News
1d
Interesting Engineering on MSNArctic Ocean had open water, life-sustaining conditions during coldest 750,000 yearsEven during the coldest 750,000 years, the Arctic Ocean had open water and sustained life thanks to seasonal sea ice. “Our ...
A recent study is shedding light on the ongoing accumulation of mercury pollution in the Arctic — despite the international ...
The in-depth analysis reveals how local tidal currents strongly affect the movement of sea ice in the Arctic ocean and provides an unprecedented look at how the makeup of the seafloor is causing ...
New research suggests continued global warming could put a major Arctic ocean current in serious trouble, and that the consequences could extend far beyond the North. Known as the Beaufort Gyre ...
"Transport of mercury from major sources like China to Greenland via ocean currents can take up to 150 years," says Rune Dietz. "This helps explain the lack of decline in Arctic mercury levels." ...
Large sea anchors could be used to drag water under a bold plan to keep the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation ...
In the last few decades, the Arctic sea ice has receded ever further, including increasingly in winter when the extent of sea ...
This current is the Beaufort Gyre and it is an important feature of the Arctic Ocean. By storing or releasing freshwater, it influences the oceanic properties both within the Arctic and as far away as ...
Now, new research has found that Arctic Ocean sea ice is shrinking even faster than previously thought — and that the Arctic may start to see its first “ice-free” days within the current decade.
Summer sea ice in the Arctic Ocean might be a thing of the past by the 2030s, no matter what we do to curb emissions of the greenhouse gases that cause global warming, an international study ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results