High-Elevation Permafrost More Vulnerable to Rising Temperatures than Arctic Permafrost

Nature Communications, 14 March 2022 Even at current levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide, 60% of high-elevation “alpine” permafrost and 20% of Arctic permafrost may be lost in the near future. Most alpine permafrost is located in the Tibetan Plateau, but is also found in the Mongolian Plateau, the Rocky Mountains, the Andes, and other global […]

Tipping Point for Permafrost Peatlands Sooner Than Expected

Nature Climate Change, 14 March 2022 Large expanses of northern Europe and western Siberia may become too warm and wet within a few decades to sustain frozen permafrost peatlands, even under moderate emissions. These frozen peatlands, an especially vulnerable portion of permafrost lands, span 1.4 million square kilometers in Europe and Siberia, and contain 40 […]

COP-26 Video of the Week: Triple Threat to Polar Oceans with Carol Turley, Helen Findley, Sian Henley, Rolf Rødven and Anne Nuorgam

The Arctic and Southern Oceans play a key role in regulating the global climate, but are under serious threat from CO2 emissions causing three main and linked impacts: warming, acidification and freshening; as well as invasion by non-polar species, with consequences for food webs and fisheries. This session at COP26 highlights the latest scientific findings […]

Rising Temperatures Double Glacier Loss in the Russian High Arctic

The Cryosphere, 6 January 2022 Glaciers in the Russian High Arctic lost twice as much ice between 2010 and 2017 as in the previous decade. Until recently, these glaciers appeared more protected and intact than most faster-melting glaciers in high latitude regions, such as subarctic Alaska. This accelerating ice loss in Russia is most notable […]

Decline in Salmon Size Signals Potentially Significant Fisheries and Ecosystem Shift in the North Atlantic

Science Advances, 4 March 2022 In 2005, a sudden reduction in the transport of Arctic water into the Norwegian Sea resulted in widespread changes throughout the Northeast Atlantic ecosystem. The resulting rush of warm water into the Norwegian Sea elevated spring water temperatures, coinciding with a 50% reduction in zooplankton abundance across large areas of […]

Warm Water Slowed Formation of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

Communications Earth & Environment, 21 February 2022 New evidence suggests the presence of warm, deep water delayed the expansion of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet as it formed 35 million years ago; and similar conditions today may cause its destabilization. The Pine Island Trough is a deep channel in the Amundsen Sea, sending ocean water […]

Arctic Council Suspends Work Due to Invasion of Ukraine

On March 3, Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and the United States issued the following joint statement: Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and the United States condemn Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and note the grave impediments to international cooperation, including in the Arctic, that Russia’s actions […]

Rapid Arctic Sea Ice Loss Increases the “Atlantification” of the Fram Strait

Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 18 February 2022 The Fram Strait is the main waterway connecting the central Arctic Ocean to the Nordic Seas. Currents flowing along the Strait’s western side carry nearly 90% of all sea ice export out of the Arctic Ocean. As global temperatures rise, they accelerate the loss of ice, triggering […]

Driven by Meltwater and Rising Temperatures, the Global Water Cycle is Accelerating

Nature, 23 February 2022 Climate change, in part by causing an increase of meltwater flowing off ice sheets into the ocean, has intensified the “global water cycle” by roughly 7%. This has worsened droughts and extreme rainfall events across the world. The global water cycle involves the constant movement of freshwater between the clouds, land […]

Rising Seas, Flooding and Erosion Threaten African Heritage Sites

Nature Climate Change, 10 February 2022 This study offers the first comprehensive assessment of the exposure of African cultural and natural heritage sites to the combination of rising sea levels, extreme weather events and erosion associated with accelerating global warming. At present, 20% of Africa’s heritage sites are at risk from a once-in-a-century extreme sea-level […]

Rising Air Temperatures Break Up Larsen B Sea Ice from Antarctic Peninsula

NASA Earth Observatory, 2 February 2022 Rising air temperatures and increasingly wet weather caused a large region of sea ice off the Antarctic Peninsula, that had persisted even through the summer since 2011, to break up completely during a few days in January. Strong winds and the formation of meltwater ponds on the surface from […]

Newly Observed Ice Loss Mechanism May Cause Extremely High Melt Rate on Greenland

Proceedings from the National Academy of Sciences, 8 March 2022 Surface meltwater heats up as it passes down through cracks and fractures in the Greenland Ice Sheet – which means that some areas at the base of the ice sheet are melting up to 100 times faster than previously estimated. Falling meltwater carries an immense […]

Regional Cooling “Blue Blob” in North Atlantic Slows Melting of Iceland’s Glaciers

Geophysical Research Letters, 24 January 2022 A patch of unusually cold water in the North Atlantic Ocean – nicknamed the “Blue Blob” – has temporarily slowed the melting of Iceland’s glaciers since 2011. This regional cooling was caused by meltwater pouring off the Greenland ice sheet and Arctic glaciers, as well as the slowing of […]

COP-26 Video of the Week: Past is Present: Why 1.5°C is the Ice Sheet Temperature Limit, with Julie Brigham-Grette and Andrea Dutton

For a look at ice sheet behavior over the past several million years, in response to CO2 and warming levels at or only slightly above today’s levels, watch this stellar COP-26 presentation by two giants of the paleo ice sheet field: Dr. Julie Brigham-Grette, University of Massachusetts Amherst and former chair of the U.S. Polar […]

Antarctic Flowering Plants Growing and Spreading at Unprecedented Rates

Current Biology, 14 February 2022 Antarctica’s two native flowering plants – pearlwort and hairgrass – have experienced unprecedented growth over the past decade as a result of rising air temperatures, with longer and wetter summers. These warm summer months also reduce the amount of ice covering the soil. In the South Orkney Islands of Antarctica, […]