By

Wynne Parry /

Livescience.com/ August 27, 2012, 1:56 PM

Arctic sea ice melt shatters record low

The Greenland ice sheet has lost 1,500 billion tons of ice since 2000.

The Greenland ice sheet has lost 1,500 billion tons of ice since 2000. / Getty Images

(LiveScience) Arctic sea ice, the white cap that covers the watery northern edge of the planet, has melted back to a record low level.

However, the ice is unlikely to stop shrinking. Arctic sea melts through the summer usually reaching its annual minimum in September.

On Sunday (Aug. 26), Arctic sea-ice extent fell to 1.58 million square miles (4.10 million square kilometers), surpassing the previous low, set on Sept. 18, 2007, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) reports. Sea-ice extent refers to the area of ocean covered at least 15 percent by sea ice, according to the NSIDC.

The record low, set in 2007, stood at 1.61 square miles (4.17 square kilometers).

But this year's melt is unlikely to stop soon. The melt season still has another two or three weeks to go. [10 Things to Know about Sea Ice]

Continuous satellite records of sea-ice extent began in 1979. But in recent years, satellite data have shown a shift in the fluctuating ice cover. For example, including this year, the six lowest ice extents in the satellite record have occurred in the last six years, the NSIDC reports.

Scientists attribute the shift to a combination of natural forces, for example, a storm in early August coincided with an acceleration of melt that occurred at the same time. However, over time, the effects of winds, clouds and other natural conditions should, in theory, balance themselves out. It is the emission of greenhouse gases that alters the long-term trend by warming the planet, Walt Meier, a research scientist at NSIDC told LiveScience last year

This year's melt rate was much faster than the normal rate for this time of year, the NSIDC reported today (Aug. 27).

Sea ice matters to the animals, such as polar bears and walruses, that depend on it for habitat, and scientists worry the loss of ice could have serious consequences for them.

Sea ice also affects weather and global climate, because it reflects most of the sun's energy back out to space. If sea ice melts, the dark water beneath it absorbs most of the energy, which in turn enters the natural system. In this way, scientists believe the melting of sea ice will aggravate global warming.

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3 Comments Add a Comment
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seeker25801 says:
So has anyone reported the flip side to this? Satellite data show that, over the past 30 years, Arctic sea ice has declined while Antarctic sea ice has mysteriously expanded, according to study leader Jiping Liu, a research scientist at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
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Ray_J3 replies:
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Well, they might if they're being intellectually dishonest like you.

http://www.skepticalscience.com/arctic-antarctic-sea-ice.htm

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Resolving_The_Paradox_Of_The_Antarctic_Sea_Ice_999.html

http://nsidc.org/cryosphere/seaice/characteristics/difference.html
davea0511b replies:
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>Antarctic sea ice has mysteriously expanded

You *LIE* like a rug. Check it out the data at http://climate.nasa.gov/keyIndicators/#landIce - derived from satellite photos. You can fake data, but photos don't lie. At least not like you lie.