Arctic Ocean sea ice diminishes to record low
Arctic sea ice has now surpassed all previous records for the lowest absolute minimum summer extent. The "stunning record low" of 4.13 million square kilometers was recorded by satellite images on September 16, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The previous record, 5.32 million square kilometers, was measured on September 20-21, 2005. The minimum for 2007 is smaller by 1.19 million square kilometers (460,000
square miles) than the previous low, roughly the size of Texas and California
combined, or nearly five United Kingdoms. This year also saw the extended
opening of the Northwest Passage through islands north of Canada for
the first time. Warming Winds, Rising Tides: Arctic
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On Baffin Island, across from Greenland in Nunavut, Canada, the loss of ice and permafrost is affecting daily life of native Inuits. Winter hunting and fishing is limited severely by loss of ice. In summer, permafrost is thawing, creating more erosion, and ice that once covered the surrounding mountains year long is nearly all melted. Elders in the village of Pangnirtung report that winds have shifted and winters are getting much shorter -- observations that weather records confirm. |
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Kids in Pangnirtung have taken to golf in the increasingly dry and dusty summer months. This contrasts with Elders' memories and old photographs of villagers clad in warm skins and fir in mid-summer, playing more traditional games like tug of war while around them the mountains were snowcapped |
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Sea level rise also affects the Arctic, where it is
frequently combines with permafrost thaw to create severe erosion. The
native village of Shismaref Alaska, a village of about 590 Inupiats perched
on a sandy barrier island on the NW shore of Seward Peninsula, has failed
to halt the rising Bering Sea. Shore erosion of the narrow spit has been
severe since the 1950s, and protective armor and wire gabions have been
ineffective. The town faces a decision to move inland, away from this
traditional site. Townspeople voted in 2002 to move their village to
higher, more protected ground away from the ocean. 


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