How Squarestate Works

Tell Colorado's Democratic Senators Yes to Filibuster Reform and No to the Not Dead Yet Grand Bargain

Contact Senator Mark Udall - (877) 768-3255 And Senator Michael Bennet - (866) 455-9866

SquareState

Connect with Squarestate


Gotta Tip???
Go to the archive
Advertise on Squarestate
Online Voter Registration!







Search




Advanced Search


NSIDC

State of the Poles - June 2012: Arctic Ice Extent Below Normal; Antarctic Ice Near Clim. Norm

by: WeatherDem

Thu Jun 14, 2012 at 09:26:00 AM MST

The  state of global polar sea ice area in early June 2012 has once again  fallen below climatologically normal conditions (1979-2009).   Arctic sea ice loss is primarily responsible for this change in  condition since just last month.  Arctic sea ice melted quickly in May  because it was thinner than usual; Antarctic sea ice has refrozen at a  near normal rate during the late austral autumn.  Polar sea ice  recovered from an extensive deficit of -2 million sq. km. area three  months ago to a +750,000 sq. km. anomaly one to two months ago before  falling back to a -1 million sq. km. deficit.  After starting the year  at a deficit last year, sea ice area spent an unprecedented length of  time near the -2 million sq. km. deficit in the modern era in 2011.   Generally poor environmental conditions established and maintained this  condition, predominantly across the Arctic last year.  The last time  global sea ice area remained near 19 million sq. km. through May was in  2007, when the Arctic extent hit its modern day record minimum.
There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1444 words in story)

State of the Poles - Jan 2012: Arctic Ice Near Historic Lows; Antarctic Ice Above Average

by: WeatherDem

Sun Jan 22, 2012 at 11:04:34 AM MST

The state of global polar sea ice area in early January 2012 has temporarily returned to climatologically normal conditions (1979-2009).  Arctic sea ice has recovered very quickly after starting the freeze season slowly and Antarctic sea ice has melted more slowly than is normal for this time of year.  Put another way, polar sea ice has recovered from an extensive deficit of -2 million sq. km. area a couple of months ago to no anomaly today.  That said, sea ice area spent an unprecedented length of time near the -2 million sq. km. deficit in the modern era.  Generally poor environmental conditions established and maintained this condition, predominantly across the Arctic, this year.
There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1002 words in story)

State of the Poles - Dec 2011: Arctic Ice Continues Low; Antarctic Ice Above Average

by: WeatherDem

Wed Dec 14, 2011 at 10:36:46 AM MST

I haven't written about polar ice conditions for a few months due to lack of time thanks to school.  Hopefully my time availability moving forward will be high enough to keep this series going.

The state of global polar sea ice area in early December 2011 has temporarily returned to near climatologically normal conditions (1979-2009).  Arctic sea ice has recovered very quickly after starting the freeze season slowly and Antarctic sea ice is benefiting from weather conditions preventing extensive melt at the edges in much the same way as it did last year at the same time.  Since my last post (covering August conditions), polar sea ice has generally recovered from an extensive deficit of negative 2 million sq. km.  The long time that sea ice area spent near this dramatic condition is unprecedented in the modern era.  Poor conditions established this development across the Arctic this year.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1226 words in story)

State of the Poles - June 2011: Arctic Near Record Low; Antarctic Normal

by: WeatherDem

Tue Jun 07, 2011 at 12:48:52 PM MST

[Note: This post first appeared yesterday in partial form.  This is the full post.  My apologies.]

The state of global polar sea ice area at the beginning of June 2011 remains poor: well below climatological conditions (1979-2009) continue to persist.

Sea ice in the Arctic continues to track significantly below average, with the 3rd lowest readings for the month in the modern era.  Antarctic sea ice recovered somewhat more quickly to normal conditions than was the case the month before.  Global sea ice area has therefore remained near historical lows for an extended period of time this year.  Within the last month, global sea ice area has finally improved from the 1 million sq. km. deficit from climatological conditions that characterized the first four months of 2011.  To help put this in context, only 2006 and 2007 saw similar conditions.  In 2007, the Arctic (and global) sea ice area fell to its lowest extent in modern history.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 743 words in story)

State of the Poles - 1/6/2011

by: WeatherDem

Thu Jan 13, 2011 at 15:55:28 PM MST

The  state of global polar sea ice area at the beginning of 2011 continues the trend present throughout most of 2010: well below climatological conditions (1979-2009).  Sea ice in the Arctic continues to track far below  average while Antarctic sea ice has tracked closer to average from above average the past couple of months.  Overall,  the rate at which Arctic sea ice is refreezing and Antarctic ice is  melting is not out of the ordinary.  The locations where freezing and  melting is occurring is once again news this month.  Global sea ice is rapidly  decreasing, as is normal for this time of year due to Antarctic  environmental conditions.  The value of global sea ice area has already fallen below the average level of 16 million sq. km.  The yearly absolute minimum should occur within the next month or so, at which time we'll be able to determine whether 2011's minimum is more like 2005, 2009 and 2010 (~15 million sq. km.) or whether 2011's minimum is more like 2006 and 2007 (~14.5 million sq. km.).
There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1382 words in story)

