| dbp:caption
|
- The area of Arctic sea ice reached a minimum in September 2012, but recent years have shown less area than 2012 in other months. Late summer shows the greatest percentage loss. (en)
- Seasonal variation and annual decrease of Arctic sea ice volume as estimated by measurement backed numerical modeling (en)
- Sea ice loss seen in March—at -2.2% per decade—is moderate compared to the extreme loss rates experienced in May and September . (en)
- Decade-by-decade progression of arctic sea ice melting shows continued ice loss since 1980, with the greatest percentage loss rate experienced in the late summer and early autumn. (en)
- Effects of climate change on sea ice vary with the seasons. Rates of ice loss, in the same month over years since 1979, are more than twice as great in September as in May. (en)
- Global sea ice extent, which combines the sea ice extents in both polar regions, reached a new all-time minimum in February 2025. (en)
- The extent of Antarctic sea ice reached a new low in 2023. Chart shows how little sea ice remains in the Antarctic summer, which at one point in February 2023 was only about 60% of its 1981-2010 average. (en)
|