Figures from the US space agency (Nasa) suggest the loss of the minimum Arctic sea-ice extent is in the region of 13.1% per decade, based on the 1981 to 2010 average. A major report on climate ...
Those temperatures have a particularly damaging effect in the Arctic. Sea ice covers more than 14 million square kilometers (5.6 million square miles) at its maximum point each year. The ice sheet ...
Previous predictions of Arctic sea ice disappearance have typically focussed on the first iceless month - defined as the first 30 days with an ice extent below 386,000 square miles. In their ...
The Arctic is losing sea ice at an unprecedented rate ... Scientists warn that an ice extent below 0.3 million square miles will mark the Arctic as “ice free,” a tipping point that could ...
Computer models had predicted that it would show long-term decline, much like we have seen in the Arctic, where summer sea-ice extent has been shrinking by 12-13% per decade as a result of global ...
Antarctic sea ice extent is up 17% from this date in 2016' Is the (mainstream media) talking about this? Climate Scam!" The post is wrong about Arctic sea ice and climate change. On Dec.
The Arctic has already experienced a significant reduction in sea ice. From 1979 to 1992, the average extent of sea ice in the Arctic was 2.6 million square miles (6.85 million km²). By this year ...