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magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1000 on: November 07, 2016, 05:41:59 PM »
two and a half century gain in the Antarctic ocean

a) thanks for the values, always longing for them to keep my excel sheet up to date LOL very much   
    appreciated.

b) if i didn't miss something entirely that sentence above could be meant to read "loss" instead of
    gain, if i'm the one who missed it i'm sorry to have mentioned it :-)

have a good day, cheers

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1001 on: November 07, 2016, 06:01:05 PM »
Thanks for noticing, it was a typo of course:  gain->loss of Antarctic sea ice.

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1002 on: November 08, 2016, 04:32:44 PM »
Update of the global sea ice graphs. Global sea ice area and extent are still in uncharted territory.
As the graphs seem to me (comments welcome) getting presentable, I gave them a place on the web, updated daily:

Global Sea Ice Area
Global Sea Ice Extent

Tealight

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1003 on: November 08, 2016, 08:55:47 PM »
Update of the global sea ice graphs. Global sea ice area and extent are still in uncharted territory.
As the graphs seem to me (comments welcome) getting presentable, I gave them a place on the web, updated daily:

Global Sea Ice Area
Global Sea Ice Extent

Great work for your 3000 post. Congratulations! :)

I do not expect 2016 to climb much higher towards the other years. All gains in the Arctic will be compensated by losses in the Antarctic. It probably stays level for a further 1-2 weeks and then slowly begins the downward trend.
« Last Edit: November 08, 2016, 11:23:22 PM by Tealight »

johnm33

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1004 on: November 09, 2016, 11:00:22 AM »
Wipneus Thanks for all your great work here it's much appreciated. Since you ask for comment, it seems to me that this is the first time this graph appears to be communicating anything, but what? Would it be possible to 'normalise' the daily average in both hemispheres to zero then have the n/s, +/- showing as blue/red [purple] above and below the zero line in narrow columns? I hesitate to ask, since you already do so much.

Pmt111500

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1005 on: November 09, 2016, 11:19:15 AM »
Quick estimate (eyeblling) of the sd currently on the global graph is something like -4 1/3 if thats what was asked (bullshitting every now and then keeps a man sane and gets him elected)
« Last Edit: November 09, 2016, 12:17:35 PM by Pmt111500 »

dnem

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1006 on: November 09, 2016, 07:34:19 PM »
These new graphs by Wipneus strike me as among the most compelling climate change images I have ever seen, anywhere.  They appear to me to indicate an unprecedented state change in the global climate system.  Is that overstating the case?  I have been sharing them and will continue doing so but I want to provide the proper context for them.

Pmt111500

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1007 on: November 09, 2016, 07:51:16 PM »
...indicate an unprecedented state change in the global climate system.  Is that overstating the case?

Certainly there are preciously few properly done graphs on such a large area with that magnitude a change. If we wish to use a sort of statistical maximum stating "once is a fluke, twice in a row is notable, thrice is a new state", we'd be quite happy to say this is a one time occurrence. On the cell (in a bar) so can't really write a novel on this quite expectable wacc-scrnario so stopping here.

(Modded next day: This was my 666th post on the forum, made after ~6 pints of beer, if anyone's counting, seeking further sixes from yesterday, it looks like I drove pretty exactly 6km, and walked ~1/6th of ye olde peninkulma. this karmic occurrence of the most imperfect number though breaks in the fact that I wrote a whole ten comments in total yesterday. Phew!!)
« Last Edit: November 10, 2016, 12:01:30 PM by Pmt111500 »

Tigertown

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1008 on: November 09, 2016, 09:27:29 PM »
These new graphs by Wipneus strike me as among the most compelling climate change images I have ever seen, anywhere.  They appear to me to indicate an unprecedented state change in the global climate system.  Is that overstating the case?  I have been sharing them and will continue doing so but I want to provide the proper context for them.

Hard to tell until the sun comes back up in the Arctic. The anomalies hurt right now, but if they persist with the sun adding to it all, everything can change.

But then again, I could be wrong.

"But, if leading scientists writing in one of the most respected academic journals are right, planet Earth could be on course for global warming of more than seven degrees Celsius within a lifetime." Says the following article.
www.independent.co.uk/news/science/climate-change-game-over-global-warming-climate-sensitivity-seven-degrees-a7407881.html

« Last Edit: November 09, 2016, 09:51:31 PM by Tigertown »
"....and the appointed time came for God to bring to ruin those ruining the earth." Revelation 11:18.

