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In the News

A Century-Old Arctic Shipwreck Could Help Us Predict Extreme Weather

March 28, 2017

In 1879, the USS Jeannette and her crew left San Francisco, headed for the Bering Strait with a dream: to win the race to reach the North Pole. After months of perilous sailing, the Jeannette made it through the strait. But soon after, she got stuck in the grip of ice floes, or sheets of floating ice.

Link: A Century-Old Arctic Shipwreck Could Help Us Predict Extreme Weather

Scientists just measured a rapid growth in acidity in the Arctic ocean, linked to climate change

February 27, 2017

The Arctic is suffering so many consequences related to climate change, it’s hard to know where to begin anymore. It’s warming more rapidly than almost any other part of the planet; its glaciers are melting and its sea ice is retreating; and its most iconic wildlife, including polar bears and walruses, are suffering.

Link: Scientists just measured a rapid growth in acidity in the Arctic ocean, linked to climate change

Arctic 2.0: What happens after all the ice goes?

February 08, 2017

As the Arctic slipped into the half-darkness of autumn last year, it seemed to enter the Twilight Zone. In the span of a few months, all manner of strange things happened. The cap of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean started to shrink when it should have been growing. Temperatures at the North Pole soared more than 20 °C above normal at times. And polar bears prowling the shorelines of Hudson Bay had a record number of run-ins with people while waiting for the water to freeze over.

Link: Arctic 2.0: What happens after all the ice goes?

How rapid Arctic sea ice melt may alter global weather patterns

January 12, 2017

Significant melting of Arctic sea ice is linked to changing global weather patterns, but climate scientists still have a lot of unanswered questions. "The Arctic is changing fairly rapidly," NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Lab oceanographer Dr. James Overland said, citing the record low ice extent in November 2016.

Link: How rapid Arctic sea ice melt may alter global weather patterns

Beneath the waves or underground, warming Alaska poses multiple threats

January 03, 2017

When you talk to climatologists about 2016, the phrase “mind-boggling” comes up a lot. “For crying out loud, yesterday it was 36 degrees in Barrow, Alaska, in the middle of winter,” said Rick Fritsch, a climate expert for the National Weather Service in Juneau. “If that doesn’t make the point, I don’t know what does. That’s not supposed to happen, at least not in the world I used to live in.”

Link: Beneath the waves or underground, warming Alaska poses multiple threats

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