Arctic Sea Ice Reaches 2019 Minimum Extent
Narration: Lauren Ward
Transcript:
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[Music]
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Narrator: On September 18th 2019, satellites observed that
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Arctic sea ice had reached its annual low.
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This year's sea ice minimum is effectively tied for the second lowest on record.
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And while sea ice grows and shrinks with the seasons,
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2019 continues the downward trend of the extent.
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Nathan Kurtz: The trends we’ve been seeing
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with the sea ice minimum have just been a decrease.
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So, in the 70’s since the modern record began tracking to today,
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there is variation from year to year, but it’s really just a
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a downward trend. Narrator: Satellite observations show that Arctic sea ice
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is not only shrinking in extent, it is also becoming younger
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and thiner. That means less and less ice survives
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the annual melt. Kurtz: The Artic has actually warmed a lot more than
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the globe at a whole. There is something called Artic amplification, which means
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that the temperatures in the Arctic have warmed about 2 – 3 times
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the global average.
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Narrator: A major cause of this warming is due to the loss of the reflectivity - or albedo – of the sea ice.
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Snow-covered sea ice has a high albedo. This helps keep the
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sun’s energy from being absorbed by a dark ocean.
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But when sea ice melts, it loses some of that reflectivity.
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And without the sea ice cover, the ocean will absorb most
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of the sun’s energy.
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This creates a feedback loop that leads to more melting and warming in the Arctic.
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Kurtz: We care about sea ice for a variety of reasons.
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One being is because it does have an impact on things like our weather and our climate.
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Because of the albedo effect if you decrease the amount of sea ice
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you start warming up the Arctic, and when you start warming up the Arctic
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you start changing the circulating of the jet stream which brings
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weather to us here in the mid latitudes.
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Other reasons why we care about sea ice, Arctic sea ice in particular,
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Because we’ve such big changes due to warming
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melting ice, it is a good visual to show that, yes, the climate
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Is changing and it is because of warming.
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Narrator: NASA continues to monitor these changes to the Arctic so that we may get a better
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understanding of what we can expect in the future.
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[Music]