arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/timeseries.global.anom.1979-2008
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- Analyzing The Western Water Crisis
- Gaslighting 1924
- Climate Abstract Generator
- Climate Abstract Generator
- “Why Do You Resist?”
- Climate Attribution Model
- Fact Checking NASA
- Fact Checking Grok
- Fact Checking The New York Times
- New Visitech Features
- Ice-Free Arctic By 2014
- Debt-Free US Treasury Forecast
- Analyzing Big City Crime (Part 2)
- Analyzing Big City Crime
- UK Migration Caused By Global Warming
- Climate Attribution In Greece
- Climate Attribution In Greece
- “Brown: ’50 days to save world'”
- The Catastrophic Influence of Bovine Methane Emissions on Extraterrestrial Climate Patterns
- Posting On X
- Seventeen Years Of Fun
- The Importance Of Good Tools
- Temperature Shifts At Blue Hill, MA
- CO₂²
- Time Of Observation Bias
Email Subscription
Join 1,946 other subscribersRecent Comments
Jeff L. on Analyzing The Western Water Cr… Morgan Wright on Great Lakes Approaching 100% I… Morgan Wright on Great Lakes Set Another Spring… gelcarrion0t on New Visitech Features saveenergy on Ice-Free Arctic By 2014 gelcarrion0t on Ice-Free Arctic By 2014 gelcarrion0t on Debt-Free US Treasury Forecast gelcarrion0t on Seventeen Years Of Fun Barbara Stockwell on Nuclear Safety In The US saveenergy on 100% Tariffs On Chinese EV…

Hmmm… Do I detect an upward trend showing ever increasing global sea ice? It is not sine qua non evidence, but it is certainly consistent with all the other data you publish, Steve, showing a global cooling trend.
I think (correct me if I’m wrong) this as as far back as we have satellite records for sea ice… and just as a casual observer I’d say that it looks like a couple of high outliers, and a couple of low outliers that taken together really don’t change the mean much, and otherwise the mean looks like it hangs around 18.75-ish. We don’t have a long record to compare it to, but it kinda looks like what I’d call an emerging picture of normal variation.
Hi
Can you break this down into Arctic and Antarctic graphs?