Right about
now, Arctic sea ice should be building up toward its annual maximum,
making most of the region impenetrable to all but the most hardened
icebreakers. Instead, January and indeed much of the winter so far has been
unusually mild throughout large parts of the Arctic.
A freak storm brought temperatures to near the freezing
point, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit, near the North Pole for a short time in late
December and early January, and other storms have repeatedly acted like space
heaters plopped on top of the globe, turning nascent sea ice to slush and
eventually, to open water.
Read Andrew Freedman’s Mashable
Australia story - “Unusually warm Arctic winter stuns scientists with record low ice extent for January.”
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