Also added is the actual computed volume this anomaly refers to, and you can see how little we are going to have left if the deflection from mean continues as it is going;
Last year we got down to around 5.
ETA: Looking at the graph, actually, around 3.
Seems to me the flow through the entire archipelago must be increasing rapidly now bringing Pacific heat to the Arctic.
Got a be a major factor.
Wonder where ocean temp and currents info might be found.
In fact the passage through the northern Canadian Arctic has an amazing amount of open water for this date.
One note, the new model system refines the accuracy of PIOMAS too, and you will see smaller anomalies in the new data. As we get closer and closer to zero it should be possible for the model to be improved further.
An amazing presentation with incredible photographs about the sea ice and it's inhabitants, and how the loss of sea ice will negatively impact many life forms.
Photographer Paul Nicklen at TED -Tales of ice-bound wonderlands
http://www.ted.com/talks/paul_nicklen_tales_of_ice_bound_wonderlands.html
I wonder if the folks at IJIS are ok, they havn't updated their graph and I am missing my daily fix.
Hoping to call the start of the melt season by their graph.
Cryosphere today looks like it is on.
My prediction is for a new low in extent for this summers minimum.
The phrase "death spiral" does indeed come to mind. That's the way ice on water always goes away (far from linearly), and the process is obviously well-advanced.