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Here's a link to an animation from NASA of melting sea ice:
http://www.nasa.gov/mov/391782main_sea_ice_concept.mov
And also, a Science Journal Article on Arctic Ice:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/311/5768/1747.pdf
GHG stands for Greenhouse Gases
GIS stands for Greenland Ice Sheet
LIG stands for Last Interglacial (130,000 years ago)
Finally, here is a link to the current state of Arctic Sea Ice extent:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.365.jpg
Notice that while minimum sea ice extent was reached
in September (as it usually does), the anomaly from the 1979 to 2000 mean
has accelerated over the last few weeks and is now approximately
2 million square kilometers low. That's about 3 times the size of Texas.
The sun set about a month ago, and yet the anomaly has actually grown since then.
This illustrates to me that the cause is due to the inability of the atmosphere to
dissipate heat due to greenhouse gas concentrations.
Figure 2 of the Science article is also fairly interesting because it illustrates that current
(0kyrs) solar anomalies do not support rapid melting of Arctic ice.
http://www.nasa.gov/mov/391782main_sea_ice_concept.mov
And also, a Science Journal Article on Arctic Ice:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/311/5768/1747.pdf
GHG stands for Greenhouse Gases
GIS stands for Greenland Ice Sheet
LIG stands for Last Interglacial (130,000 years ago)
Recent assessment of future climate change
(2) indicates that the amount of future warming
is highly dependent on the model used, with
some models less sensitive to elevated atmospheric
GHG concentrations than others. The
model we used has midrange sensitivity and
appears reasonably accurate (27). Both past and
future simulations are characterized by large
Arctic warmings (i.e., to above freezing) that
extend from the spring into the fall. The future
susceptibility of the GIS to melting is also
likely to be exacerbated by soot-induced snow
aging (28), a factor that probably did not play a
role 130,000 years ago. Lastly, Greenland could
be much warmer by 2130 than it was during the
LIG (Fig. 2), assuming a 1% per year increase
in CO2 or equivalent GHGs. Thus, by any account
the GIS could be even more susceptible
to melting in the near future than it was
130,000 years ago.
Finally, here is a link to the current state of Arctic Sea Ice extent:
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.365.jpg
Notice that while minimum sea ice extent was reached
in September (as it usually does), the anomaly from the 1979 to 2000 mean
has accelerated over the last few weeks and is now approximately
2 million square kilometers low. That's about 3 times the size of Texas.
The sun set about a month ago, and yet the anomaly has actually grown since then.
This illustrates to me that the cause is due to the inability of the atmosphere to
dissipate heat due to greenhouse gas concentrations.
Figure 2 of the Science article is also fairly interesting because it illustrates that current
(0kyrs) solar anomalies do not support rapid melting of Arctic ice.
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