Climate change in the Arctic
Beating a retreat
Sep 24th 2011 | from the print edition
ON SEPTEMBER 9th, at the height of its summertime shrinkage, ice
covered 4.33m square km, or 1.67m square miles, of the Arctic Ocean,
according to America’s National Snow and Ice Data Centre (NSIDC). That
is not a record low—not quite. But the actual record, 4.17m square km
in 2007, was the product of an unusual combination of sunny days,
cloudless skies and warm currents flowing up from mid-latitudes. This
year has seen no such opposite of a perfect storm, yet the summer
sea-ice minimum is a mere 4% bigger than that record. Add in the fact
that the thickness of the ice, which is much harder to measure, is
estimated to have fallen by half since 1979, when satellite records
began, and there is probably less ice floating on the Arctic Ocean now
than at any time since a particularly warm period 8,000 years ago, soon
after the last ice age.
That Arctic sea ice is disappearing has been known for decades. The
underlying cause is believed by all but a handful of climatologists to
be global warming brought about by greenhouse-gas emissions......More
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