Note: 12 - month running anomalies of
monthly snow extent are plotted on the 7th month using values from November 1966 to December 2017.
Not exact matches
On the
monthly scale, the December and January
snow cover
extents were below average, while the February
snow cover
extent was above average.
Snow indices that consider only monthly mean snow cover extent over Eurasia have a moderate, but statistically significant correlation with the DJF
Snow indices that consider only
monthly mean
snow cover extent over Eurasia have a moderate, but statistically significant correlation with the DJF
snow cover
extent over Eurasia have a moderate, but statistically significant correlation with the DJF AO.
According to the National
Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), the
monthly average June 2010 ice
extent was 10.87 million square kilometers, 1.29 million square kilometers below climatology (1979 - 2000) and 190,000 square kilometers below the previous record low for the month of 11.06 million square kilometers set in 2006.
The Rutgers University Global
Snow Lab has daily, weekly and monthly data for snow extent as well as data for the monthly departure from aver
Snow Lab has daily, weekly and
monthly data for
snow extent as well as data for the monthly departure from aver
snow extent as well as data for the
monthly departure from average.
The sea ice
monthly extent for September 2012 was 3.6 million square kilometers, based on National
Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) estimates, a full 1.0 million square kilometers below the 2011 value (Figure 1).
The average arctic sea ice
monthly extent for September 2012 was the lowest observed in the satellite era at 3.6 million square kilometers, based on National
Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) estimates — 50 % lower than the 1979 - 2000 average of 7.0 million square kilometers.
NMEFC of China (Li and Li), 4.02 (3.10 - 4.57), Statistical We predict the September
monthly average sea ice
extent of Arctic by statistic method and based on
monthly sea ice concentration and
extent from National
Snow and Ice Data Center.
New data from the National
Snow and Ice Data Center shows that the average Arctic sea ice
extent in July set a new
monthly record low — even though the rate of ice loss slowed «substantially» in the last two weeks of the month.
The extraordinary 2012 Arctic sea ice melt has resulted in a September average sea ice
extent of 3.61 million sq km, according to the latest
monthly data from the National
Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), smashing the previous record of 4.30 million sq km set in 2007.