1. Arctic Climate Change: Where Reality Exceeds Expectations Mark C. Serreze National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder With thanks to the entire community.
2. Serreze et al., 2000: Observational evidence of recent change in the Northern high-latitude environment, Climatic Change , 46, 159-207. “ Taken together, these results paint a reasonably coherent picture of change, but their interpretation as signals of enhanced greenhouse warming is open to debate.” Seven years ago…
3. Why the fence-sitting? Natural variability appeared to dominate; many changes over recent decades could be directly linked to behavior of the NAO/NAM. J. Hurrell (top left), M. Visbeck (top right), 0. Johannessen (bottom left)
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5. Rapid loss of Arctic sea ice September sea ice extent in 2007 compared to previous record set in 2005: A decline of 23% Mark Serreze, Julienne Stroeve, Walt Meier, Ted Scambos, Marika Holland, Jim Maslanik, Stephanie Renfrow, Matt Savoie
6. 2007 sea ice conditions in context Mark Serreze, Julienne Stroeve, Walt Meier, Ted Scambos, Marika Holland, Jim Maslanik, Stephanie Renfrow, Matt Savoie September Sea Ice Extent (1979–2007) September 2007 4.28 million km 2 2000
10. Observed rate of loss is faster than expected Julienne Stroeve, Mark Serreze, Walt Meier, Ted Scambos, Marika Holland
11. Moorings at Svinoy and Fram Strait I. Polyakov et. al, 2005 A puzzle: warming of Atlantic inflow
12. K. Shimada et al., 2006 Feedback associated with Pacific summer water
13. Are we near a tipping point? Ice concentration: Marika Holland, Cecilia Bitz, Bruno Tremblay, Julienne Stroeve 1990–1999 2010–2019 2040–2049 CCSM3 Model Simulation Observations Model Drop 1.8 million sq km, 2024–2025 Observed Drop 1.6 million sq km, 2006–2007 September Sea Ice Extent
14. Sea ice thickness: an intriguing comparison Modeled ice thickness before abrupt ice loss, March 2024 (CCSM3) Observed satellite-derived ice thickness, March 2007 (ICESat) Marika Holland et al, 2006 (left), Julienne Stroeve (right)
16. The Northwest Passage: open by late August 2007 G. Spreen, L. Kaleschke, and G. Heygster/IUP Universitat Bremen, AMSR data from National Snow and Ice Data Center (left); unknown (upper right); Dave Kavanagh (middle right); D. Thoreson (lower right) Manhattan 1968 Gjoa 1903 Cloud Nine 2007
17. As the sea ice cover continues to retreat, the Arctic will become increasingly accessible, not just to commercial shipping, but to oil extraction. Mike Keefe, 08/18/2007 Denver Post An accessible Arctic
18. Model-Projected Arctic Amplification Mark Serreze, Andy Barrett, Marika Holland Model projection of 2-meter temperature anomalies by month and year for 70–90 degrees North latitude, compared to 1979–1998 means (CCSM3) Latitude by height dependence of zonally averaged October–March temperature anomalies for 2050–2059, compared to 1979–1998 means (CCSM3)
19. Arctic Amplification appears to have emerged Corresponding anomalies in 2-meter temperature (NCEP/NCAR) Anomalies observed sea ice extent by year and month, relative to 1979-2007 means, for an Arctic Ocean domain (SSMR and SSM/I) Seasonality is as expected Andy Barrett, Mark Serreze, Matt Savoie
20. The vertical structure also looks correct Latitude (0 to 90 degrees North) by height (1,000 to 100 hectopascals) dependence of temperature anomalies, 1995–2007 minus 1979–2007 October November NCEP/NCAR, Climate Diagnostics Center
21. Surface melt over Greenland 2007 Melting Day Anomalies Melting Index Time Series Marco Tedesco, City College of New York-CUNY
22. Melt-induced ice flow and moulins Konrad Steffen, CIRES at the University of Colorado at Boulder
23. Cryospheric sea-level rise: glaciers and ice sheets Konrad Steffen, CIRES at the University of Colorado at Boulder
24. “ Greening” of the Arctic Trends in vegetation synthetic activity from1982–2005 (GIMMS-G AVHRR Vegetation indices) Significant positive trends Significant negative trends Scott Goetz, Woods Hole
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26. Decadal changes in multi-model mean freshwater budget terms for the Arctic Ocean: positive anomalies indicate an increasing source (or decreasing sink) of freshwater for the Arctic Ocean Holland, Finnis, Barrett and Serreze, JGR, 2007 Anomalies are with respect to 1950–1980 means for ten models participating in the IPCC-AR4, A1B emissions scenario for the 21 st Century Not everything is rapidly changing…