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1009 on: November 09, 2016, 09:49:02 PM »
These new graphs by Wipneus strike me as among the most compelling climate change images I have ever seen, anywhere.  They appear to me to indicate an unprecedented state change in the global climate system.  Is that overstating the case?  I have been sharing them and will continue doing so but I want to provide the proper context for them.


If peak to trough values are maintained next year then sea ice area will drop to around 15m km2.

Darvince

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1010 on: November 10, 2016, 07:40:07 AM »
On the best source I have available for Antarctic IJIS, the current sea ice extent of 15.44 M km^2 is 500k km^2 below the record set in 1986.

Btw, is there an FTP source where you can get the exact numbers?

Lord M Vader

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1011 on: November 10, 2016, 08:02:33 AM »

BornFromTheVoid

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1012 on: November 13, 2016, 05:13:18 PM »
Update for the week to November 12th

The current 5 day trailing average is on 8,433,000km2 while the 1 day extent is at 8,616,000km2.

(All the following data is based on a trailing 5 day average)
The daily anomaly (compared to 81-10) is at -1,891,000km2, a decrease from -2,380,000km2 last week. The anomaly compared to the 07, 11 and 12 average is at -753,000km2, a decrease from -1,130,000km2 last week. We're currently lowest on record, the same as last week.



The average daily change over the last 7 days was +131.6k/day, compared to the long term average of +61.7k/day, and the 07, 11 and 12 average of +77.8k/day.
The average long term change over the next week is +68.0k/day, with the 07, 11, and 12 average being +80.2k/day.



The extent increase so far this November is the 2nd largest on record. To achieve the largest gain, an increase of at least 85.5k/day is required (at least +84.7k/day with with single day values), while the smallest gain requires a loss of at least 8.1k/day (more than 20.5k/day with single day values) and an average gain requires an increase of 40.3k/day (33.9k/day with single day values).

I recently joined the twitter thing, where I post more analysis, pics and animations: @Icy_Samuel

Adam Ash

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1013 on: November 13, 2016, 09:48:56 PM »
Interesting to see that PIOMAS Sea Ice Volume is about to fall out the bottom of the curve set too...

http://psc.apl.uw.edu/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/schweiger/ice_volume/BPIOMASIceVolumeAnomalyCurrentV2.1_CY.png


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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1014 on: November 16, 2016, 06:35:02 PM »
Global area and extent are still venturing in this uncharted territory.

Attached are the already introduced "by year" plots. The grey shading is the +/- 2sigma range calculated from the 1981-2010 normals.

New are the normalized anomaly plots. Normalized meaning anomaly is divided by the standard deviation. I will attach them in the next post as they need a click.

Both area and extent are now a staggering 10 sigma below normal value.


Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1015 on: November 16, 2016, 06:35:47 PM »
see above. Do click to see the full width.

[EDIT: both graphs showed area. Fixed the extent graph]
« Last Edit: November 17, 2016, 11:35:41 AM by Wipneus »

magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1016 on: November 16, 2016, 07:04:53 PM »
Global area and extent are still venturing in this uncharted territory.

Attached are the already introduced "by year" plots. The grey shading is the +/- 2sigma range calculated from the 1981-2010 normals.

New are the normalized anomaly plots. Normalized meaning anomaly is divided by the standard deviation. I will attach them in the next post as they need a click.

Both area and extent are now a staggering 10 sigma below normal value.

thanks a lot, those are really meaningful numbers, btw i tried to plot those values into an excel file but did not find a comma separated or similar data file, but found a site where one has to register for data downloads. is that the place to fetch data from to plot them or is there another way.

i would be grateful for any hint, no tutorial needed, only initial directions where to look for and/or the point that i overlooked according to the above mentioned. perhaps another software is needed?

