Arctic sea ice is still at a historic low extent this
winter, and a blast of balmy weather north of Iceland isn’t helping anything.Dreaming of a white Christmas? Maybe skip the Arctic this
year, where two days of temperatures far warmer than normal, above the freezing point, aren’t helping fix a
historically low amount of winter sea ice.
READ ALSO: Beware!! Women Who Take Paracetamol And Ibuprofen Atleast 2wice A Week For 6yrs, Risk Going Deaf..
On Thursday, a Danish Meteorological Institute
meteorologist, Jesper Eriksen, reported a buoy only 87 miles south of the North
Pole had recorded temperatures just above freezing, crossing 32 degrees
Fahrenheit.
That’s about 40 degrees warmer than normal for this time of
year in the Arctic, reports meteorologist Andrew Freedman at Mashable. The
two-day heat wave near the North Pole resembles a similar event that happened
last year in the region.
Partly as a result, Arctic sea ice remains at a historic low
extent as of Thursday, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Open
water that absorbs heat and allows warm winds to penetrate farther north
despite the onset of winter have slowed the annual regrowth of sea ice.
A series of storms have battered the sea ice as well,
creating a series of temperature spikes far higher than normal all winter.Despite the expectation that climate change would reduce
Arctic ice cover, scientists are still surprised at what they are seeing this
year. NOAA’s Arctic Report Card reported historic high temperatures for the
region in September, contributing to this year being the likely warmest on
record.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Leave Comment Here