A long-term proxy for sea ice thickness in the Canadian Arctic: 1996-2020
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31876Dato
2023-08-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Glissenaar, Isolde A.; Landy, Jack Christopher; Babb, David G.; Dawson, Geoffrey J.; Howell, Stephen E. L.Sammendrag
. This study presents a long-term winter sea ice
thickness proxy product for the Canadian Arctic based on
a random forest regression model – applied to ice charts
and scatterometer data, trained on CryoSat-2 observations,
and applying an ice type–sea ice thickness correction using
the Pan-Arctic Ice Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System (PIOMAS) – that provides 25 years of sea ice thickness in the Beaufort Sea, Baffin Bay, and, for the first time,
the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. An evaluation of the product with in situ sea ice thickness measurements shows that
the presented sea ice thickness proxy product correctly estimates the magnitudes of the ice thickness and accurately
captures spatial and temporal variability. The product estimates sea ice thickness within 30 to 50 cm uncertainty
from the model. The sea ice thickness proxy product shows
that sea ice is thinning over most of the Canadian Arctic, with a mean trend of −0.82 cm yr−1
in April over the
whole study area (corresponding to 21 cm thinning over the
25-year record), but that trends vary locally. The Beaufort
Sea and Baffin Bay show significant negative trends during
all months, though with peaks in November (−2.8 cm yr
−1 ) and April (−1.5 cm yr−1 ), respectively. The Parry Channel, which is part of the Northwest Passage and relevant for shipping, shows significant thinning in autumn. The sea ice thickness proxy product provides, for the first time, the opportunity to study long-term trends and variability in sea ice thickness in the Canadian Arctic, including the narrow channels in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
Forlag
Copernicus PublicationsSitering
Glissenaar, Landy, Babb, Dawson, Howell. A long-term proxy for sea ice thickness in the Canadian Arctic: 1996-2020. The Cryosphere. 2023;17(8):3269-3289Metadata
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