State of the Poles - 12/5/10

by: WeatherDem

Tue Dec 07, 2010 at 10:30:04 AM MST

The state of global polar sea ice area at the beginning of December 2010 remains well below climatological conditions (1979-2008). Sea ice in the Arctic continues to track far below average while Antarctic sea ice stayed slightly above average. Overall, the rate at which Arctic sea ice is refreezing and Antarctic ice is melting is not out of the ordinary. The locations where freezing and melting is occurring is news this month. Global sea ice is rapidly decreasing, as is normal for this time of year due to Antarctic environmental conditions.
There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1060 words in story)

State of the Poles - 9/7/10

by: WeatherDem

Thu Sep 09, 2010 at 17:11:10 PM MST

The state of global polar sea ice at the beginning of September 2010 is once again very poor compared to   climatological conditions (1979-2008).   The Arctic ice extent is far, far below average for this time of year.  The Antarctic sea ice extent is above average, but not nearly so much as was the case at the beginning of August.  Unfortunately, global sea ice extent has fallen to ~18  million sq. km., something that has happened in only 2 previous Septembers: in 2007 and 2008.  The Northwest Passage and the Northern Sea Route are largely free of  ice, allowing the Arctic Ocean to potentially be circumnavigated.

Each month and each year that goes by provides additional proof that the Arctic has entered into a new state; a different state than has existed for 1,000 years or more.  Monthly and yearly weather conditions have varied considerably over the past few years, as one would expect, but the end result has been nearly the same regardless of any specific condition: Arctic sea ice is declining year-over-year.  It is declining at a rate that exceeds scientific estimates from just a few years ago.  Climate change deniers keep prattling on about increasing sea ice, in direct contradiction to the physical realities before them.  I think most of the areas that have sea ice this September will not have sea ice by 2020.  Specific weather or geologic events might delay the year that occurs slightly, but I don't think it will take too much longer to witness an Arctic Ocean that is essentially ice-free.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1792 words in story)

State of the Poles - 8/7/10

by: WeatherDem

Sun Aug 08, 2010 at 10:48:03 AM MST

The state of global polar sea ice in July 2010 is somewhat poor compared to   climatological conditions (1979-2008).   The Arctic ice extent once again finds itself far below average extent for this time of year.  In contrast, the Antarctic sea ice extent remains significantly above average conditions.  Given those two quite different stories, the fact that global sea ice extent has once again fallen below 19  million sq. km., just as it has the past five consecutive years and eight out of the past nine, speaks to the dangerously poor condition of Arctic sea ice.

A quick aside: it's not just the regions north of 60 that are experiencing ridiculous warmth this year.  As I'll detail further in my upcoming post on the NASA & NOAA global temperature datasets, numerous areas across the Northern Hemisphere have experienced record breaking heat this summer.  Washington D.C. has witnessed its warmest June-July on record.  Moscow has experienced its warmest temperatures on record, while massive wildfires rage across the Russian countryside - burning both forests and peat bogs (all of which releases even more CO2 into the atmosphere).  All-time record temperatures for country after country has fallen this year - further speaking to the dead seriousness of climate change's effects now beginning to take hold.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1138 words in story)
Squarestate.net is owned by Open Communications Colorado, LLC. and is not responsible for the opinions expressed outside of our own.
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Resources
Online Voter Registration!
Blog Roll
Abandon Your Car
American Indian Movement Colorado
Argusfest
The Bell
Big Media
Colorado Capitol Watch
Colorado Confluence Colorado Ethics Watch
Colorado Independent
Colorado Progressive Jewish News
Coloradopols
Congresspedia
Coyote Gulch
CritterThink
DemNotes
Denver Direct
Denver Voice
El Centro Humanitario
El Seminario
Great Education Colorado
La Voz
Lefty Blogs
Liberal Latina
Mario Solis-Marich
Mariowire
Outta the Cornfield
Pocho Blog
Politics West
Rocky Mountain Activist
Scholars and Rogues
Steam Powered Opinions
TriLakeDems
Ultimate Politics
Union Staff for Union
Democracy

Wash Park Prophet
WeatherDem - the blog
Wide Streets

Get Involved
Deep Green Resistance
Occupy Denver
Occupy Everywhere

What We Listen To
KUNC 91.5 FM
AM 760: Boulder's Progressive Talk
KCFR 1340 AM
KGNU 1390AM or 88.5FM
KRFC 88.9FM
Citizen Radio
MicCheckRadio
Democracy Now!
Progressive Voice
Colorado State Legislature

Reference
CoMaps.org
General Assembly
Prospector
Secretary of State
Tax Tracks
TRACER
WikiLeaks.org

Powered By
SoapBlox



Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

SquareState.net is owned by Open Communications Colorado, LLC
Powered by: SoapBlox