Geophysical Research Letters (Jun 2022)

Record Low Antarctic Sea Ice Cover in February 2022

  • John Turner,
  • Caroline Holmes,
  • Thomas Caton Harrison,
  • Tony Phillips,
  • Babula Jena,
  • Tylei Reeves‐Francois,
  • Ryan Fogt,
  • Elizabeth R. Thomas,
  • C. C. Bajish

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL098904
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract On 25 February 2022 Antarctic sea ice extent dropped to a satellite‐era record low level of 1.92 × 106 km2, 0.92 × 106 km2 below the long‐term mean. The area of sea ice was also at a record low level of 1.24 × 106 km2. Although no individual sector was at a record low, at the minimum there were negative sea ice anomalies in all sectors of the Southern Ocean, with the largest in the Ross (contributing 46%) and Weddell Seas (26%). The Amundsen Sea Low had a record low depth in October/November 2021, with a series of very deep depressions giving strong offshore winds. These accelerated ice loss during the melt season, creating a 1.00 × 106 km2 coastal polynya in the Ross Sea. In the northern Weddell Sea, westerly winds of record strength led to ice export from the region.

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