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Arctic Report Card 2013 3 January 14

According to a new report released by the national Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and its partners, cooler temperatures in the summer of 2013 across the central Arctic Ocean, Greenland and northern Canada moderated the record sea ice loss and extensive melting that the surface of the Greenland ice sheet experienced last year. Yet there continued to be regional extremes, including record low May snow cover in Eurasia and record high summer temperatures in Alaska.

“The Arctic caught a bit of a break in 2013 from the recent string of record-breaking warmth and ice melt of the last decade,” said David M. Kennedy, NOAA’s deputy under secretary for operations, during a press briefing today at the American Geophysical Union annual meeting in San Francisco. “But the relatively cool year in some parts of the Arctic does little to offset the long-term trend of the last 30 years: the Arctic is warming rapidly, becoming greener and experiencing a variety of changes, affecting people, the physical environment, and marine and land ecosystems.”

View December 10, 2013 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration report highlights
View Arctic Report Card: Update for 2013
View December 12, 2013 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration article
View National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Facebook page
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Manitoba Wildlands2002-2014