Tag Archives: arctic

Early Findings Show a Radically Changed Arctic

Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Simon Boxall, a lecturer in Oceanography at the National Oceanography Centre, as part of the Cape Farewell project . The science on this year’s Cape Farewell has been split into two (linked) sections. We want to build on previous visits to Svalbard (2003,04 and 07) by repeating a cross section through the West Spitsbergen current (part of the extension of the Gulf Stream) and measuring the East Spitsbergen current for the first time (the other half of that e… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Early Findings Show a Radically Changed Arctic

Chasing Frankenstein Above the Arctic Circle

Paul D. Miller on Chermsideouya Island. Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Paul D. Miller, also known as DJ Spooky, as part of the Cape Farewell project . “Nowadays everyone knows the price of everything, but the value of nothing.” – Oscar Wild Today I write to you from the Noorderlicht after we’ve left a deeply barren island that’s pretty much the most northern part of our journey. The island reminded me of a scene from the 1817 novel

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Chasing Frankenstein Above the Arctic Circle

Rapid Decline of Oldest, Thickest Arctic Sea Ice Tracked in New Study

Photo via Sustainablog Though a recent study called into question the current estimated rate of ice loss at the poles, there’s no question as that ice loss is a major problem, and a harsh reality in the Arctic. Case in point: a soon-to-be-released study scooped at Climate Progress reveals further evidenc… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Rapid Decline of Oldest, Thickest Arctic Sea Ice Tracked in New Study

DJ Spooky Tells the Political Tale of Two Poles

Paul D. Miller is no stranger to polar exploration. Here, DJ Spooky poses in Antarctica. Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Paul D. Miller, also known as DJ Spooky, as part of the Cape Farewell project . “How can I know what I think till I see what I say?” – E.M. Forster Here in the far North, weather conditions can change rapidly . A crystal clear day can be erased by cumulus, gray fogs drift into bays and fjords a… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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DJ Spooky Tells the Political Tale of Two Poles

Norway to Ship Iron Ore Across Arctic to China – First Non-Russian Carrier to Use Northeast Passage

photo: Nordic Bulk Carriers With both the northwest and northeast passages open thanks to Arctic ice melting due to climate change, it was only a matter of time before this happened: For the first time a non-Russian flagged commercial bulk carrier will use the Northern Sea Route (the northeast passage), a Norwegian vessel shipping iron ore to China through Arctic and Rus… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Norway to Ship Iron Ore Across Arctic to China – First Non-Russian Carrier to Use Northeast Passage

Melting Ice Forces 10,000 Walruses Ashore in Alaska

(Sept. 15) — Female walruses traditionally like to spend the summer lounging on slabs of sea ice with their young, occasionally dipping into shallow Arctic waters for a fishy treat. But over the past few weeks, thousands of these mammals have given up their free-floating lifestyle and taken up residence along the Alaska side of the Chukchi Sea. An estimated 10,000 to 20,000 Pacific walruses — mainly mothers and calves — are resting along the coastline, gathered together in tightly clustered pods, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. (Bulls normally splash around the Bering Sea in summer months.) Because only 20 percent of walruses normally come to shore, the Alaska Dispatch notes, scientists suspect another 80,000 walruses could be swimming close by. This is the third time such a sea-to-land migration — common in Russia, but historically unprecedented in Alaska — has taken place in the last four years. This unusual behavior appears to have been triggered by the slow warming of the Arctic waters through climate change, which in turn has shrunk the amount of thick, walrus-suitable sea ice. Last week, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center reported that Arctic sea ice coverage had fallen to its third-lowest level since records began in 1979; only 2007 and 2008 saw lower levels. added by: TimALoftis

