Arctic sea ice extent for June 2011 was the second lowest in the satellite data record since 1979, continuing the trend of declining summer ice cover. Average ice extent fell below that for June 2007, which had the lowest minimum ice extent at the end of summer. However, ice extent this year was greater than in June 2010. The sea ice has entered a critical period of the melt season: weather over the next few weeks will determine whether the Arctic sea ice cover will again approach record lows.
Overview of conditions
Average ice extent for June 2011 was 11.01 million square kilometers (4.25 million square miles). This is 140,000 square kilometers (54,000 square miles) above the previous record low for the month, set in June 2010, and 2.15 million square kilometers (830,000 square miles) below the average for 1979 to 2000.
June ice extent was lower than normal in much of the Arctic, but the Kara Sea region had particularly low ice extent. Ice has also started to break up off the coast of Alaska in the Beaufort Sea. These open water areas absorb the sun’s energy, which will help to further ice melt through the summer.
Conditions in context
Ice extent during June 2011 declined at an average rate of 80,800 square kilometers (31,200 square miles) per day, about 50% faster than the average decline rate for June 1979 to 2000. Ice extent declined more slowly than in June 2010, the year with the lowest average ice extent for the month. However, ice declined faster than in June 2007, the year when September sea ice extent reached the lowest in the satellite record. Ice loss in the Kara Sea was especially fast, more than double the average rate and close to double the rate of the past four years (2007 to 2010). Sea ice has largely disappeared in the southern Kara Sea, which normally still has considerable ice cover at this time of year.
At the end of June, Arctic sea ice extent was 9.54 million square kilometers (3.68 million square miles), 375,000 square kilometers (145,000 square miles) less than the ice extent on June 30, 2007 and 264,000 square kilometers (102,000 square miles) above the record low for June 30, set in 2010.
June 2011 compared to past years
Arctic sea ice extent in June 2011 was the second lowest in the satellite record, consistent with the overall downward trend of the past thirty years. The lowest year for June was 2010. June average ice extent exceeded 12 million square kilometers (4.6 million square miles) 16 out of 21 years between 1979 and 1999, but has been below that value every year since.
Warmer than average temperatures continue
Air temperatures for June were 1 to 4 degrees Celsius (2 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than average over most of the Arctic Ocean, except in the Beaufort and Greenland seas, where temperatures were near normal or slightly below normal. High pressure dominated most of the central Arctic, with the highest pressures over the Beaufort Sea. The monthly averaged pressure field shows a circulation pattern somewhat similar to a pattern known as the dipole anomaly, with unusually high pressure over the Beaufort Sea and unusually low pressure over central Siberia. Similar patterns have become common in recent summers.
A detailed view from MODIS data
Data from the NASA Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) provide a detailed view of seasonal ice breakup. Along the Alaska coast, large ice floes are breaking away near the coast southwest of Barrow. However, in this image from June 28, a narrow strip of landfast ice remained anchored to the coast, bounded on the seaward side by grounded ridged ice. That last bit of ice broke up around July 3, according to the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks
Sea ice breakup in Barrow is defined as the time when the landfast ice along the coast starts to move. The timing of this breakup is closely tied to the cumulative amount of solar energy input to the Barrow region—the amount of sunshine the area receives—after June 5. The Geophysical Institute uses this relationship to forecast the breakup: this year they predicted the breakup to occur on July 11.
Further ReadingOcean heat
An article published recently in the journal Science showed that the flow of ocean heat into the Arctic Ocean from the Atlantic is now higher than any time in the past 2000 years. The warm, salty Atlantic water flows up from the mid-latitudes and then cools and sinks below the cold, fresh water from the Arctic. The higher salt content of the Atlantic water means that it is denser than fresher Arctic water, so it circulates through the Arctic Ocean at a depth of around 100 meters (328 feet). This Atlantic water is potentially important for sea ice because the temperature is 1 to 2 degrees Celsius (1.5 to 3 degrees Fahrenheit) above freezing. If that water rose to the surface, it could add to sea ice melt.
Spielhagen, R.F., K. Werner, S. Sorensen, K. Zamelczyk, E. Kandiano, G. Budeus, K. Husum, T.M. Marchitto, M. Hald, 2011. Enhanced modern heat transfer to the Arctic by warm Atlantic Water, Science, vol. 331, pp. 450-453, 28.
New ice thickness data
The first preliminary map of sea ice thickness data from the European Space Agency’s Cryosat-2 was released in June. This radar altimeter measures the height of features such as snow and sea ice on the Earth surface. This initial map is very preliminary and considerable work will be required before the thickness retrievals are validated and useful for scientific study. Researchers expect that Cryosat-2 will eventually provide additional information about changes in sea ice thickness and volume.