Good points guys.
To bad that ice is so thin. It's not going to take much over the Canadian basin the next two months to melt out a huge part that didn't melt in 2013.
In some ways 2013 preconditioned the Canadian Basin this year to have a big melt.
It took that older 2-3.5M ice that slide West in winter and late Spring of 12-13 and melted it strongly but not out. Last winter before the great flush on the Laptev side it was pushed even further West.
The rebound was mostly 30-60CM while the losses from 2013 were 1-2M.
Now we have a huge area of 3-6yr old ice in the Canadian basin that is actually thinner than the ice to it's West over the Chukchi and ESS.
MYI or not. It's only July 7th it will take a miracle weather reversal now to spare pretty much any ice in the Canadian basin around 1.5 to 1.75M thick or thinner regardless of age.
It's a lot easier to melt ESS ice and Chukchi ice because of the shallow ridge and warm Pacific under current that has no where to hide like it can in the deeper Beaufort because the fresh water layer.
Given the nasty weather modeling coming to fruition and given where we are with 30 days to go of 400w/m2 per day I think a huge collapse on the Pacific side as well as the Laptev/Kara side could bring an unforeseen drop this year thru August if the weather cooperates.
On top of that bottom ice melt with the ice being so thin over the Canadian Basin will be much easier to ramp up than compared to 2013 when the ice was 2-3.5M at this point for the most part.
On the Laptev said it speaks for it self the ice has been flushed to the barents since early March.
Now we have a huge open water body with waves and 2-5C ssts being bombarded into the side of the ice pack.
Folks have noted the lack of flushing in the fram and Barents but the Barents is more like a machine even if ice is flushed out by the time it reaches that 80N line roughly it's likely under 1M for sure even if it's not when it gets to the warm salty Barents its going to essentially vanish into thin air.
Another factor and correct me if I am wrong but the ice formed in the Laptev region that moves to the Barents region or even Nansen basin should have lower salinity.
I would assume as that ice moves into higher salinity waters it would melt from the bottom as well?
As clouds are finally dispersing over the Atlantic side an area of seemingly open water but its not open water shows up but it could also be very thin ice.
Or maybe it's an artifact. But it started yesterday and grew today as warmer/sunnier conditions are moving in.
I hope for love of god we get a good MODIS scan tonight of that area.