~12 nautical miles a day is hardly dense pack ice speed
~Very fluid movement precedes rapid melting
Thursday, August 16, 2018
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Gradual melt will eventually show up as massive one day drop
~North of East Siberian sea ice peninsula is turning into thousands of little ice Islands
~One day soon it will be nothing but water
~Incredible smashing and mixing is a good melting accelerator
180 W 75 N sector was driven by steady High pressure which turned the ice slowly towards the warmest Bering sea waters, not without a great deal of mechanical mixing, in a few days, JAXA will depict this zone as open water even if there will still be sea ice present, but less than 15% extent. WD August 15 2018
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
Laptev sea surface temperatures bites big time
~The entire Arctic Ocean ice pack veers clockwise from counterclockwise
~This gives a misleading slowdown in melt numbers, it follows a usual pattern of fast-slow-slow- fast melt cycle
~North of Laptev sea Goodbye Waves abound, a sure sign of warm seas
The ease by which sea ice pack veers or backs, clockwise or counterclockwise by pressure system winds is a sure sign of thinness, always intermixed with older sea ice, but over all lesser weight of the entire pack means less momentum keeping one direction longer:
Not long ago, the pack turned the other way, July 31 to August 7 JAXA loop demonstrates the presence of a steady anticyclone over the Arctic Ocean. During the earlier switchover, sea ice daily melts slowed down, or appeared so, because of scattering rather than a temperature effect.
Also pushed North is this Laptev warm sst's very next to CMC 50% pack extents. There is no melting slowdown possible when so. WD August 7 2018
~This gives a misleading slowdown in melt numbers, it follows a usual pattern of fast-slow-slow- fast melt cycle
~North of Laptev sea Goodbye Waves abound, a sure sign of warm seas
The ease by which sea ice pack veers or backs, clockwise or counterclockwise by pressure system winds is a sure sign of thinness, always intermixed with older sea ice, but over all lesser weight of the entire pack means less momentum keeping one direction longer:
Not long ago, the pack turned the other way, July 31 to August 7 JAXA loop demonstrates the presence of a steady anticyclone over the Arctic Ocean. During the earlier switchover, sea ice daily melts slowed down, or appeared so, because of scattering rather than a temperature effect.
Laptev sea was open early, had plenty of time to pick up solar rays, the result is rapid 7 day sea lost easily identifiable by bountiful Goodbye Waves, these are done by sea ice just about to disappear as water. Here 44.5 nautical miles melted in 7 days direction North, August 1 to 7. A speed of 6.4 nautical miles a day.
Also pushed North is this Laptev warm sst's very next to CMC 50% pack extents. There is no melting slowdown possible when so. WD August 7 2018
Sunday, August 5, 2018
Totally unfamiliar wide region of sea ice between North of Greenland and Ellesmere
~I have no explanation for this
~One thing for sure, it was not air temperature driven
~Highly likely abnormal under sea ice ocean temperatures
First we look at 2012:
Quite normal sea ice in densest pack ice field even for August 5 2012, then a very terrible year for sea ice, now look at this:
This August 5 2018 sea ice area seems awfully weak, even ready to melt off completely. All I know is that there is a tidal current going towards the Strait between Greenland and Ellesmere Island, it usually has a semi-circular look about 1/10 the size of this area. WD August 5 2018
~One thing for sure, it was not air temperature driven
~Highly likely abnormal under sea ice ocean temperatures
First we look at 2012:
Quite normal sea ice in densest pack ice field even for August 5 2012, then a very terrible year for sea ice, now look at this:
This August 5 2018 sea ice area seems awfully weak, even ready to melt off completely. All I know is that there is a tidal current going towards the Strait between Greenland and Ellesmere Island, it usually has a semi-circular look about 1/10 the size of this area. WD August 5 2018
6 years later, what about 80 degrees North?
~2012 all time minima melt is on the brink of being surpassed
~In fact 2012 Central Arctic Basin is almost the same as 2018
~What is left is not what matters, what matters is at 80 degrees North
All said and done, today 2018 is still technically #1 in lowest extent since East Siberian and CAA ice will at least shrink by 400,000 km2 come minima in mid September. Today was the 2012 great cyclone anniversary date, which violently stirred and mixed up already emaciated sea ice, lets look at 80 degrees North:
80 degrees North 157 West is in worse shape in 2018, what matters is the greater open water signifying greater melting, 2012 had more thin ice left. Again, the measuring limitations given by the 15% extent rule may not show a great difference in extent numbers between these two seasons. Nevertheless, this type of sea ice rot emplies East Siberian sea will be eventually surrounded by open water, easing the quicker melting of the ice peninsula further to its North . The quicker this ice disappears the more certain 2018 will be #1 lowest. WD August 5 2018
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Monster hot sst from Pacific finishing off broken up sea ice extremely rapidly
July 19-July 31 JAXA loop demonstrating the process of total disintegration of sea ice in the Pacific sector of the Pole, with extreme rapidity. We note lesser but significant melting everywhere else with open water.
