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sea ice

May 12, 2017

The Great Thaw: our melting Arctic must be monitored and Canada should lead the way

The following OpEd written by Ocean Networks Canada President Kate Moran was published in The Hill Times on Monday, 8 May 2017.

Imagine autumn in the Gatineau’s without trees, or the Rideau River without water. Now imagine the Arctic without ice. All unimaginable images, yet despite our proud “Great White North” designation, the problem in grasping the magnitude of this meltdown is that it seems so far away. In fact, the vast majority of Canada’s 35 million citizens know only of the Arctic through the pages of school textbooks, and it’s easy to see why. According to the 2016 census, 66% of Canadians live within 100 kilometres of the U.S. border, as far from...

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Arctic | Camridge Bay | climate change | sea ice | Temperature

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Dec 5, 2016

Arctic sea ice: slow growth in 2016

While global temperature tracking is suggesting 2016 will follow 2014 and 2015 as the warmest year on record, the effects are acute and immediate in the Canadian Arctic where climate change has already warmed more than twice the global average.

This warming is having a dramatic effect on Arctic sea ice, with reports of both low geographic coverage and low total thickness.

Graph of he latest observed global sea-ice concentration.

The latest observed global sea-ice concentration, against the historic annual cycle dating back to 1978 from the National Snow and Ice...

Read more

sea-ice | Cambridge Bay | climate change | sea ice | global warming | Arctic | thickness | NSIDC

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Sep 29, 2016

Cambridge Bay at the crossroads of history and climate science (2016)

In late summer 2016, Cambridge Bay, Nunavut found itself at the centre of an arctic crossroads of sorts: a pivotal meeting place where ice-bound history is melting into climate science. A week after the first luxury cruise ship sailed through a virtually ice-free Northwest Passage and anchored in Cambridge Bay, the wreck of Franklin’s ship The Terror—abandoned in 1845 due to impenetrable sea-ice—was finally discovered in Terror Bay, just 200 km east.

The coincidence in time and place of these two iconic voyages poignantly highlights how quickly the arctic climate is changing, the need to monitor these changes, and the growing importance of Cambridge Bay as an emerging arctic hub.

...
Read more

Arctic | ice | Cambridge Bay | climate change | Safe Passage | snowfall | sea ice | Northwest Passage

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Aug 31, 2016

Cambridge Bay observatory monitors Arctic ocean health and safety

As shrinking sea ice ushers in a new era for arctic tourism, Ocean Networks Canada’s (ONC) newly expanded Cambridge Bay observatory becomes a vital tool for monitoring ocean health and marine safety.

Arctic Observatory Map

Map of Ocean Networks Canada data sources and installations in the Arctic.

On 29 August, the cruise ship Crystal Serenity arrived in Cambridge Bay Nunavut, bringing 1600 passengers and crew to the tiny hamlet, temporarily doubling the population of about 1500 people. ...

Read more

Arctic | Cambridge Bay | sea ice | platform | Marine Safety | Arctic Ocean | arctic observing

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Apr 26, 2016

Sea Ice Research and its Benefits

Understanding Sea Ice: Ocean Networks Canada Coordinates POLAR Safe Passage Project.

Imagine an area of the size of Ontario ‒ gone. That’s roughly the amount of Arctic sea-ice that has melted in the last 30 years: over 1 million square km. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg: some climate change forecasts are predicting an ice-free summer Arctic Ocean by as early as 2030.

Understanding sea-ice change is critical to life in the high north, particularly when it comes to getting around. Local transportation and commercial shipping are defined by the Arctic’s shifting seasonal extremes, which is becoming harder to predict. Not only is the thickness and extent of the frozen ocean shrinking, but the dates of freeze-up, break-up and the duration of solid...

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Arctic | POLAR | Safe Passage | sea ice | Cambridge Bay | community observatories | data

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Nov 14, 2019

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Nov 20, 2015

Sea ice returns to Cambridge Bay

Unseen beneath the surface of the Arctic Ocean, the Ocean Networks Canada ocean observatory in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, monitors ocean conditions 24/7. During the night of 13 October, sensors detected the seasonal return of surface sea ice.

Twilight at Cambridge Bay, Nunavut.

Since the installation in September 2012, the cabled observatory has continually recorded the conditions in Cambridge Bay, including the thickness of the sea ice. The shallow water ice profiler (SWIP) manufactured by Canada’s ASL Environmental Sciences, facing upward from the top of the observatory platform, uses acoustics to measure the...

Read more

sea ice | Cambridge Bay

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Apr 24, 2014

A Year of Arctic Sea Ice

A winter's passage has been captured by cameras and instruments measuring ice thickness, salinity, oxygen and phytoplankton abundance in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. These data are being analyzed by staff scientist Akash Sastri and Scientific Data Specialist Alice Olga Victoria Bui, revealing new insights into how conditions evolve beneath the ice over the long Arctic winter. The data are being collected by instrumentation attached to a community observatory operating at a depth of approximately 6 metres below the surface and connected by cable to a nearby wharf for realtime data collection.

...
Read more

Cambridge Bay | community observatory | Nunavut | Arctic | ice | sea ice | oxygen | salinity | ice draft | Greenland Cod | time-lapse

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