Whither Antarctic Sea Ice?
- 14 November 2003
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 302 (5648) , 1164
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1090004
Abstract
The extent of sea ice around Antartica and the Arctic should be a sensitive indicator of climatic change at the poles. In his Perspective, Wolff highlights the report of Curran et al ., who have compared a potential chemical proxy for sea ice extent from an ice core with satellite records for sea ice extent in the nearby ocean. Finding good agreement, the authors extended the proxy record to 1840. They conclude that sea ice was stable from 1840 to 1950, but has decreased sharply since then. Wolff warns that the results do not seem to echo any clear temperature trend from meteorological stations in this region. Nevertheless, this intriguing evidence for recent climate change calls for rapid investigation of similar data from around Antarctica.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ice Core Evidence for Antarctic Sea Ice Decline Since the 1950sScience, 2003
- Recent Rapid Regional Climate Warming on the Antarctic PeninsulaClimatic Change, 2003
- Evidence for the loss of snow-deposited MSA to the interstitial gaseous phase in central Antarctic firnTellus B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology, 2003
- Frost flowers: Implications for tropospheric chemistry and ice core interpretationJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2002
- Variability of Antarctic sea ice 1979–1998Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 2002
- The reconstruction of late Quaternary Antarctic sea-ice distribution—the use of diatoms as a proxy for sea-icePalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2000
- The influence of Antarctic sea ice on glacial–interglacial CO2 variationsNature, 2000
- Methanesulfonic acid in coastal Antarctic snow related to sea‐ice extentGeophysical Research Letters, 1993