TIA

dnem

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1017 on: November 16, 2016, 07:40:31 PM »
That is astounding Wipneus.  The probability of a 10 sigma event is essentially zero.  Which means to me that what is occurring now is being drawn from a different distribution than the historical numbers. I.e. a "state change".

oren

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1018 on: November 16, 2016, 07:48:03 PM »
The global sea ice anomaly is shocking. Normally I would run to show it to anyone I know. My only problem with it is that Arctic and Antarctic sea ice behave differently and represent different things. Arctic sea ice is a proxy for global warming and arctic amplification, while the Antarctic behaves more randomly and is lost mostly by El Nino, and is actually predicted to gain by global warming due to increased meltwater discharge from Antarctic glaciers. So bunching them together is not so much good science in my opinion, and was mostly done by deniers claiming there was no problem with sea ice while ignoring the fundamentals.
Not intending to criticize, as this chart is very interesting, just reminding folks about the meaning of it.

dnem

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1019 on: November 16, 2016, 07:56:43 PM »
That's a great point Oren and I've been debating how to frame it if and when I share it.  Scribbler has a good and cautious post about it today.

https://robertscribbler.com

dnem

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1020 on: November 16, 2016, 08:01:18 PM »
But still. TEN sigma  :o

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1021 on: November 16, 2016, 08:34:40 PM »
At the same time the global ice amount is an earth system state property so it is not really unscientific. Granted it is a number that depends on multiple phenomena that can be on or out of phase but the span that Wip presents encompasses multiple ENSO state flips, although not enough PDO state ones. 10 sigma though is 10 sigma!!! Enough to accept a new fundamental particle ....
« Last Edit: November 16, 2016, 09:00:01 PM by DrTskoul »

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1022 on: November 16, 2016, 10:42:50 PM »
What does this mean regarding Albedo?!

magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1023 on: November 16, 2016, 10:52:57 PM »
The global sea ice anomaly is shocking. Normally I would run to show it to anyone I know. My only problem with it is that Arctic and Antarctic sea ice behave differently and represent different things. Arctic sea ice is a proxy for global warming and arctic amplification, while the Antarctic behaves more randomly and is lost mostly by El Nino, and is actually predicted to gain by global warming due to increased meltwater discharge from Antarctic glaciers. So bunching them together is not so much good science in my opinion, and was mostly done by deniers claiming there was no problem with sea ice while ignoring the fundamentals.
Not intending to criticize, as this chart is very interesting, just reminding folks about the meaning of it.

the global sea ice represents very well the state of the global climate, in the long run a warmer climate will lead to less to zero ice ( around the year ) and a cooler climate will lead to an ice age with a third of the planet covered by ice. in this context it think that global sea-ice is indeed the right long-term indicator when it comes to the state of the planet and the differences you mentioned are more of a different way how that shows short term.

the reason why i predicted for years that there will be a mid-long-term turnaround in the antarctic as well is simply due to the fact that if the planet will be 5C warmer there will be no more sea ice in summer on both sides and once the land ice masses will be heavily reduced, also on both ends, even though that may take centuries if not millenia to get down to zero or close to zero as it has been in the past and who knows what kind of events will happen in the mean time.

i say global sea-ice VOLUME is the ultimate way to measure what's happening long term, short term outliers to both sides on both ends are hype and have to be interpreted with care.

again this is more as an add on to your post because as i know form many of your posts i agree to your general way to see things and very much appreciate your well founded contributions :-)

cheers

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1024 on: November 17, 2016, 09:16:52 AM »
Hello to All, this is the first time I write in this forum.

I have been following the freezing season with interest and I have been shocked by the graphs by Wipneus on the Global area and extent anomalies.

I have a question: If there is much lesser ice than previous years, does it have an impact on sea level? Can we see it?

Thanks.

Neven

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1025 on: November 18, 2016, 12:30:54 AM »
Welcome, Observador. Those graphs are for sea ice which floats on water, so if it melts, it doesn't raise sea level (only by a very tiny bit, having to do with salinity, I believe). Archimid can probably explain it better. I believe he came up with the concept.  ;)
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magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1026 on: November 18, 2016, 02:16:15 AM »
Hello to All, this is the first time I write in this forum.

I have been following the freezing season with interest and I have been shocked by the graphs by Wipneus on the Global area and extent anomalies.

I have a question: If there is much lesser ice than previous years, does it have an impact on sea level? Can we see it?

