Arctic ice may be normal now, but leading government scientists say that it will be ice-free in a few weeks.
COI | Centre for Ocean and Ice | Danmarks Meteorologiske Institut
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Arctic summers ice-free ‘by 2013’
Arctic ice may be normal now, but leading government scientists say that it will be ice-free in a few weeks.
COI | Centre for Ocean and Ice | Danmarks Meteorologiske Institut
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Arctic summers ice-free ‘by 2013’
As per above we had:
Then we had:
My best guess is that they are guessing…………..again. Get ready for an update between now and 2006 as to another best guess for [insert guess date]. đŸ˜‰
Correction: I meant
“…between now and 2016 as to another best guess for [insert guess date].”
I already guessed that.
But also 2019 is a nice round number .
“On the 2nd of November 1922, The Washington Post published the following story: Arctic Ocean Getting Warm; Seals Vanish and Icebergs Melt”. The corresponding report in the Monthly Weather Review of November 1922 had also stated that the ice conditions in the Northern North Atlantic were exceptional; in fact, so little ice has never before been noted. Only 16 year later the meteorologist C.E.P. Books thought it necessary to explain the situation more complex:
In recent years attention is being directed more and more towards a problem which may possibly prove of great significance in human affairs, the rise of temperature in the northern hemisphere, and especially in the Arctic regions. (Brooks, 1938) “
EXTRACT FROM: http://www.arctic-heats-up.com/chapter_1.html , continuing Ch.1B:
“It………. the present arctic warming since 1980 is not the only one. There was another warming period for the region north of 62o North since 1920 until 1945, for which the high-latitude temperature increase was stronger in the late 1930s early 1940s than in recent decades (Polyakov, 2002). The first Arctic warming started 90 years ago, from about 1920 to 1940. In winter 1918-19 the air temperatures exploded at the remote archipelagos Spitsbergen, which the Norwegian call: Svalbard. In 1930 the Norwegian scientist .B. J. Birkeland regarded the rise as maybe the biggest ever observed in one place. Birkeland could presumably repeat the claim today with justification. But would he or his colleagues come up with the exclamation the Arctic is screaming today? Definitely not, although he and his colleagues might wish to scream: How could it be that you know so little about “our arctic warming” to understand “your arctic warming”. “
Steve, that’ll be a good one to post again in October of this year.
Regards
I’m so glad we got all this melting stuff sorted out and tidied up. Now we can settle in and begin evacuating coastlines for when all the floating ice melts. I think I’ll stay behind when they bus everyone out of Manhattan so I can declare salvage rights in time for the Santa Claus Rally.
Arctic ice extent has been in the normal range all winter. Just click on the 1981-2010 avg on this graph.
http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/charctic-interactive-sea-ice-graph/