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The NOAA team at NSIDC manages over 60
distinct cryospheric and related data products. With an emphasis on data
rescue and in situ data, these products hold value for both the scientific
and non-scientific user communities. The overarching goal of this
presentation is to promote products from two components of the cryosphere
(glaciers and sea ice). Our Online Glacier Photograph Database contains
approximately 3,000 photographs taken over many decades, exemplifying change
in the glacier terminus over time. The sea ice product shows sea ice extent
and concentration along with anomalies and trends. This Sea Ice Index
product, which starts in 1979 and is updated monthly, provides visuals of
the current state of sea ice in both hemispheres with trends and anomalies.
The long time period covered by the data set means that many of the trends
in ice extent and concentration shown in this product are statistically
significant despite the large natural variability in sea ice. The minimum
arctic sea ice extent has been a record low in September 2002 and 2005,
contributing to an accelerated trend in sea ice reduction. With increasing
world-wide interest in indicators of global climate change, and the upcoming
International Polar Year, these data products are of interest to a broad
audience. To further extend the impact of these data, we have made them
viewable through Google Earth via the Keyhole Markup Language (KML). This
presents an opportunity to branch out to a more diverse audience by using a
new and innovative tool that allows spatial representation of data of
significant scientific and educational interest. |
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