Reduced ice thickness in Arctic Transpolar Drift favors rapid ice retreat


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christian.haas [ at ] ualberta.ca

Abstract

Helicopter-borne electromagnetic sea ice thickness measurements were performed over the Transpolar Drift in late summers of 2001, 2004, and 2007, continuing ground-based measurements since 1991. These show an ongoing reduction of modal and mean ice thicknesses in the region of the North Pole of up to 53 and 44%, respectively, since 2001. A buoy derived ice age model showed that the thinning was mainly due to a regime shift from predominantly multi- and second-year ice in earlier years to first-year ice in 2007, which had modal and mean summer thicknesses of 0.9 and 1.27 m. Measurements of second-year ice which still persisted at the North Pole in April 2007 indicate a reduction of late-summer second-year modal and mean ice thicknesses since 2001 of 20 and 25% to 1.65 and 1.81 m, respectively. The regime shift to younger and thinner ice could soon result in an ice free North Pole during summer. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.



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Eprint ID
19373
DOI https://www.doi.org/10.1029/2008gl034457

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Haas, C. , Pfaffling, A. , Hendricks, S. , Rabenstein, L. , Etienne, J. L. and Rigor, I. (2008): Reduced ice thickness in Arctic Transpolar Drift favors rapid ice retreat , Geophysical Research Letters, 35 (17) . doi: https://www.doi.org/10.1029/2008gl034457


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