New Reason Why Arctic Is Warming So Fast Found by Scientists

Arctic Ocean Sea Ice 2018

Arctic Ocean sea ice seen during a 2018 research cruise. Credit: San Nguyen

Explanation is proposed for extra heat in the oceans.

The Arctic has experienced the warming effects of global climate change faster than any other region on the planet. Scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography have developed a new theory aided by computer simulations and observations that helps explain why this occurs.

A team led by Scripps researcher Emma Beer observed the changes taking place in the Arctic Ocean, which is largely covered by sea ice for most of the year. There, an unusual situation exists where the water is warm at depth and cold near the surface. The deeper waters are fed by the relatively warm Pacific and Atlantic oceans, whereas the near-surface waters are in contact with sea ice and remain close to the freezing point. Heat flows upward from the warmer water to the colder water.

The scientists found that the deeper water is getting still warmer as a result of climate change, but the near-surface water below the sea ice remains close to the freezing point. The increasing difference in temperature leads to a greater upward flow of heat. Beer, Scripps climate scientist Ian Eisenman, and researcher Till Wagner of the University of North Carolina estimate that this phenomenon is responsible for about 20% of the amplification of global warming that occurs in the Arctic.

“While previous work has found mechanisms related to the surface and the atmosphere that cause Arctic amplification, our finding is that there is also a fundamental reason why the ocean causes polar amplification when the polar region is covered with sea ice,” Eisenman said of the National Science Foundation-supported study. The results are published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Reference: “Polar Amplification Due to Enhanced Heat Flux Across the Halocline” by E. Beer, I. Eisenman and T. J. W. Wagner, 3 February 2020, Geophysical Research Letters.
DOI: 10.1029/2019GL086706

3 Comments on "New Reason Why Arctic Is Warming So Fast Found by Scientists"

  1. carla mc ewen | March 2, 2020 at 6:27 am | Reply

    are there not also underground volcanoes? i was watching the chuckchi sea data last year..the southern part, did not freeze until late december. In the northern Pacific, the blob is back..is that heat coming from the bedrock the ocean sits on at that point? Is the bedrock being heated by underground caldera? And venting methane out the chuckchi?

  2. Randall C. Page | March 2, 2020 at 9:21 am | Reply

    carla mc ewen, that is a very good question. I’m on the Olympic Peninsula and there has been seismic activity recently. The “blob” is of great concern to the local fishing industry.

  3. William Hughes-Games | March 4, 2020 at 3:17 am | Reply

    And as there is more open water, winds can cause more mixing of the lower and upper levels. Add to this, if you have a storm which induces a counter clockwise current in the Arctic, to-the-right (Coriolis) is away from the center of the circular current expelling water out through the Fram and Bearing Straights, making the surface cold water layer thinner, further aiding the mixing. Surface waves also induce internal waves between the layers and they break as they reach shallow water, further mixing the layers. At some point the ice melt will accelerate markedly.

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