No Correlation Between Arctic Ice Extent And Snow Extent

Alarmists claim that snow is caused by missing Arctic ice, but the historical record provides no support for that idea.

The graph below plots January Northern Hemisphere snow extent vs. January Arctic ice extent. There is no correlation. The years with highest and lowest snow extent both occurred with ~15 million km^2 of Arctic ice.

ScreenHunter_24 Jan. 23 18.41

RSQ= 0.26

ftp://sidads.colorado.edu/DATASETS/NOAA/G02135/Jan/N_01_area.txt

Rutgers University Climate Lab :: Global Snow Lab

About Tony Heller

Just having fun
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2 Responses to No Correlation Between Arctic Ice Extent And Snow Extent

  1. Les Johnson says:

    Looking at it, it appears there is a negative slope. That would mean that less arctic ice does mean more snow extent, but large variability.

    What the trend line look like?

  2. A C Osborn says:

    Have you tried plotting the Summer Ice extent against the Snow, as that is what prompted the “it’s the lack of Arctic Ice stories.

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