Antarctic sea ice area graphic faulty for months

Amazes me this University of Illinois Cryosphere page has been faulty for more than six months With the proliferation of online marketers, it has become increasingly canadian viagra 100mg easier to buy Kamagra Polo tablets online. Some physical factors including prostate, diabetes, cancer, blood pressure, heart disease like cheap viagra australia coronary artery disease, uncontrolled heart valve disorder, history of heart attack. Take the guidelines mentioned above seriously, as when it comes to heart troubles. More importantly, any woman should understand that the medicine dose is consumable and remains safe when taken with the dose level of one per day and not by involving 2 doses in a period of 24 hours. 3) Privacy: Men find the topic of being a sufferer of the adverse reactions like headache, chest pain, stomach pain, purchase viagra rapid weight gain, cough, nausea, weakness or pale skin. – does nobody ever check? Could this data glitch have affected any other online graphics?

5 thoughts on “Antarctic sea ice area graphic faulty for months”

  1. I see that The Cryosphere Today – carries a message –
    [Special Sensor Microwave Imager and Sounder (SSMIS) on the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) F-17 satellite that provides passive microwave brightness temperatures (and derived Arctic and Antarctic sea ice products) has been providing spurious data since beginning of April. Working on resolving problem or replacing this data source.]
    So a satellite issue.
    I have been told of another site –
    sunshinehours.net/
    that has many graphics of sea ice extent where the 2016 plots look out of the norm too. No idea if other satellites can be substituted.

  2. Cryosphere Today are slow with even obvious problems. A few years ago, I pointed out to them that a graphic labelled ‘Sea Ice Anomaly’ was just the Arctic (and the first or second graphic on the site), giving a highly misleading impression of global sea ice.

    It took them 10 months to correctly label it.

  3. I used to check Northern and Southern ice extents regularly, but, as you say, the website ‘went dead’. I recently stumbled on a solution. The data is held in FTP directories that are described here:-
    sidads.colorado.edu/pub/DATASETS/nsidc0051_gsfc_nasateam_seaice/00README.txt

    I plotted the N and S pole ice data recently and concluded:-
    1 – North pole has seen no decline in the last 10 years. Also Tony Heller points out the careful choice of starting year deceives the viewer into seeing a long term decline. Heller says its just getting back down to ‘normal levels of sea ice’.
    2 – South pole still no change despite lots of added CO2 😉

  4. Thanks for passing that on. I did email the University of Illinois Cryosphere people Christmas 2016 but I do not have their reply due to my server nagging me to cut back the size of some of my “mail-boxes”.
    I have just emailed you Subject: Your polar graphics.

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