Arctic sea ice shrinks to third lowest area on record

Arctic sea ice melted over the summer to cover the third smallest area on record, US researchers said Wednesday, warning global warming could leave the region ice free in the month of September 2030. Last week, at the end of the spring and summer “melt season” in the Arctic, sea ice covered 4.76 million square kilometers (1.84 million square miles), the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center said in an annual report. “This is only the third time in the satellite record that ice extent has fallen below five million square kilometers (1.93 million square miles), and all those occurrences have been within the past four years,” the report said. A separate report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) found that in August, too, Arctic sea ice coverage was down sharply, covering an average of six million square kilometers (2.3 million square miles), or 22 percent below the average extent from 1979 to 2000. The August coverage was the second lowest for Arctic sea ice since records began in 1979. Only 2007 saw a smaller area of the northern sea covered in ice in August, NOAA said. The record low for Arctic sea ice cover at the end of the spring and summer “melt season” in September, was also in 2007, when ice covered just 4.13 million square kilometers (1.595 million square miles). Mark Serreze, director of the NSIDC, said climate-change skeptics might seize the fact that Arctic sea ice did not hit a record-low extent this year, but said they would be barking up the wrong tree if they claimed the shrinkage had been stopped. “Only the third lowest? It didn't set a new record? Well, right. It didn't set a new record but we're still headed down. We're not looking at any kind of recovery here,” he told AFP. In fact, Serreze said, Arctic sea ice cover is shrinking year-round, with more ice melting in the spring and summer months and less ice forming in the fall and winter. “The Arctic, like the globe as a whole, is warming up and warming up quickly, and we're starting to see the sea ice respond to that. Really, in all months, the sea ice cover is shrinking — there's an overall downward trend,” Serreze told AFP. “The extent of Arctic ice is dropping at something like 11 percent per decade — very quickly, in other words. “Our thinking is that by 2030 or so, if you went out to the Arctic on the first of September, you probably won't see any ice at all. It will look like a blue ocean, we're losing it that quickly,” he said. Losing sea ice cover in the Arctic would affect everything from the obvious, such as people who live in the far north and polar bears, to global weather patterns, said Serreze. “The Arctic acts as a sort of refrigerator of the northern hemisphere. As we lose the ice cover, we start to change the nature of that refrigerator, and what happens up there affects what happens down here in the middle latitudes,” he said. “We might have less cold outbreaks, which you might say is a good thing, but it's not such a good thing in regions that depend on snowfall for their water supply.” NOAA noted in its report that the first eight months of 2010 were in equal first place with the same period in 1998 for the warmest combined land and ocean surface temperatures on record worldwide, and the summer months were the second warmest on record globally, after 1998. added by: JanforGore

DJ Spooky Channels Arctic Amplification into Song

Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Paul D. Miller, also known as DJ Spooky, as part of the Cape Farewell project . “I had started on a voyage of discovery, only to find that it was I who was being discovered.” – Tété-Michel Kpomassie in An African In Greenland The Arctic Circle begins at roughly 66

Global Warming’s Impact on Arctic Ice Explained (Video)

Photo via Rising Powers Earlier today, we looked at the fictional story of a polar bear leaving its threatened home in the Arctic to seek out the source of the problem in human civilization — and yes, that was an advertisement for Nissan’s LEAF electric car. But the phenomena it depicted, ice melting and land mass shrinking in the Arctic, is very real. So good thing then that Peter Sinclair has a brand new video out that details how exa… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Global Warming’s Impact on Arctic Ice Explained (Video)

Cruise Ship is Stuck in the Arctic Ocean | The Canadian Coast Guard Is Helping

Canada aids cruise ship stuck in the Arctic Ocean By the CNN Wire Staff August 29, 2010 10:39 p.m. EDT The crew of the Clipper Adventurer was unable to dislodge it during high tide. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * The Canadian coast guard is ferrying passengers from the ship * The are being taken to a small town on the shore of the Arctic Ocean * Some 128 passengers and roughly 69 crew members are thought to be on board * The ship ran aground an unmapped rock on Friday (CNN) — The Canadian coast guard began ferrying passengers on Sunday from a cruise ship that ran aground an unmapped rock. Officials aboard the Clipper Adventurer reported their troubles on Friday. The crew failed to dislodge the ship during high tide on Saturday, while Sunday, a coast guard icebreaker arrived to transport the people on board to land. No one of the estimated 128 passengers and 69 crew members were hurt or injured, said Theresa Nichols, a spokeswoman with the Canadian coast guard. “They are in the midst of completing the operation of ferrying the passengers off,” she said. “That operation should be just about finished.” The passengers are being taken to Kugluktuk, a small town on the shore of the Arctic Ocean, where accommodations have been arranged by the cruise ship company, said Nichols. They are then expected to fly to the Canadian city of Edmonton. The grounded vessel is stable, but rests with a slight list, according to the company that operates the cruise ship, Adventure Canada. “Weather remains favourable as passengers continue to enjoy onboard programming and hospitality,” the company said in a statement. added by: EthicalVegan