Publication | Open Access
Large-scale surveys of snow depth on Arctic sea ice from Operation IceBridge
245
Citations
27
References
2011
Year
Arctic EngineeringGlacierEngineeringGeomorphologyOceanographyOperation IcebridgeEarth ScienceArctic ScienceMean RadarClimate ChangeClimatology Minus RadarMeteorologySynthetic Aperture RadarGlaciologyGeographySea IceCryosphereLarge-scale SurveysIce LoadSnow DepthArctic OceanographyClimate DynamicsRadarClimatologyArctic StructureIce-structure Interaction
[1] We show the first results of a large-scale survey of snow depth on Arctic sea ice from NASA's Operation IceBridge snow radar system for the 2009 season and compare the data to climatological snow depth values established over the 1954–1991 time period. For multiyear ice, the mean radar derived snow depth is 33.1 cm and the corresponding mean climatological snow depth is 33.4 cm. The small mean difference suggests consistency between contemporary estimates of snow depth with the historical climatology for the multiyear ice region of the Arctic. A 16.5 cm mean difference (climatology minus radar) is observed for first year ice areas suggesting that the increasingly seasonal sea ice cover of the Arctic Ocean has led to an overall loss of snow as the region has transitioned away from a dominantly multiyear ice cover.
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