Sea Ice News Volume 3, #2

In today’s report

  • Arctic Sea Ice on the rise again, presently in the range of normal levels
  • Antarctic Sea Ice is at slightly above normal levels
  • Why is early satellite data for Arctic and Antarctic Ice extent referenced in the first IPCC report missing from today’s data?
  • Is revisionism going on with the date of the famous USS Skate photo in the Arctic?
  • Bonus – it seems NOAA is taking Arctic soot seriously

First the Arctic from NSIDC:

Source: http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/images/daily_images/N_stddev_timeseries.png

After being out of the ±2 STD area since before peak melt last year, Arctic extent has spent most of March in near normal territory. After what looked like a maximum earlier this month, it was false peak, and ice is on the rise again.

NORSEX SSM/I shows the current value within ±1 STD

Source: http://arctic-roos.org/observations/satellite-data/sea-ice/observation_images/ssmi1_ice_area.png

A caution, as we saw in 2010, extent hugged the normal line for quite awhile, and that didn’t translate into a reduced or normal summer melt. So, forecasting based on this peak might not yield any skillful ice minimum forecasts.

Antarctic Sea Ice is at slightly above normal levels, as it has been for some time:

Source: http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/images/daily_images/S_stddev_timeseries.png

Why is early satellite data for Arctic and Antarctic Ice extent referenced in the first IPCC report missing from today’s data?

In a post last week, Steve Goddard pointed out that in the original IPCC FAR in 1990, there was an interesting graph of satellite derived Arctic sea ice extent:

This is from page 224 of IPCC FAR WG1 which you can download from the IPCC here

And here is figure 7.20 (a) magnified:

The IPCC descriptive text for these figures reads:

Sea-ice conditions are now reported regularly in marine synoptic observations, as well as by special reconnaissance flights, and coastal radar. Especially importantly, satellite observations have been used to map sea-ice extent routinely since the early 1970s. The American Navy Joint Ice Center has produced weekly charts which have been digitised by NOAA. These data are summarized in Figure 7.20 which is based on analyses carried out on a 1° latitude x 2.5° longitude grid. Sea-ice is defined to be present when its concentration exceeds 10% (Ropelewski, 1983). Since about 1976 the areal extent of sea-ice in the Northern Hemisphere has varied about a constant climatological level but in 1972-1975 sea-ice extent was significantly less. In the Southern Hemisphere since about 1981, sea-ice extent has also varied about a constant level. Between 1973 and 1980 there were periods of several years when Southern Hemisphere sea-ice extent was either appreciably more than or less than that typical in the 1980s.

I find it interesting and perhaps somewhat troubling that pre-1979 satellite derived sea ice data was good enough to include in the first IPCC report in 1990, but for some reason not included in the current satellite derived sea ice data which all seems to start in 1979:

Since the extent variation anomalies in 1979 seem to match with both data sets at ~ +1 million sq km, it would seem they are compatible. Since I’m unable to find the data that the IPCC FAR WG1 report references so that I can plot it along with current data, I’ve resorted to a graphical splice to show what the two data sets together might look like.

I’ve cropped and scaled the IPCC FAR WG1 Figure (a) to match the UUIC Cryosphere Today Arctic extent anomaly graph so that the scales match, and extended the base canvas to give the extra room for the extended timeline:

Click image above to enlarge.

Gosh, all of the sudden it looks cyclic rather than linear, doesn’t it?

Of course there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth over my graphic, and the usual suspects will try to pooh-pooh it, but consider the following

  1. Per the IPCC reference, it is data from NOAA, gathered by the American Navy Joint Ice Center
  2. It is satellite derived extent data, like Cryosphere Today’s data
  3. The splice point at 1979 seems to match well in amplitude between the two data sets
  4. The data was good enough for the IPCC to publish in 1990 in the FAR WG1, so it really can’t be called into question
  5. If Mike Mann can get away with splicing two dissimilar data sets in an IPCC report (proxy temperature reconstructions and observations) surely, splicing two similar satellite observation data sets together can’t be viewed as some sort of data sacrilege.

