NASA Sat Images Reveal Arctic Ice Thinning
Arctic sea ice is dramatically thinning with thin, seasonal ice
replacing thick, older
ice as the dominant type for the first time on record, according to
scientists from NASA and the University of Washington. The researchers
used data and observations from NASA's earth-orbiting ICESat (Ice,
Cloud and land Elevation Satellite) to provide further
evidence of the rapid, ongoing transformation of the Arctic's ice
cover.
Previously, scientists relied only on measurements of area to
determine how much of the Arctic Ocean is covered in ice, but ICESat
makes it possible for the first time to monitor ice thickness and volume changes over the
entire Arctic Ocean. Using ICESat measurements, the scientists discovered that overall
Arctic sea ice thinned about seven inches a year, for a total
of 2.2 feet over four winters.
The total area covered by
the thicker, older "multiyear" ice that has survived one or more
summers shrank by 42 percent.
The research team said the changes in the overall
thickness and volume of Arctic Ocean sea ice is due to recent warming and
anomalies in patterns of sea ice circulation.
"Ice volume allows us to calculate annual ice production and
gives us an inventory of the freshwater and total ice mass stored in
Arctic sea ice," Ron Kwok of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, who led the research team, said in a statement. "Even in years when the overall extent of
sea ice remains stable or grows slightly, the thickness and volume of
the ice cover is continuing to decline, making the ice more vulnerable
to continued shrinkage."
Kwon and his fellow researchers published their findings July 7 in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans.
"Our data will help scientists better understand
how fast the volume of Arctic ice is decreasing and how soon we might
see a nearly ice-free Arctic in the summer," Kwon said.
The Arctic ice cap grows each winter as the sun sets for
several months and intense cold follows. In the summer, wind and ocean
currents cause some of the ice naturally to flow out of the Arctic,
while much of it melts in place. The thicker, older ice is more likely to survive. Seasonal
sea ice usually reaches about six feet in thickness, while
multiyear ice averages nine feet.
In recent years, the amount of ice replaced in the winter has
not been sufficient to offset summer ice losses. The result is more
open water in summer, which then absorbs more heat, warming the ocean
and further melting the ice. Between 2004 and 2008, multiyear ice
cover shrank 595,000 square miles --
nearly the size of Alaska's land area.
"One of the main things that has been missing from information
about what is happening with sea ice is comprehensive data about ice
thickness," said Jay Zwally, study co-author and ICESat project
scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "U.S.
Navy submarines provide a long-term, high-resolution record of ice
thickness over only parts of the Arctic. The submarine data agree with
the ICESat measurements, giving us great confidence in satellites as a
way of monitoring thickness across the whole Arctic Basin."
During the four-year study period, the relative contributions of the two
ice types to the total volume of the Arctic's ice cover were reversed.
In 2003, 62 percent of the Arctic's total ice volume was stored in
multiyear ice, with 38 percent stored in first-year seasonal ice. By
2008, 68 percent of the total ice volume was first-year ice, with 32
percent multiyear ice.
