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Trends and Variability in Sea Ice and Icebergs off the Canadian East Coast
Authors:IK Peterson  R Pettipas  A Rosing-Asvid
Institution:1. Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, CanadaIngrid.Peterson@dfo-mpo.gc.ca;3. Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada;4. Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, Nuuk, Greenland
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Seasonal time series of sea-ice area or extent in several regions along the east coast of Canada were compiled from several sources for the period 1901 to 2013 and compared with an index of ice extent off southwest Greenland, iceberg season length south of 48°N, air temperature, and other climate indices. Trends in winter ice area and iceberg season length are significant over the past 100 years and 30 years. Variability of winter ice area and iceberg season length is associated with a combination of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) indices superimposed on a negative trend. Thus, large declines in ice area and iceberg season length in the 1920s and 1990s can be attributed to a decreasing NAO index and a shift to the positive phase of the AMO at the end of these decades. Ice extent in southern areas such as the Scotian Shelf is more strongly correlated with the Western Atlantic index than with the NAO. Ice area trends (in percent per decade) are larger in magnitude and account for twice as much of the variance in ice area for summer than for winter, with summer trends significant over 30-, 60- and 100-year periods. Sea-ice variability is generally consistent with air temperature variability in the various regions; in the 1930s, during the early twentieth-century warming period, ice anomalies were higher and temperature anomalies were lower along the coast of eastern Canada than along the coast of southwestern Greenland.
Keywords:sea ice  icebergs  climate  eastern Canada
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