Not exact matches
Let's start with the why - blondies - in - the -
peak - of -
ice - cream -
season?
As
peak ice cream
season approaches, we set out to taste as many non-dairy
ice creams as we could handle (turns out, we could handle a lot).
The area of the Arctic Ocean covered by sea
ice usually hits its winter
peak in early to mid-March, as the freeze
season ends with the re-emergence of the sun above the horizon.
The on - site restaurant serves three meals daily, and there's also a traditional
ice cream fountain, coffee shop and bar tucked away near the trailhead with folk musicians that perform during
peak season.
Temperatures on the Greenland
ice sheet are well below freezing, and this is
peak melt
season.
The area of the Arctic Ocean covered by sea
ice naturally waxes and wanes with the
seasons, reaching its
peak at the end of winter and its nadir at the end of summer, usually in mid-September.
Arctic sea
ice near the coast of Greenland in September of 2015 at the
peak of the melt
season.
This coincided with record - breaking shrinkage of Arctic sea
ice, where total coverage at the
peak of melting
season is now 40 percent lower than in the late 1970s.
The extent of Arctic sea
ice at the
peak of the summer melt
season now typically covers 40 percent less area than it did in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
I've always said that the current drop in Arctic
Ice Extent might have roots in soot from the industrialization of Asia causing an albedo change which really took off in the 1990 ′ s, would show up in the summer melt
season when solar irradiance is at a
peak in the Arctic.