Arctic sea ice retreat in 2007 follows thinning trend
Abstract
The minimum of arctic sea ice extent in the summer of 2007 was unprecedented in the historical record. A coupled ice-ocean model is used to determine the state of the ice and ocean over the past 29 years to investigate the causes of this ice extent minimum within an historical perspective. We find that even though the 2007 ice extent was strongly anomalous, the loss in total ice mass was not. Rather, the 2007 ice mass loss is largely consistent with a steady decrease in ice thickness that began in 1987. Since then, the simulated mean September ice thickness within the Arctic Ocean has declined from 3.7 to 2.6 m at a rate of -0.57 m decade-1. Both the area coverage of thin ice at the beginning of the melt season and the total volume of ice lost in the summer have been steadily increasing. The combined impact of these two trends caused a large reduction in the September mean ice concentration in the Arctic Ocean. This created conditions during the summer of 2007 that allowed persistent winds to push the remaining ice from the Pacific side to the Atlantic side of the basin and more than usual into the Greenland Sea, exposing large areas of open water, resulting in the record ice extent anomaly.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2008
- Bibcode:
- 2008AGUFM.C51A0526L
- Keywords:
-
- 0750 Sea ice (4540);
- 4540 Ice mechanics and air/sea/ice exchange processes (0700;
- 0750;
- 0752;
- 0754)