Earth from Space is a free eBook describing our planet from a satellite's perspective. Fore more information, please read the About pages. |
![]() |
Home ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
See also: Greenland Coast, Barrier Island along Arctic Shore of Beaufort Sea | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
Beaufort SeaPosition of center of photo (Lat/Long): [69.48489/-138.22309] |
![]() ![]() The challenges of navigating the Northwest Passage are evident in this image of the Beaufort Sea north of Alaska and Canada’s Yukon and Northwest Territories. Though the passage is often clear by the end of July, as it was in 2005, the sea was still frozen almost to the shore by July, 2006. Very little of the inky, blue-black sea is visible under the white expanse of ice. The ice is not smooth; rather, chunks can be seen where new ice has formed around pieces of older ice from previous years. The section of the Beaufort Sea that is visible in the top image is clouded with brown sediment flowing into the water from the Mackenzie River. There are several reasons for the lingering ice, says Walt Meier of the National Snow and Ice Data Center. First, temperatures in the sea dropped below average in the fall of 2005 and remained cool in the Beaufort Sea region, so sea ice was able to form quickly. Record melting during 2005 allowed old, thick ice from the north to drift into the Beaufort Sea. Some of this old ice may still be in the sea, frozen among the fresh ice that formed over the winter. Finally, wind may be pushing yet more ice toward the shore. Though there was more ice in the Beaufort Sea at the end of July 2006 than there had been in previous years, the Arctic as a whole continued to melt at an ever-quickening pace. By June 2006, sea ice in the Arctic covered 1.2 million fewer square kilometers than the long-term average measured between 1979 and 2000, said Meier. This put sea ice concentrations (the percentage of ice that covers a predefined area) at a record low for June, breaking the record set in June 2005, during which sea ice extent was down 0.8 million square kilometers from the average. |
Source of material: NASA |
Further information: WikiPedia article on Beaufort Sea