Zoomed July 29-31:
The East Siberian sea ice Peninsula (1.5 million km2 strong) is in the process of completely disappearing, when so looses cohesion, as a result, sea ice scatters and nulls the extent numbers loss a bit, only to be corrected when every pan of pack vanishes. WD August 1, 2018
Monday, July 30, 2018
Atlantic front race to 85 North vs Pacific waters massacre
~Central Arctic Basin 2018 is #1 is lowest extent
~ Beaufort sea and CAA make up 400 K difference with 2012, while 2018 has 464, 000 km2 more sea ice than 12
~ Along with other peripheral seas, which will have near 0 extent come mid September, 2018 is technically #1 at the moment.
We note super fast melting conditions North of Bering sea, with ripe conditions enhanced by a High pressure Gyre favouring compaction and flow of extreme warm waters finishing off straggling sea ice pans. On the Atlantic Front, we see Fram Strait loosing sea ice rapidly due to no flow conditions, but also a race towards a 85N on the entire Atlantic sea ice shore line. The NE passage is about to open first, equally as expected in April, the NW passage is clogged with sea ice but should open partially much later.
What about the black spots appearing in waves on the JAXA animation above? They are open water zones opening closing rapidly as captured 82 N 176 W:
The JAXA dark spots indicate rapid movement of sea ice sometimes leaving open water gaps which may fill with rubble and slush, is part of the same process detected North of Alaska about a month ago. Rapid motion of sea ice may be interpreted as steady sea ice albedo until the slush turns to goodbye waves, when the entire pack collapses rapidly as occurring North of Alaska at present. WD July 30 2018
Friday, July 27, 2018
Vast 2018 region of Arctic Ocean sea ice in much worse shape than 2012
~Gyre area sea ice about to totally melt or simply move away very rapidly
~15% extent rule certainly favours 2012 as having similar sea ice extent than 2018 in same region.
July 26 2018 Gyre region sea ice is in a catastrophic state. We can see the blue ocean overtaking the pristine white sea ice.
2012 same date same place was in bad shape as well, but not as terrible as 2018 deep in the Gyre zone.
A closer look:
In all technicality 2018 has less sea ice than 2012 for a vast area, but the 15% extent rule makes 2012 similar. Hindsight being 20/20 , we did not know how bad 2012 was until a very strong
early August cyclone came through, having the benefit of this history, we now know that 2018 is
very much going to overtake 2012 very soon, at least in this region, there should be not a lot of sea ice left come late September. WD July 27,2018
~15% extent rule certainly favours 2012 as having similar sea ice extent than 2018 in same region.
July 26 2018 Gyre region sea ice is in a catastrophic state. We can see the blue ocean overtaking the pristine white sea ice.
2012 same date same place was in bad shape as well, but not as terrible as 2018 deep in the Gyre zone.
A closer look:
In all technicality 2018 has less sea ice than 2012 for a vast area, but the 15% extent rule makes 2012 similar. Hindsight being 20/20 , we did not know how bad 2012 was until a very strong
early August cyclone came through, having the benefit of this history, we now know that 2018 is
very much going to overtake 2012 very soon, at least in this region, there should be not a lot of sea ice left come late September. WD July 27,2018
Thursday, July 26, 2018
Current sea ice extent is getting close to be nearly equal to all time melt year
~After July 23 more than 200K drop, on July 25 2018 there is a +421,497 Km2 difference in extent between 2018 and 2012.
~There are ample reasons to believe that 2012 extent will be caught up soon
of the Arctic may be quite cold while the majority of its lands and seas much warmer. Each year varies, 2012 Northwest passage opened very early, does not look so for 2018.
CAA current July 25 sea ice extent. 2018 trace is in black, 2012 light brown. There is at least 200,000 km2 of ice to be gone come September/October minima.The current lag with 2012 is about 200K.
Record extent drops are primed North of Alaska, July 22 to 25 JAXA loop suggests at least 200,000 km2 ready to vanish quite soon.
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
Bering sea black melt potential
~2018 slow start melt season picks up not only speed but darkness
From AMSR2 JAXA daily extent melt numbers July 21-22-23-24 in km2/day:
At the moment, the most significant difference between 2012 and 18 melt can be seen just North of
Alaska, whereas the ice flows clockwise and counterclockwise respectively, the difference being
extensive over a long period of time warmed Bering sea waters in 18 compared to 2012 Beaufort newly exposed sea surface:
From AMSR2 JAXA daily extent melt numbers July 21-22-23-24 in km2/day:
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
-58703 -58133 -28828 -139308 -111030 -96509 -133995
-51872 -106572 -50552 -107064 -55089 -93661 -139657
-62907 -116820 -78800 -113552 -46065 -41377 -118268
-102879 -71755 -28430 -100037 -59703 -9685 -124573
2018 has a staggering dominating melt pace;
At the moment, the most significant difference between 2012 and 18 melt can be seen just North of
Alaska, whereas the ice flows clockwise and counterclockwise respectively, the difference being
extensive over a long period of time warmed Bering sea waters in 18 compared to 2012 Beaufort newly exposed sea surface:
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