Of course the big inconvenient question is: why has this data been removed from common use today if it was good enough for the IPCC to use in 1990? Is there some revisionism going on here or is there a valid reason that hasn’t been made known/used in current data sets?

If any readers know where to find this data in tabular form, I’ll happily update the plot to be as accurate as possible.

Is revisionism going on with the date of the famous USS Skate photo in the Arctic?

It seems our favorite photo of the USS Skate has had it’s date revised.

Skate (SSN-578), surfaced at the North Pole, 17 March 1959.

Since yesterday was the anniversary of the March 17th surfacing of the USS Skate, WUWT contributor Ric Werme was interested in what the photographic conditions might look like on March 17th 1959 when the sun was just below the horizon, and so found a sub and attempted to recreate the photo conditions himself to see if the photograph was actually possible.

See:  http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/03/17/submarines-in-the-winter-twilight/

Turns out it was, but then he stumbled on something he didn’t expect to find. The date for the surfacing has been changed from March 17th, 1959 to August, 1958 (with no day given) in Wikipedia and in NAVSOURCE. He at first thought I’d made a mistake in citation, but it turns out dates have been changed since I wrote my original article on the USS Skate on April 26th, 2009.

I wrote about how the original date remains on NAVSOURCE in the Wayback machine

Anthony Watts says:

Navsource, in the Wayback machine, had it stated as March 17th 1959, just days before my original article. This is the April 18th 2009 snapshot from Wayback:

http://web.archive.org/web/20090418161606/http://www.navsource.org/archives/08/08578.htm

The caption then reads:

Skate (SSN-578), surfaced at the North Pole, 17 March 1959.

I remember checking NAVSOURCE for accuracy before publishing, my caption then says:

Skate (SSN-578), surfaced at the North Pole, 17 March 1959. Image from NAVSOURCE

History on that photo changed there at NAVSOURCE since then, probably due to alarmist pressure from Wiki etc. and other folks like Neven who went ballistic over the picture when I highlighted it. It is “inconvenient” in March (during peak ice season) but soothing for them in August (during near peak melt season).

The picture may have been taken a couple of days after the funeral photo in March alluded to upthread.

Se EM Smith comment in my original thread. http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/04/26/ice-at-the-north-pole-in-1958-not-so-thick/#comment-122932

Oddly, NAVSOURCE now shows a caption of:

So what had been certain and unchallenged for years now all of the sudden is uncertain and may be in August 1958. Seems like a case of the tail wagging the dog.

Obviously there is a need to pin this date down, but I’m amused that so much attention has been brought to this photo since I first blogged on it.

BONUS: I’ve always said that the current drop in Arctic Ice Extent might have roots in soot from the industrialization of Asia causing an albedo change which really took off in the 1990’s, would show up in the summer melt season when solar irradiance is at a peak in the Arctic. Now it seems NOAA is taking Arctic soot seriously:

From the video description:

Small, new, remotely-operated, unmanned aircraft are being flown in the Arctic to measure black soot. The soot is produced by burning diesel fuel, agricultural fires, forest fires, and wood-burning stoves. It is transported by winds to the Arctic, where it darkens the surface of snow and ice, enhancing melting and solar warming. See http://saga.pmel.noaa.gov/ and http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/edd/manta.html

As always, check the latest sea ice conditions on the WUWT Sea Ice Reference page.

UPDATE: Robert Grumbine disputes some the the points related to the IPCC1 report and sea ice with EMMR equipped satellites here. – Anthony

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March 18, 2012 1:20 pm

USS SKATE SSN-578 Submarine Color Cachet 50th NorthPole (In philately, a cachet is a printed or stamped design or inscription, other than a cancellation or pre-printed postage, on an envelope, postcard …)
There are two postmarks: 17 MAR 1959 = SKATE = 17 MARCH 2009
It is the ice encrusted photo. See it here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/USS-SKATE-SSN-578-Submarine-Color-Cachet-50th-NorthPole-/360248275767?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item53e0787337

AndyG55
March 18, 2012 1:25 pm

Puzzled
“■Arctic Sea Ice on the rise again, presently in the range of normal levels”
I assume you mean in the range of the 1979-2000 average…
How do you know that range gives “normal levels” ???
How do you know that the range say 2000-2009 isn’t the normal level ?

