The University of Southampton
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Arctic lakes thawing earlier each year

Scientists from the University have found that Arctic lakes, covered with ice during the winter months, are melting earlier each spring.

The team, who monitored 13,300 lakes using satellite imagery, have shown that on average ice is breaking up one day earlier per year, based on a 14-year period between 2000 and 2013. Their findings are published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports.

Geographers from the University on fieldwork in Alaska. Image Credit: Maarten Van Hardenbroek.

The researchers used information on how light is reflected off the lakes, using the changes in reflectance to identify the freezing and thawing processes.

Professor Jadu Dash commented:

Previous studies have looked into small numbers of lakes to show the impact of changes in temperature on the cyclic nature of lake-ice cover.  However, ours is the first to use time-series of satellite data to monitor thousands of lakes in this way across the Arctic.  It contributes to the growing range of observations showing the influence that warmer temperatures are having on the Arctic.

 

 

The full story is available to read here.

 
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