Seasonal sea-ice in the Arctic’s last ice area during the Early Holocene

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Abstract

According to climate models, the Lincoln Sea, bordering northern Greenland and Canada, will be the final stronghold of perennial Arctic sea-ice in a warming climate. However, recent observations of prolonged periods of open water raise concerns regarding its long-term stability. Modelling studies suggest a transition from perennial to seasonal sea-ice during the Early Holocene, a period of elevated global temperatures around 10,000 years ago. Here we show marine proxy evidence for the disappearance of perennial sea-ice in the southern Lincoln Sea during the Early Holocene, which suggests a widespread transition to seasonal sea-ice in the Arctic Ocean. Seasonal sea-ice conditions were tightly coupled to regional atmospheric temperatures. In light of anthropogenic warming and Arctic amplification our results suggest an imminent transition to seasonal sea-ice in the southern Lincoln Sea, even if the global temperature rise is kept below a threshold of 2 °C compared to pre-industrial (1850–1900).

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Detlef, H., O’Regan, M., Stranne, C., Jensen, M. M., Glasius, M., Cronin, T. M., … Pearce, C. (2023). Seasonal sea-ice in the Arctic’s last ice area during the Early Holocene. Communications Earth and Environment, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-00720-w

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