 years old.
http://climatechangepsychology.blogspot.com/2009/12/current-warming-on-greenland-has.html
Yeah, what was the name of that film? Crack in the Earth?
Post a Comment