Blade
March 18, 2012 1:26 pm

A few weeks back in this thread there was this intriguing comment:

TG McCoy (Douglas DC) [March 1, 2012 at 10:28 am] says:
“Cousin’s husband was a young torpedoman on the Skate when they did that… there was a LOT of open water…”

Sounds like a possible primary source. If you are still reading this thread could you elaborate on his status? If he is still with us perhaps you might arrange for an interview of him on the record so he can at least get his important eyewitness experience documented! Maybe he has his own private photos.

March 18, 2012 1:28 pm

ZT says:
March 18, 2012 at 12:17 pm
The winter surfacing at the North pole was described in May 1959 in Life magazine, by the captain. From his account is is clear that there was enough water to surface a nuclear sub.

Actually from that account it’s clear that there was no water: “It took two hours of careful manoevering before at last our sail buckled the ice at the precise top of the world.”
From his descriptions of the March 1959 Arctic cruise all of the surfacings were through ice and the photo from the original post: http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/uss-skate-open-water.jpg?w=640
can’t be from that cruise but most likely from the previous summer’s cruise, possibly even taken from the floating station they met then. Here’s a contemporary newspaper article about the 1959 cruise.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19590327&id=JhQrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=upsFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6271,4829110

DBoon
March 18, 2012 1:38 pm

@Andrew30
Eyeballing the graph in your link leads to an average max of 14 million square km and an average min of 7 million square km for the ’53-’77 era (without error bars). This compared to current max average of 15.5 and 7.5 min (NORSEX ’79-’06). Of course, the methods are different so I guess this is comparing apples with oranges. But still interesting.

cui bono
March 18, 2012 1:42 pm

Stephen Skinner says (March 18, 2012 at 1:14 pm)
“The BBC are showing a PIOMAS graph indicating a possible ice free arctic by 2015.”
——–
BBC = Richard Black, showing the most alarmist info he can possibly find, in this case doubtless borrowed from a Guardian doom story:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/sep/11/arctic-ice-melting-at-fastest-pace
PIOMAS = another GIGO computer *MODEL* at the U. of Washington (Pan-Arctic Ice Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System (PIOMAS) at the Polar Science Center).
Although I may get an answer to one of my earlier questions from the Polar Science Centre:
Schweiger, A.J. , J. Zhang, R.W. Lindsay and M. Steele,’ Did unusually sunny skies help drive the sea ice anomaly of 2007′, Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 35, L10503, doi:10.1029/2008GL033463, 2008.
Blimey! Sunny days = melting ice? Whodathunkit?

March 18, 2012 1:44 pm

Anthony.
The NSIDC and Walt Meir’s group has now released sea ice extent going back to 1964 from Nimbus I, II, and III data. A couple of years ago someone found virtually all of the AVCS images from Nimbus (visible light). These were discovered in a room open to the weather at the National Records Center at Suitland Maryland and these are being put in mosaics that have 400 meter resolution on the ground.
There is also a NASA publication, I think the number is SP-489 that shows sea ice extent on a monthly basis from 1973-1976.
The folks at NSIDC are putting together an almost continuous record of sea ice to 1961 from satellite. There is far more of this information in existence than is commonly known. The folks at NSIDC are doing a good job in tracking this down and some of it has been released in peer reviewed publications.
You would really love the daily Nimbus HRIR stuff that shows hurricane tracks, and the first estimate of the global temperature came from the HRIR data from Nimbus II!.
REPLY: I found the reference to the SP-489:
Parkinson, C. L., J. C. Comiso, H. J. Zwally, D. J. Cavalieri, P. Gloersen, and W. J. Campbell. 1987. Arctic sea ice 1973-1976: Satellite passive-microwave observations. NASA Spec. Publ. SP-489. 296 p.
Now I just have to find the actual document – Anthony
UPDATE: Found it, http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19870020588_1987020588.pdf
Reading it now – Anthony

GeoLurking
March 18, 2012 1:45 pm

So… there is a bit of contention about when the Skate was surfaced.
FOIA may not be needed if some one can get ahold of the Deck Log.
If they were on the surface, the Deck Log will show it.
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq73-1.htm