Thanks.

somewhere it has been mentioned that see level rose by 15mm recently which would indeed be a significant acceleration. i think i've heard that in a recent documentary on german television but am not totally sure, could as well be a read in this very forum.

in reply to you question that would mean "yes"

Tigertown

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1027 on: November 18, 2016, 02:28:07 AM »
Land ice like glaciers or ice sheets raise sea level upon melting. Also, Antarctica's ice shelves because of their great heights above the water. Warming of the waters in the oceans also raise sea levels. What I have learned that most impressed me is that for various reasons sea level increases are greater in some areas of the world than others.
"....and the appointed time came for God to bring to ruin those ruining the earth." Revelation 11:18.

magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1028 on: November 18, 2016, 02:47:19 AM »
Land ice like glaciers or ice sheets raise sea level upon melting. Also, Antarctica's ice shelves because of their great heights above the water. Warming of the waters in the oceans also raise sea levels. What I have learned that most impressed me is that for various reasons sea level increases are greater in some areas of the world than others.

yeah, for us mere mortals this might sound like a paradoxon and it could as well have something to do with this phenomenon (links) :

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20335-earth-is-shaped-like-a-lumpy-potato/

https://www.google.es/search?q=earth%2Bpotato&num=100&tbm=isch&imgil=dQo-WDH2Qnw52M%253A%253BF3q4i0dlYiqLvM%253Bhttp%25253A%25252F%25252Fkingnewsmedia.blogspot.com%25252F2011%25252F04%25252Fgravity-satellite-yields-potato-earth.html&source=iu&pf=m&fir=dQo-WDH2Qnw52M%253A%252CF3q4i0dlYiqLvM%252C_&usg=__KpFNQp3P4WiAMO65trMMKUdHCkA%3D&biw=1676&bih=930#imgrc=dQo-WDH2Qnw52M%3A



https://www.google.es/search?q=earth%2Bpotatoe&oq=earth%2Bpotatoe&aqs=chrome..69i57j0l5.5123j0j1&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

jdallen

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1029 on: November 18, 2016, 02:55:39 AM »
Hello to All, this is the first time I write in this forum.

I have been following the freezing season with interest and I have been shocked by the graphs by Wipneus on the Global area and extent anomalies.

I have a question: If there is much lesser ice than previous years, does it have an impact on sea level? Can we see it?

Thanks.

somewhere it has been mentioned that see level rose by 15mm recently which would indeed be a significant acceleration. i think i've heard that in a recent documentary on german television but am not totally sure, could as well be a read in this very forum.

in reply to you question that would mean "yes"
Need to qualify that "YES".

Ice melting in the Arctic will not raise sea level.

Ice *melt* from land-based ice will raise sea level, and most of that contribution is from Antarctica and Greenland.

Heat in the environment will also raise sea level through thermal expansion - that's actually a very sizeable fraction of of our current increases in sea level. (Note: steric rise pertains to changes driven by expansion from heating)

https://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/tar/wg1/411.htm#tab111
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Apocalypse4Real

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1030 on: November 18, 2016, 02:41:18 PM »
Wipneus,

What is the base period for your global sea ice extent and area anomaly graphs?

They are very impressive - and disturbing.

Mind if I share them in a course I teach?

A4R

Lord M Vader

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1031 on: November 18, 2016, 02:51:37 PM »
Todays daily extent number from NSIDC shows a staggering drop of -147K(!) It's not without that you wondr if this is the biggest single November drop from NSIDC during the whole period with daily values. Anyone who knows?

The 5-day average also did a 2K drop.
« Last Edit: November 18, 2016, 03:31:57 PM by Lord M Vader »

BornFromTheVoid

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1032 on: November 18, 2016, 03:12:34 PM »
Todays daily extent number from NSIDC shows a staggering drop of -147K(!) It's not without that you wondr if this is the biggest single November drop from NSIDC during the whole period with daily values. Anyone who knows?

The 5-day average also did a 20K drop.

Previous largest singe day extent drop for November is -138k on the 16th, 1996.

For the 5 day mean there has only been 2 previous drop in November, -4.6k on 21st 1982 and -14.2k on the 8th 2013. The drop this year is just 2k for now.
I recently joined the twitter thing, where I post more analysis, pics and animations: @Icy_Samuel

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1033 on: November 18, 2016, 03:51:33 PM »
Wipneus,

What is the base period for your global sea ice extent and area anomaly graphs?

They are very impressive - and disturbing.

Mind if I share them in a course I teach?

A4R

Hi A4R. Good you asked the question. Normals and standard deviation are calculated over the years 1981-2010, following NSIDC practise. I am always happy to share them, go ahead.
I did notice that the standard deviation that I used is not the correct one, it is the deviation from a linear trend over the period. Using the correct one (deviation from the mean value) yields a slightly larger value, resulting in approximately 8 sigma.
I have an update as soon as possible.

