Publication | Open Access
Fracture of summer perennial sea ice by ocean swell as a result of Arctic storms
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Citations
44
References
2012
Year
Arctic BasinArctic EngineeringOcean DynamicsOcean SwellEngineeringPolar EnvironmentsOceanographyEarth ScienceArctic ScienceSea Ice DecayExtreme Minimum ExtentOceanic SystemsArctic StormsClimate ChangeMeteorologyIce-water SystemGeographySea IceCryosphereIce LoadArctic OceanographyClimate DynamicsClimatologyArctic StructureIce-structure Interaction
The Arctic summer minimum sea ice extent has experienced a decreasing trend since 1979, with an extreme minimum extent of 4.27 × 10 6 km 2 in September 2007, and a similar minimum in 2011. Large expanses of open water in the Siberian, Laptev, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas result from declining summer sea ice cover, and consequently introduce long fetch within the Arctic Basin. Strong winds from migratory cyclones coupled with increasing fetch generate large waves which can propagate into the pack ice and break it up. On 06 September 2009, we observed the intrusion of large swells into the multiyear pack ice approximately 250 km from the ice edge. These large swells induced nearly instantaneous widespread fracturing of the multiyear pack ice, reducing the large, (>1 km diameter) parent ice floes to small (100–150 m diameter) floes. This process increased the total ice floe perimeter exposed to the open ocean, allowing for more efficient distribution of energy from ocean heat fluxes, and incoming radiation into the floes, thereby enhancing lateral melting. This process of sea ice decay is therefore presented as a potential positive feedback process that will accelerate the loss of Arctic sea ice.
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