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sult, weve seen a dramatic loss of Arctic sea ice but stability, and sometimes ice gain, in Antarctica. What gives? A team of scientists led by University of Washington professor Kyle Armour has developed a theory. In a paper recently published in the journal Nature Geoscience the researchers argue
"It's really deep, old water that's coming up to the surface, all around the continent. You have a lot of water coming to the surface, and that water hasn't seen the atmosphere for hundreds of years," said lead author Kyle Armour, assistant professor at University of Washington, in the US.
Date: May 31, 2016
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Centuries-Old Water Explains Why Antarctic Ocean Unaffected By Human-Caused Climate Change
Using climate models and observations, Kyle Armour, from the University of Washington, and colleagues have found that the unique currents around Antarctica cause centuries-old water to go up the surface transporting warmer water on the surface to the equator.
Date: May 31, 2016
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Deep, old water explains why Antarctic Ocean hasn't warmed
"With rising carbon dioxide you would expect more warming at both poles, but we only see it at one of the poles, so something else must be going on," said lead author Kyle Armour, a UW assistant professor of oceanography and of atmospheric sciences. "We show that it's for really simple reasons, and
Kyle Armour, postdoc in MIT's EAPS, comments: Antarctic sea ice extent is indeed at its highest point since continuous records began in 1979, and the mechanisms driving this are not yet understood. However, satellite observations from the 1960s show that it used to be higher than it is today. Moreov
Date: Dec 03, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
No Tipping Point For Arctic Sea Ice, Research Shows
esearch Letters. The lead author is Kyle Armour, a UW graduate student in physics, and other co-authors are Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth and Kelly McCusker, UW graduate students in atmospheric sciences, and Ian Eisenman, a postdoctoral researcher from the California Institute of Technology and UW.