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1034 on: November 18, 2016, 03:54:22 PM »
Updated graphics, here are the global sea ice area and extent per year:

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1035 on: November 18, 2016, 03:57:18 PM »
Normalized anomalies, with the fixed calculation of the std, deviation.

Click for bigger pictures.

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1036 on: November 18, 2016, 03:59:27 PM »
Last addition, area/extent, normal and anomaly in one graph Cryosphere Today-style.
« Last Edit: November 18, 2016, 05:56:35 PM by Wipneus »

Juan C. García

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1037 on: November 18, 2016, 04:27:16 PM »
It looks rather odd the actual NSIDC Charctic graph, noticing that it is based on a 5-days average.    ???
Which is the best answer to Sep-2012 ASI lost (compared to 1979-2000)?
50% [NSIDC Extent] or
73% [PIOMAS Volume]

Volume is harder to measure than extent, but 3-dimensional space is real, 2D's hide ~50% thickness gone.
-> IPCC/NSIDC trends [based on extent] underestimate the real speed of ASI lost.


pdjakow

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1039 on: November 18, 2016, 05:34:02 PM »
Last addition, area/extent, normal and anomaly in one graph Cryosphere Today-style.

Are these graphs normalized as title said?

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1040 on: November 18, 2016, 05:36:52 PM »
Last addition, area/extent, normal and anomaly in one graph Cryosphere Today-style.

Are these graphs normalized as title said?

No, title is incorrect. Fixed now, thanks for the notice.
« Last Edit: November 18, 2016, 06:13:14 PM by Wipneus »

magnamentis

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1041 on: November 18, 2016, 07:31:11 PM »
Hello to All, this is the first time I write in this forum.

I have been following the freezing season with interest and I have been shocked by the graphs by Wipneus on the Global area and extent anomalies.

I have a question: If there is much lesser ice than previous years, does it have an impact on sea level? Can we see it?

Thanks.

somewhere it has been mentioned that see level rose by 15mm recently which would indeed be a significant acceleration. i think i've heard that in a recent documentary on german television but am not totally sure, could as well be a read in this very forum.

in reply to you question that would mean "yes"
Need to qualify that "YES".

Ice melting in the Arctic will not raise sea level.

Ice *melt* from land-based ice will raise sea level, and most of that contribution is from Antarctica and Greenland.

Heat in the environment will also raise sea level through thermal expansion - that's actually a very sizeable fraction of of our current increases in sea level. (Note: steric rise pertains to changes driven by expansion from heating)

https://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/tar/wg1/411.htm#tab111

that was a misunderastanding (or failure to point out a few things on my side) :-)

a) i know that only land based ice would increas sea-level

b) he asked whether the recent global events are showing and global included the arctic hence
there is land ice to melt and there is greenland.

but then you are right, he was talking about global extent and area and only that won't have an impact other than that warmer waters have a higher volume.

so in short, i wanted to answer his question as to whether SLR accellerates which seems to be a yes for recently and i failed to point out what you pointed out with your post, thanks for jumping in.

nowayout

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1042 on: November 18, 2016, 08:13:55 PM »

Quote
a) i know that only land based ice would increas sea-level

Sorry folks, but it seems that something here goes the wrong direction, not only in this statement.

First: a floating iceberg shows only a fraction of its volume above sea level. I don't have the exact number at hand, but let's say it is 10%.

Second: Let us give a crude model of the Antarctic maritime glaciers. A column of 500 meter of frozen ice would support  exactly 50 additional meter of ice above sea level without affecting the global sea level.

Any inch more can (and will) add to the global sea level. And I'm quite sure, on average the ice above sea level in the Antarctic exceeds the assumed 10%.

Third: Now, how will it develop in the Antarctic. The maritime glaciers are melting from underneath as we speak. And the additional volume of ice is being hold by a dome of ice which will eventually fail, collapse, and add additional frozen ice to the ocean volume.

Effectively immediately, to borrow from a different discourse.

I can't resist:





Tigertown

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1043 on: November 18, 2016, 08:26:47 PM »
I think that usually the way the thinking goes is that water expands when frozen and thus the sea ice loses volume upon melting. This excess volume and the percentage of ice that floats above the water offset each other, if not perfectly, then close enough to a negligible deficit.

As far as Antarctica, as I mentioned above, there is land ice, ice shelves, and sea ice. The first two contribute to sea level rise upon melting. The sea ice floats the same as all sea ice. Sometimes people mix up the shelves with the sea ice, but it's not the same.

