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Last revised October 2007. All information and figures are by approximation, and may be altered and changed without notice. 18 August 2008
“The Arctic ocean is warming up, icebergs are growing scarcer and in some places the seals are finding the water too hot”, reported the The Washington Post, on November 2nd , 1922. B.J. Birkeland (1930) saw the temperature rise, as “probably be the greatest yet known on earth”, and few years later A. W. Ahlmann (1946) called the event a ‘climatic revolution’[1]. This site explains this sudden warming since winter 1918/19 in a detailed step-by-step approach (Chapter A-C; Links on left-side). Since about the 1980th it Also IPCC is too superficial in this respect (see above). At least they should have paid attention to the advise, V.F. Zakharov submitted to the World Meteorology Organization (WMO) in 1997[7], asking:
Also a work from Sergey V. Pisarev (1997)[8] indicates that the impact of the sea may require more attention. Actually, this site is carefully elaborating the reasons for the sudden commencement of the arctic warming since winter 1918/19, concluding, that the source had been the seas around the Spitsbergen archipelagos as far as not covered by sea ice according the seasons. When Ø. Nordli observes: “The cold phase was characterized by clear sky and pronounced inversions, whereas the warm phase was characterized by overcast sky and weaker and rarer inversions[9]”, the answer is easy, for the winter season at least: It is the sea. By A. Bernaerts/Aug.2008
[1] See Chapter A, Introduction, http://www.arctic-warming.com/introduction-the-scope-of-this-investigation.php , [2] IPCC, 2007a: Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Solomon, S., D. Qin, M. Manning (eds.)]. [3] Ditto: Average Arctic temperatures increased at almost twice the global average rate in the past 100 years. Arctic temperatures have high decadal variability, and a warm period was also observed from 1925 to 1945. [5] Øyvind Nordli, Year ?, “Temperature variations at Svalbard during the last century” [6] Øyvind Nordli, 2005, „Long-term Temperature Trends and Variability at Svalbard (1911 – 2004)“, Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 7, 06939, 2005. [7] Zakharov, V.F.; 1997, ‘Sea Ice in the Climate System’, Arctic Climate System Study, WMO/TD-No. 782, in the section “On the nature of ‘polar forcing’”, p. 71. [8] Sergey V. Pisarev , 1997, >"Arctic Warming" During 1920-40: A Brief Review of Old Russian Publications<, http://mclean.ch/climate/Arctic_1920_40.htm [9] Øyvind Nordli, 2005, „Long-term Temperature Trends and Variability at Svalbard (1911 – 2004)“, Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 7, 06939, 2005. |
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