March 18, 2012 1:47 pm

And then there is this:
March 17
1898 – USS Holland, first practical submarine, launched
1942 – United States Naval Forces Europe established to plan joint operations with British
1958 – Navy Vanguard rocket launches 3.25 pound sphere from Cape Canaveral
1959 – USS Skate (SSN-578) surfaces at North Pole
Ref. http://www.history.navy.mil/wars/datesmar.htm
cheers,
gary

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
March 18, 2012 1:47 pm

Anthony,
I’ve been looking for the possible source of the NOAA data from a FAR reference. Found this list:
http://climate.rutgers.edu/snowcover/pubs.html
It contains the reference:
Wiesnet, D.R., C.F. Ropelewski, G.J. Kukla & D.A. Robinson (1987)
A discussion of the accuracy of NOAA satellite-derived global seasonal snow cover
measurements. Large Scale Effects of Seasonal Snow Cover, International Association
of Hydrological Sciences Publication 166, 291-304.
The important part, it also has this listed:
Pielke, R.A., Sr., G.E. Liston, W.L. Chapman & D.A. Robinson (2004)
Actual and insolation-weighted Northern Hemisphere snow cover and sea-ice between
1973-2002. Climate Dynamics, 22, 591-595.
So it appears Dr. Pielke Sr could help with pre-1979 Arctic sea ice data, possibly NOAA satellite data.

DirkH
March 18, 2012 1:50 pm

GeoLurking says:
March 18, 2012 at 1:45 pm
“So… there is a bit of contention about when the Skate was surfaced.
FOIA may not be needed if some one can get ahold of the Deck Log.”
I hear they’re still working on “scanning” it… expect a multi-layered PDF RSN…

Bob B
March 18, 2012 1:50 pm

Wow–in Figure 5 the sea ice in 1960 took a huge dip—making 2007 look small!
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/1520-0485%281979%29009%3C0580%3AAAOASI%3E2.0.CO%3B2

Bruce Ringstrom
March 18, 2012 2:01 pm

USS Sargo SSN-583 surfaced 25 feet from North Pole at 1049 hours on 9 February 1960 through 36 inches of ice. Ship’ log. Website USS Sargo

Rob R
March 18, 2012 2:08 pm

Two prominant photos keep repeating, one black and white, one colour. It is interesting that the ice on the deck appears to be about the same thickness in both.

Jimbo
March 18, 2012 2:09 pm

I was eagerly hoping that WUWT would post this important item which I first saw on Goddard’s website. I was amazed to learn that pre-1979 sea ice records existed and how the IPCC removed it from subsequent reports.
Hide the Medieval Warm Period, hide the decline and hide early 1970s Arctic ice extent.
Anthony, your splicing sir is not hiding but revealing. 😉
http://www.real-science.com/ipcc-early-1970s-arctic-sea-ice-persistently
http://www.real-science.com/arctic-fraud-worse

March 18, 2012 2:14 pm

Hull number gives a short history of Skate; http://www.hullnumber.com/SSN-578
On 30 July, Skate steamed to the Arctic where she operated under the ice for 10 days. During this time, she surfaced nine times through the ice, navigated over 2,400 miles under it, and became the second ship to reach the North Pole. On 23 August, she steamed into Bergen, Norway. The submarine made port calls in the Netherlands, Belgium, and France before returning to New London on 25 September 1958.
In the following months, Skate, as the first ship of her class, conducted various tests in the vicinity of her homeport. In early March 1959, she again headed for the Arctic to pioneer operations during the period of extreme cold and maximum ice thickness. The submarine steamed 3,900 miles under pack ice while surfacing through it 10 times. On 17 March, she surfaced at the North Pole to commit the ashes of the famed explorer Sir Hubert Wilkins to the Arctic waste. When the submarine returned to port, she was awarded a bronze star in lieu of a second Navy Unit Commendation for demonstrating … for the first time the ability of submarines to operate in and under the Arctic ice in the dead of winter . . . In the fall of 1959 and in 1960, Skate participated in exercises that were designed to strengthen American antisubmarine defenses.

