Understanding Arctic Sea Ice

Starting in 1988, a large amount of thick multi-year ice began flowing out of the Arctic Basin into the Fram Strait during the winters. This caused the ice to thin.

Since 2009, the pattern has reversed and the percentage of multi-year ice has increased substantially, causing the ice to thicken. This past winter the thick ice moved directly away from the Fram Strait, causing almost all of it to be preserved.

The amount of 2+ year old ice has increased by 30% since 2009, and the amount of 3+ year old ice has increased by 50% since 2011. People at NSIDC understand this, but for some reason Mark Serreze isn’t talking about it.

ScreenHunter_76 Apr. 23 05.09

April | 2013 | Arctic Sea Ice News and Analysis

Winter winds caused the decline, and they are also causing the increase. PIOMAS of course does not reflect any of this.

About Tony Heller

Just having fun
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8 Responses to Understanding Arctic Sea Ice

    • kbray in california says:

      In comparing 1989 to 2013, 24 years difference, the North is still cold, snowy, icy, and deadly… no positive change in my book. The warmists can move there, I’ll pass.

      • Marian says:

        LOL:

        And they can burn all the electronic toys to help keep them warm. From GPS sets to cellphones, laptops, cameras, etc. 🙂

  1. F. Guimaraes says:

    Great post Steve, I’ll spread the word!:-)

  2. NevenA says:

    When are you going to announce another recovery, Steve? Any predictions wrt volume, extent, area? 🙂

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