Skip navigation

How Eerie Sea Ice 'Brinicles' Form

What's cooler than being cool? Brine-cold. When salt-rich water leaks out of sea ice, it sinks into the sea and can occasionally create an eerie finger of ice called a brinicle. New research explains how these strange fingers of ice form and how the salty water within sea ice could have been a prime Full story

Sea Ice Loss Could Alter Arctic Air Chemistry

Over the past 30 years, the Arctic has warmed more than any other place on the planet, and that warming and the resulting melt of the region's sea ice presents a number of potential adverse effects, from impacts on weather systems to the decline in the habitats of native species. Full story

Say Goodbye to Arctic Summer Ice

By the time today's babies graduate college, there's a very good chance they could celebrate with a cruise across the North Pole. Full story

Arctic Sea Ice Hits Yearly Max, But Still Dwindling

It may be time to retire the groundhog and start tracking Arctic sea ice for a better prediction of late-winter weather. Full story

NASA's IceBridge Mission Braves the Arctic

After a brief winter vacation, NASA's polar ice surveyors are back in business.  Full story

Arctic Storm Shatters Thin Sea Ice

Though every day brings more sunlight, February is still one of the coldest months in the Arctic. The sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is now nearing its winter maximum, but the effects of a February storm markedly illustrate the changes that have happened with the Arctic sea ice cover under the effects Full story

Sponsored Links

Articles

As Sea Ice Melts, Storm Surges Batter Arctic Coasts

Satellite Spies Unusual Antarctic Sea Ice

New Source Found For Cold, Deep Antarctic Currents

Cyclone is absolved in record sea ice melt

Why Arctic Sea Ice Melts So Quickly

Arctic Snow Cover Shows Steep Decline

Record Arctic Storm Melted Sea Ice

Ice critical for emperor penguin foraging

Antarctic Glacier Primed to Form Iceberg

5 Ways Rapid Warming Is Changing the Arctic

Related Photos

Saunders Island and Wolstenholme Fjord picture taken during an Operation IceBridge survey flight
Saunders Island and Wolstenholme Fjord picture taken during an Operation IceBridge survey flight

Saunders Island and Wolstenholme Fjord with Kap Atholl in the background is shown in this picture taken during an Operation IceBridge survey flight in April 2013. Sea ice coverage in the fjord ranges from thicker, white ice seen in the background, to thinner grease ice and leads showing open ocean w

REUTERS NEWS PICTURES - IMAGES OF THE YEAR 2012
REUTERS NEWS PICTURES - IMAGES OF THE YEAR 2012

RNPS IMAGES OF THE YEAR 2012 - The crew of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy, in the midst of their ICESCAPE mission, retrieves supplies for some mid-mission fixes dropped by parachute from a C-130 in the Arctic Ocean in this July 12, 2011 NASA handout photo obtained by Reuters June 11, 2011. Scie

Sea water off the east coast of Greenland looked a bit like marbled paper in October 2012. The shifting swirls of white were sea ice, as observed by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA's Aqua satellite on October 17, 2012. In fact, this ice moved discernibly between October 16

Aa free-swimming robot submarine maneuvers beneath sea ice in Eastern Antarctica
Aa free-swimming robot submarine maneuvers beneath sea ice in Eastern Antarctica

A free-swimming robot submarine maneuvers beneath sea ice in Eastern Antarctica in this undated photo made available on Oct. 11, 2012. Scientists have produced the first three dimensional map of the surface beneath Antarctic sea ice, helping them better understand the impact of climate change on Ant

Wildlife biologist Ian Bullock says shrinking areas of sea ice are forcing polar bears into smaller areas and more intense competition.
Wildlife biologist Ian Bullock says shrinking areas of sea ice are forcing polar bears into smaller areas and more intense competition.

Wildlife biologist Ian Bullock says shrinking areas of sea ice are forcing polar bears into smaller areas and more intense competition.