And yes, if glacier ice or ice shelves fall in the ocean and become ice bergs, these immediately raise sea level. No need to wait for melting to do so.
"....and the appointed time came for God to bring to ruin those ruining the earth." Revelation 11:18.

Apocalypse4Real

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1044 on: November 18, 2016, 09:06:28 PM »
Wipneus,

Thanks for the anomaly clarification and the tremendous contribution to tracking global ice change.

I haven't looked at the data, but it appears from the graph that we are already below the low global sea ice levels of September, which appears to be a month early than the naturally occurring global decline for Antarctic summer..

A4R


AbruptSLR

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1045 on: November 19, 2016, 02:30:23 AM »
It looks like the WunderBlog also admires Wipeneus' graphs per the linked article entitled: "Crazy Cryosphere: Record Low Sea Ice, An Overheated Arctic, and a Snowbound Eurasia":

https://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/crazy-cryosphere-record-low-sea-ice-an-overheated-arctic-and-a-snow

Extract: "Experts agree that the laggard sea ice this month around Antarctica is a separate matter from the Arctic, because sea ice in the northern and southern polar regions is produced by two markedly different circulation regimes and geographies. “At NSIDC, we generally frown on the practice of looking at the global sea ice extent,” said Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center, “the reason being that ice in the two hemispheres tends to behave rather differently; while Arctic extent shows clear downward trends in all months, the pattern for the Antarctic has been much more complex.” Serreze and several other ice experts I contacted agreed that there was no obvious explanation for why sea ice extent would suddenly dip in unison in both the Arctic and Antarctic when the two processes are typically so uncorrelated. Previous record-warm years didn’t behave this way. Could some previously dormant or absent connection be popping up just now? If so, it’s not an obvious one. NSIDC’s Ted Scambos: “I’d say that to link the two poles with a single causality chain at the seasonal/annual level is probably about a decade of research in the future.”"
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BornFromTheVoid

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1046 on: November 19, 2016, 02:44:55 PM »
Another drop on the daily NSIDC extent, takes us to lowest on record by well over 1 million km2 now, and gives us the biggest drop in the 5 day running average for November on record.
Will post more detail a little later.
I recently joined the twitter thing, where I post more analysis, pics and animations: @Icy_Samuel

Wipneus

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1047 on: November 19, 2016, 04:59:17 PM »
Global extent, calculated from NSIDC sea ice concentration, has a triple century drop today. Global area goes similar with a triple and a near-triple century in the last two days.

So moving fast out of known territory with the anomaly increasing at warp speed now 0.3 sigma/day

                                                    normalized normalized
                global   global    global    global     global     global
         date   extent     area  ext.anom area.anom   ext.anom  area.anom
2016-11-09T12   23.667   17.179    -3.316    -4.323     -6.475     -7.652
2016-11-10T12   23.475   17.138    -3.483    -4.322     -6.724     -7.639
2016-11-11T12   23.422   17.242    -3.512    -4.175     -6.710     -7.340
2016-11-12T12   23.230   17.281    -3.676    -4.089     -6.944     -7.144
2016-11-13T12   23.040   17.074    -3.827    -4.243     -7.137     -7.372
2016-11-14T12   22.964   16.868    -3.860    -4.392     -7.092     -7.578
2016-11-15T12   22.840   16.791    -3.935    -4.407     -7.118     -7.545
2016-11-16T12   22.707   16.629    -4.013    -4.503     -7.148     -7.649
2016-11-17T12   22.419   16.334    -4.236    -4.723     -7.434     -7.973
2016-11-18T12   22.108   16.050    -4.473    -4.922     -7.730     -8.275

 
« Last Edit: November 19, 2016, 05:48:32 PM by Wipneus »

Pmt111500

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1048 on: November 19, 2016, 05:12:11 PM »
<clip>

So moving fast out of known territory with the anomaly increasing at warp speed now 0.3 sigma/day
 
<clip>

Fubar. No doubt will rise to near acceptable levels at some point in time but is it feb-2017 or feb-20017 is anybody's guess. But at least we won't have to worry about glacials.

Shared Humanity

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Re: 2016 sea ice area and extent data
« Reply #1049 on: November 19, 2016, 05:17:03 PM »
Last freeze season was very exciting. This one is riveting. Thanks to everyone here. I visit every day.