Tag Archives: arctic

Greenland May Soon Disappear

A panel of scientists told Congress the entire ice mass of Greenland will disappear from the world map if temperatures rise by as little as 2C –3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, with severe consequences for the rest of the world.The fall-out would be felt thousands of miles away from the Arctic, unleashing a global sea level rise of 23 feet. Low-lying cities such as New Orleans would vanish. added by: The_Global_Report

Stranded Polar Bears Threaten Migratory Birds

Image credit: Tomi Tapio /Flickr With their habitats shrinking, and new competitors moving in , polar bears across the Arctic are desperate to find a place to feed, rest, and raise their cubs. In Canada, this has led to an increase in polar bear-human interactions . On the island of Svalbard, north of Europe, it has placed another species—barnacle geese—in danger… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Stranded Polar Bears Threaten Migratory Birds

Permafrost Melting Releases Mercury Into Swedish Lake

photo: Rob Lee via flickr Lots of environmentally bad stuff is happening as the world’s permafrost melts, mostly in the realm of releasing stored greenhouse gases. But, as Conservation points out, a new report in the journal

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Permafrost Melting Releases Mercury Into Swedish Lake

Explorer Wakes Up In Jaws Of A Polar Bear

They were on an Arctic expedition to be the first team to paddle 1,250 miles around the island chain. Of course, there are dangers when camping in the Arctic so they protected thier tents with an early warning system and protection. However, for Sebastian Plur Nilssen the system failed and he woke up to find a Polar bear in his tent. The bear dragged him out by his head, but Nilssen couldn't shot the bear because it had broken the shotgun in the struggle. It is legal to shot a Polar Bear in self defence, and that's what his friend Ludvig Fjeld did. Nilssen in currently in hospital recovering, but told the press the entire story of the attack. “The 23-year-old was dragged screaming from the tent, with his head clamped in the animal's jaws. The adult male bear flung the young explorer's body from side to side in an attempt to stun him, a technique typically used on its usual prey of seals. The polar bear's teeth pierced Mr Nilssen's lung as it fought for a better grip and narrowly missed a main artery in his neck. “It was so strong I could not fight, I grabbed for my shotgun and tried to shoot it but [the polar bear] had snapped [the gun] in half,” he said. “It must have been only a minute I was in his jaws but it felt like forever. “It was a big bear, at one point it stood up on its back legs with me in its mouth, I was 2.5 metres off the ground and it seemed very high.” “When I fired the first shot, the bear dropped him, but I had to fire four more to make sure it was dead. But despite his brush with death, Mr Nilssen said he was not angry at the bear, speculating that it carried out its unusual attack on humans because it was hungry.”-Yahoo. added by: Mcellie

Petermann glacier: large ice island breaks off Greenland

A giant ice island has broken off the Petermann Glacier in northern Greenland. A University of Delaware researcher says the floating ice sheet covers 100 square miles – more than four times the size of New York's Manhattan Island. Andreas Muenchow, who is studying the Nares Strait between Greenland and Canada, said the ice sheet broke off early Thursday. He says the new ice island was discovered by Trudy Wohlleben of the Canadian Ice Service. Not since 1962 has such a large chunk of ice calved in the Arctic, but researchers have noticed cracks in recent months in the floating tongue of the glacier. Also see: http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100806/sc_livescience/icechunklargerthanma… added by: JanforGore

Russia Launches Barge For Floating Nuclear Power Plant

The barge of Russia’s floating nuclear power plant, Academician Lomonosov, is launched at the Baltic Shipyard. Photo via The Voice of Russia . Guest bloggers Andrea Donsky and Randy Boyer are co-founders of NaturallySavvy.com . Does the idea of a nuclear power plant floating in the ocean leave you a little nervo… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Russia Launches Barge For Floating Nuclear Power Plant

Scientists Predict Continued Rapid Summer Arctic Sea Ice Decline – But No New Record

image: Klimacampus Though currently the extent of Arctic sea ice in lower than it was back in 2007, when the current record minimum was set, two different groups of German scientists’ forecasts show continued rapid decline but no new record to be set by this September. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Scientists Predict Continued Rapid Summer Arctic Sea Ice Decline – But No New Record

