Website/Data Set Available
New satellite essential climate variables for the
Greenland ice sheet changes
ESA Greenland CCI projectWebsite Available
The Northern Bering Sea: Our Way of Life
NSIDCArchived Webinar Available
Temperatures in the Arctic
NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory
- Website/Data Set Available
New satellite essential climate variables for the
Greenland ice sheet changes
ESA Greenland CCI project
The ESA Greenland Climate Change Initiative project has released
a new set of Essential Climate Variables for the Greenland ice
sheet. The new data sets include:
- CryoSat elevation change trends 2010-15 on a 5 km grid,
including 2-year running means; - Ice Velocities for the entire Greenland ice sheet on a 500 m
grid from RadarSat and Sentinel-1 2013-15; - Time series of Ice Velocities for 9 major outlet glaciers from
S-1; - Updated Calving Front Locations for main glaciers from S-1;
- Updated Grounding Line Location from S-1 for the Petermann
Glacier; and - GRACE mass change products for the entire ice sheet as well as
8 main drainage basins.
For more information on the ESA Greenland CCI project, go to:
http://www.esa-icesheets-greenland-cci.org/.
To access the data, go to:
http://products.esa-icesheets-cci.org/.
- Website Available
The Northern Bering Sea: Our Way of Life
National Snow and Ice Data Center/ELOKA
The Exchange for Local Observations and Knowledge of the Arctic (ELOKA)
project at the National Snow and Ice Data Center is pleased to announce
the release of a website focused on the cultural and ecological
significance of the northern Bering Sea.
The Northern Bering Sea: Our Way of Life highlights large hunting and
fishing areas, overlayed with the distribution of key species. It
illustrates that the whole northern Bering Sea is the storehouse that
supports the way of life for Indigenous peoples of the region. The
Northern Bering Sea: Our Way of Life is a project of the Bering Sea
Elders Group, with support from Alaska Marine Conservation Council.
Initially produced in print and as an electronic PDF file, NSIDC and
ELOKA staff designed a website archiving the content and preserving it
in an interactive way online.
To access, go to:
http://tinyurl.com/Bering-Sea-Report.
- Archived Webinar Available
Temperatures in the Arctic
NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory
The Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) would like to share a
video recording of a webinar, which took place July 13h, 2016. The
presentation by Jim Overland was entitled "Was the record warm winter
2016 another Arctic surprise?"
To access, go to:
.
For questions, please contact:
Adi Hanein
Email: adi.hanein [at] noaa.gov
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