March 18, 2012 2:14 pm

Phil. says:
March 18, 2012 at 1:28 pm
ZT says:
March 18, 2012 at 12:17 pm
“The winter surfacing at the North pole was described in May 1959 in Life magazine, by the captain. From his account is is clear that there was enough water to surface a nuclear sub.”
“Actually from that account it’s clear that there was no water: “It took two hours of careful manoevering before at last our sail buckled the ice at the precise top of the world.””
That appears to be correct. The August 58 surfacing were through openings in the ice and the Mar 59 were through places of thin ice. They knew that March was the worst time to find somewhere to surface due to the expected thickness of the ice. However, they used upward facing TV cameras to look for thin ice and to monitor the ‘sail’ as it came into contact with the ice. Of interest to the sailors was the relative warmth of the water below the ice and how everything froze when they broke through to the surface. When they submerged again ice formed on the surface of the sail under the ice in the warmer water. While the submarine was surfaced it’s surface was cooled by the -30 outside air and when it sank into the ‘warmer’ water this water then froze to the sub. They could see this on the TV monitors.

Gary Crough
March 18, 2012 2:25 pm

Surface At The Pole http://www.amazon.com/Surface-At-The-Pole-Extraordinary/dp/1166128768/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1332103197&sr=1-1 , written by the Captain of the USS Skate makes it clear that the USS Skate did surface at the North Pole in Mach but also that the photo often presented (with clear water around the sub) was NOT taken in the winter. Most like it was made on the Skate’s 1st trip to the Arctic to developed summer tactics.for operating under the arctic ice.
A second trip was made in the winter. A sub-goal was to surface at the N pole and deposit ashes of an Arctic explorer. That was a long shot. Here is how it was done. First the sub was outfitted to crash through thin ice (perhaps up to a foot thick). The ice flows are about 12′ thick but they are “flows” and the drift with the current so cracking (called leads) is normal. These cracks were identifiable via an “up-looking sonar” and though they immediately started to freeze over (~ 3″ per a day the 1st day and less the following days as the ice provides insulation) the Skate could break through such ice for about a week after such a lead was formed. Not only are such leads common but since the ice is flowing about 2.5 miles per day near the pole the possibility of finding a lead and waiting for it to drift over the North poll was a realistic hope. That is what happened.
The photo taken of the winter surface at the pole is also available. In it there are chunks of ice laying against the sub. They appear to be at least 6″ thick. It was very cold and windy so they completed the ceremony and left. There was no blue water around the sub during any the many winter surfacing. In fact, a major danger was to surface in a thin lead (ice an inch or two thick) and then have the ice flow crash into the sub. This was prevented by crashing through ice several inches thick as this ice would hold the sub and allow it to drift with the ice-flow.

MAC
March 18, 2012 2:33 pm

Vice Admiral James F. Calvert played a key role in developing nuclear submarine Arctic tactics during his tour as commanding officer of the USS Skate (SSN-578) from December 1957 to September 1959. Skate surfaced at the North Pole in February 1959. During this tour, Calvert also helped define the operational capabilities of the Navy’s first series-production class of nuclear submarine. Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, Calvert graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in June 1942 and from Submarine School in September of that year. He was awarded the Silver Star and the Bronze Star while serving aboard the submarine USS Jack (SS-259) during World War II. He also served as executive officer aboard the USS Haddo (SS-255) in 1945. Following the war, he served as executive officer aboard the USS Charr (SS-328) and USS Harder (SS-568) and as commanding officer of the USS Trigger (SS-564). Calvert served as Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy from 1968 to 1972.
http://www.navy.mil/navydata/cno/n87/history/pioneers4.html#James%20F.%20Calvert

a reader
March 18, 2012 2:53 pm

“Climatic Atlas of Arctic Sea Ice Extent and Anomalies 1953-1984” by D.K. Manak and L.A. Mysak.
CRG Report 87-8 Sept. 1987 can be found by googling.

Matt G
March 18, 2012 3:03 pm

The sea ice anomaly between 1974 and 1979 is almost 2 million km2. Take almost 2 million km2 off latest charts showing from 1979 only and then it reduces to around 2005 levels. 2006 onwards are still generally lower ice levels than 1974. (2009 excluded)