In the deep middle of the remote Arctic Ocean,ebony things are amiss.
With the passage of summer, the ice -- diminished by the warm season -- is expected to regrow as frigid temperatures envelope the Arctic.
But, this year, it's not.
Specifically, sea ice in the Central Arctic basin -- a massive region of ocean some 4.5 million square kilometers in size -- hasn't started its usual rapid expansion, and unusually warm temperatures in both the air and the ocean are largely to blame.
"For the most part, Arctic sea ice normally begins rapidly refreezing this time of year," Zack Labe, a climate scientist and Ph.D. candidate at the University of California Irvine, said over email.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The air over the high Arctic is anomalously warm compared to the decades-long average, Lars Kaleschke, an Arctic scientist at the University of Hamburg's Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability, said over email. In mid-October, the temperatures here should be plummeting. But they've gone up.
While temperatures are still hovering near freezing in these high northern realms, they're presently around a whopping 18 degrees Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius) above the 1958 to 2002 average for this time of year.
A formidable mass of high atmospheric pressure stretching all the way from Alaska to the North Pole has pushed relatively warm air from the North Pacific Ocean into the Arctic, noted Labe.
SEE ALSO: An appreciation of the persistently grim tweets from the Norway Ice ServiceBut warmth in the oceans is likely playing a significant role, too.
"Both the ocean and atmosphere are warmer than usual," said Kaleschke.
It's difficult, however, to know whether it's warm air or ocean waters that are playing a stronger role in suppressing the growth of ice in this remote Arctic sea, said Kaleschke.
Yet, oceans can absorb much more heat than the air -- in fact, over 90 percent of Earth's accumulating heat from global warming gets trapped in the absorbent seas.
This process is accelerated in the Arctic Ocean, a place warming at two to three times the rate of the rest of the planet.
"I tend to suspect the ocean heat [is] delaying the ice growth more than the atmosphere but this is just a guess," said Kaleschke.
These days, the reality that strange events are occurring in the Arctic shouldn't be too surprising.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Arctic climate changes and extremes are now happening during all seasons of the year," said Labe.
"The last several autumns have all featured well-above average temperatures and low levels of Arctic sea ice."
Separately from Kaleschke, Labe did his own analysis of both the central Arctic and portions of surrounding seas, finding similarly stark results.
While the Central Arctic Basin might be the largest regional sea in the greater Arctic, other portions of this northern ocean are seeing the expected, rapid build-up of ice.
Powerful winds are are pushing great chunks of ice down to the Greenland coast, where ice buildups are now amassing along the frigid island. The Canadian Arctic is also seeing a rapid ice expansion.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But for now, unusual circumstances in the central Arctic will persist, although an influx of cooler air might steer things back to normal.
"A change in the weather conditions could easily allow sea ice to begin growing more rapidly, but for the time being, the unusually warm temperatures (relative to average) and slow sea ice refreeze will continue," said Labe.
On Tuesday, ice in the Central Arctic Basin was the second lowest in recorded history for that day of the year, noted Kaleschke.
"Only in the year 2007 there was less ice in the Central Arctic," said Kaleschke.
Are period apps genderCouple plans amazing techThe unusual lawsuit involving Miss Cleo and 'GTA': A lawyer's viewColin Kaepernick still hasn't been signed, so people are rallying in front of NFL headquartersThe unusual lawsuit involving Miss Cleo and 'GTA': A lawyer's viewFacebook kills its SnapchatThe world is once again safe for podcasting after patent trolls lose in courtRich residents just found out someone bought their street and they are not happy'Game of Thrones': Should Jon and Dany hook up?Rich residents just found out someone bought their street and they are not happyBeing afraid to come out in a country that just elected a lesbian prime ministerFacebook kills its SnapchatThe celebrity 'Game of Thrones' cameo in Ep 4 you probably missedHere's why Peter shouldn't be the next 'Bachelor'Russian influencer network shows its teeth to RepublicansThe military is not afraid to shoot your drone to shitiPhone 8 will ship alongside iPhone 7S and 7S Plus, rumor claimsiPhone 8 will ship alongside iPhone 7S and 7S Plus, rumor claimsWhy 'Firestick that sh*t' became shorthand for pirating our favorite films and TV showsThe celebrity 'Game of Thrones' cameo in Ep 4 you probably missed 'Aladdin' CinemaCon footage goes all in with Will Smith's Genie Infiniti teases its next electric concept car Elon Musk says Dogecoin is his favorite cryptocurrency 'Avengers: Endgame' ticket sales threaten to break the internet Google Assistant may promote advertisers without telling you about it Another big cyberattack is taking a country offline Disney promotes 'Dark Phoenix', promises more 'Deadpool' at CinemaCon Kendall Jenner dressed like Paris Hilton for her 21st birthday Astronaut Anne McClain shares stunning moonset from the International Space Station Report: iPad Pros have a touch Twitter makes it easier to appeal decisions about bad behavior When it comes to self Apple iPad mini 5 teardown reveals RAM upgrade Facebook on how it's tackling interference ahead of the Australian elections This little Iron Man robot is the kind of ‘Avengers: Endgame’ merch we dig 'The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina' makes a good witch go bad: Review Most would pay more than $10 for Spotify, Hulu bundle Fact: Melania Trump is a Westworld robot Apple might not have 5G iPhone ready in time for 2020 launch Everything we learned about 'Cats' at CinemaCon
2.9972s , 10133.421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【ebony】,Inspiration Information Network