Sea Ice Growing at Fastest Pace on RecordHat Tip to Powerline. (I may as well just send them the damned hat...)
Rapid Rebound Brings Ice Back to Levels from the 1980s.An abnormally cool Arctic is seeing dramatic changes to ice levels. In sharp contrast to the rapid melting seen last year, the amount of global sea ice has rebounded sharply and is now growing rapidly. The total amount of ice, which set a record low value last year, grew in October at the fastest pace since record-keeping began in 1979.
The actual amount of ice area varies seasonally from about 16 to 23 million square kilometers. However, the mean anomaly-- defined as the difference between the current area and the seasonally-adjusted average-- changes much slower, and generally varies by only 2-3 million square kilometers.
That anomaly had been negative, indicating ice loss, for most of the current decade and reached a historic low in 2007. The current value is again zero, indicating an amount of ice exactly equal to the global average from 1979-2000.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
ZOMG, STOP THE PRESSES!
The Messiah hasn't even been inaugurated, and already he's reversed Global Warming!
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Blogosphere,
cluemeter,
Curmudging
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