EPA Administrator Pens Blog Against Murkowski’s ‘Dirty Air’ Amendment

photo via EPA The pundits are saying that the vote on Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s amendment to upend the EPA’s Endangerment Finding, which says the CO2 and other greenhouse gases are warming the planet, could be a harbinger of things to come on the Senate climate and energy bill. This is probably not the case, since the Murkowski language could never get through the House and the president wouldn’t sign it. Nonetheless, EPA chief Lisa jackson posted a blog today on the

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EPA Administrator Pens Blog Against Murkowski’s ‘Dirty Air’ Amendment

Arctic Ice Cover at Lowest Point in Past Several 1000 Years + Arctic Autumn Will Be Ice-Free This Decade

photo: US Geological Survey via flickr Two pieces on Arctic ice which are worth paying attention to today: 1) Via Climate Progress , Wieslaw Maslowski of the Naval Postgraduate School has presented some new research showing how autumn in the Arctic is likely to be ice-free by the end of thi… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Arctic Ice Cover at Lowest Point in Past Several 1000 Years + Arctic Autumn Will Be Ice-Free This Decade

Arctic Ice At Low Point Compared To Recent Geologic History

Less ice covers the Arctic today than at any time in recent geologic history. That's the conclusion of an international group of researchers, who have compiled the first comprehensive history of Arctic ice. For decades, scientists have strived to collect sediment cores from the difficult-to-access Arctic Ocean floor, to discover what the Arctic was like in the past. Their most recent goal: to bring a long-term perspective to the ice loss we see today. Now, in an upcoming issue of Quarternary Science Reviews, a team led by Ohio State University has re-examined the data from past and ongoing studies – nearly 300 in all – and combined them to form a big-picture view of the pole's climate history stretching back millions of years. “The ice loss that we see today – the ice loss that started in the early 20th Century and sped up during the last 30 years – appears to be unmatched over at least the last few thousand years,” said Leonid Polyak, a research scientist at Byrd Polar Research Center at Ohio State University. Polyak is lead author of the paper and a preceding report that he and his coauthors prepared for the U.S. Climate Change Science Program. Satellites can provide detailed measures of how much ice is covering the pole right now, but sediment cores are like fossils of the ocean's history, he explained. “Sediment cores are essentially a record of sediments that settled at the sea floor, layer by layer, and they record the conditions of the ocean system during the time they settled. When we look carefully at various chemical and biological components of the sediment, and how the sediment is distributed – then, with certain skills and luck, we can reconstruct the conditions at the time the sediment was deposited.” For example, scientists can search for a biochemical marker that is tied to certain species of algae that live only in ice. If that marker is present in the sediment, then that location was likely covered in ice at the time. Scientists call such markers “proxies” for the thing they actually want to measure – in this case, the geographic extent of the ice in the past. While knowing the loss of surface area of the ice is important, Polyak says that this work can't yet reveal an even more important fact: how the total volume of ice – thickness as well as surface area – has changed over time. “Underneath the surface, the ice can be thick or thin. The newest satellite techniques and field observations allow us to see that the volume of ice is shrinking much faster than its area today. The picture is very troubling. We are losing ice very fast,” he said. “Maybe sometime down the road we'll develop proxies for the ice thickness. Right now, just looking at ice extent is very difficult.” To review and combine the data from hundreds of studies, he and his cohorts had to combine information on many different proxies as well as modern observations. They searched for patterns in the proxy data that fit together like pieces of a puzzle. Their conclusion: the current extent of Arctic ice is at its lowest point for at least the last few thousand years. As scientists pull more sediment cores from the Arctic, Polyak and his collaborators want to understand more details of the past ice extent and to push this knowledge further back in time. During the summer of 2011, they hope to draw cores from beneath the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait between Alaska and Siberia. The currents emanating from the northern Pacific Ocean bring heat that may play an important role in melting the ice across the Arctic, so Polyak expects that the history of this location will prove very important. continued added by: JanforGore