Arctic ice melt prelude to severe winters
June 7th, 2012 - 11:51 am ICT by IANSWashington, June 7 (IANS) The dramatic melt-off of Arctic sea ice due to climate change could lead to severe winter outbreaks, reveals a study.
Charles H. Greene, professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University and colleague Bruce C. Monger, senior research associate, detail this phenomenon, the journal Oceanography reported.
“Everyone thinks of Arctic climate change as this remote phenomenon that has little effect on our everyday lives,” Greene said. “But what goes on in the Arctic remotely forces our weather patterns here.”
A warmer Earth increases the melting of sea ice during summer, exposing darker ocean water to incoming sunlight. This causes increased absorption of solar radiation and excess summertime heating of the ocean - further accelerating the ice melt, according to a university statement.
The excess heat is released to the atmosphere, especially during the autumn, decreasing the temperature and atmospheric pressure gradients between the Arctic and middle latitudes.
“What’s happening now is that we are changing the climate system, especially in the Arctic,” Greene said. “It’s something to think about given our recent history.”
This past winter, an extended cold snap descended on central and Eastern Europe in mid-January, with temperatures approaching minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit and snowdrifts reaching rooftops.
There were also the record snowstorms fresh in the memories of residents from several eastern US cities, as well as many other parts of the Eastern Seaboard during the previous two years.
- Mountain glacier melt-off to raise sea level by 12 cm by 2100 - Jan 11, 2011
- Britain to get colder winters due to climate change: Experts - Dec 25, 2010
- Why Antarctic sea ice is increasing despite warming climate - Aug 17, 2010
- Arctic sea ice level reaches second-lowest in history - Oct 06, 2011
- Arctic sea ice shrinks to smallest ever - Aug 28, 2012
- Arctic sea ice hits second-lowest level - Oct 05, 2011
- Reduced sea ice, warming elevate Arctic temperatures - Jul 08, 2012
- 'Precipitation, river discharges increase climate change' - Sep 06, 2012
- Ancient fossils hold clues for predicting future climate change - Apr 09, 2011
- Thickest Arctic Sea ice melting much faster - Mar 01, 2012
- NASA: Arctic's thickest ice diminishing faster than thin ice - Mar 01, 2012
- Arctic changes could spell dire consequences - Jan 31, 2012
- Ice age to interglacial period: Greatest climate change - Jul 24, 2012
- Arctic region warming fastest on earth - Jul 04, 2011
- Arctic's sea ice melt hits second-lowest level - Oct 07, 2011
Tags: arctic climate change, arctic ice, arctic sea ice, atmospheric pressure, atmospheric sciences, central and eastern europe, climate system, cold snap, cornell university, eastern seaboard, everyday lives, incoming sunlight, middle latitudes, ocean water, oceanography, pressure gradients, recent history, rooftops, solar radiation, weather patterns