A
team of 18 scientists from five countries determined that the current
rate of record-setting ice retreat is the most drastic to occur in at
least 5,000 years. The researchers’ findings, which are being published
in the peer-reviewed journal Quaternary Science Reviews, examined data
from hundreds of studies to obtain a large picture of millions of years
of Arctic history. They concluded that the Arctic ice conditions of the
past 30 years were unmatched and consistent with the rapidly warming
climate.
Dr. Leonid Polyak, a polar researchers and lead author
of the study, stated that the normally predictable ice fluctuations
related to the Earth’s orbit indicate that there should be more, rather
than less ice.
Therefore, the current ice loss is not just a low
point in the natural variable cycle of shrinking and growing ice. Dr.
David Barber, Canada’s Research Chair in Arctic System Science at the
University of Manitoba and his own team of researchers has also been
finding evidence of unprecedented sea ice decline.
David Barber (M):
We’re just coming into the summer conditions in 2010, and we’re finding
that we’re probably going to lose quite a bit of ice through the
summer. And so we’re expecting it to be another year that’s fairly
similar to 2007, which was the last record of the minimum extent of sea
ice in the northern hemisphere.
VOICE: Navigating through the
Arctic sea ice, Dr. Barber and his team found that the ships were able
to go through the normally thick multi-year ice easily, as it had
degraded to only a thin layer of first-year ice.
David Barber (M):
It used to be that about 80 to 85% of the Arctic basin was covered with
that kind of ice. We’re now down to about 18% of the Arctic basin being
covered by that kind of ice.
And what happens is as we lose that
ice, it’s replaced in the fall with this first-year ice which is much
thinner. It has a maximum thickness of about 2 meters. It’s much more,
say, lean, and much warmer, so it’s much easier to break and it’s much
more susceptible to winds and wave action.
VOICE: We appreciate
your efforts, Drs. Barber and Polyak and colleagues, in asserting the
alarming extent of these damaging ice effects. May your research
motivate us all to act quickly toward steps to stabilize the climate in
the Arctic and throughout our planetary home.
In a September 2009
videoconference in South Korea, Supreme Master Ching Hai spoke of the
Arctic’s already urgent situation and how to stop its further decline.
Supreme Master Ching Hai: As
you saw for yourself how quickly the North Pole is melting - it’s at
least twice as fast as the rest of the globe. As I’m sure you already
knew, they call the Arctic ice the refrigerator of the planet. The
world’s leading climate scientists told us that being vegetarian -
meaning no animal products - is the single most effective thing an
individual can do to stop global warming.
From my own insight, I
know that if the world’s people become vegan, one of the results is that
the ice in the Arctic will be restored, and quickly, along with the
repairing of nature in every corner of the planet.
Isn’t that wonderful? This is the truth that I could promise you, but we all must act fast, like yesterday.
http://www.physorg.com/news194719743.htmlhttp://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Worst+retreat+Arctic+thousands+years+study/3112363/story.html http://www.montrealgazette.com/technology/Arctic+Ocean+retreating+year+record+pace/3149267/story.htmhttp://ipy-osc.no/article/2010/1276262463.72