Regional charts and associated synopsis write-up capture ice and environmental conditions throughout the Arctic which are based on the U.S. National Ice Center’s weekly analysis. Charts and synopses are updated weekly on Fridays. Note: Baltic Sea analysis is provided by the Finnish Meteorological Institute. The Canadian Archipelago (Canada East, Canada North, Canada West, and Hudson Bay) analysis is provided by the Canadian Ice Service.
The ice in the Bay of Bothnia is rotting. In the northern Bay of Bothnia 40-70 cm thick rotten or rotting fast ice and very close ice, in places ridged, to south of Kemi 1 and to Oulu 1. There are areas of open water in the ice field. Farther out open water approximately to the line Malören - Falkens grund - Kallan. Some thick drifting floes in the area. Farther west 30-60 cm thick, in places ridged, drift ice with varying concentration. In the southern Bay of Bothnia open water approximately to the center line. Farther west 10-50 cm thick drift ice with varying concentration. In the Quark, from Stora Fjäderägg to northeast, there is an area of 10-40 cm thick open ice. Strips in the vicinity of Helsingkallan. Farther south ice-free.
Foxe Basin contains mostly first-year ice. The ice in Davis Strait is mostly first-year with a trace of old ice. Frobisher Bay has low concentrations of first-year ice along with areas of bergy water. Cumberland Sound is also a mix of first-year ice, bergy water but also with some young ice. The ice along the Labrador Coast is first-year ice with a trace of old ice.
The Arctic Ocean consists mostly of old ice with some first-year ice. The ice-bridge in Nares Strait remains in place and contains fast old and first-year ice. South of the ice-bridge, in northern Baffin Bay, the ice is a mixture of young and first-year within open drift conditions. The Archipelago contains old and first-year fast ice in roughly equal proportion. Barrow Strait contains mostly first-year ice with a trace of old ice and some young ice. Lancaster Sound consists of mostly first-year ice with some old ice present. There is some new and young ice along the north shore of Baffin Island and some young ice along the south shore of Devon Island. Prince Regent Inlet contains mostly first-year ice with some old ice extending southward to ~71°N. The Gulf of Boothia and Committee Bay contain first-year ice. Baffin Bay contains mostly first-year ice, with some old ice in its western section. Davis Strait consists of first-year ice with some old ice. Cumberland Sound contains mostly bergy water with small amounts of first-year and young ice present. The ice along western Greenland is first-year.
The ice around the Queen Elizabeth Islands (QEI) and Sverdrup Islands is mostly old with some first-year ice present. The ice around the southwestern Sverdrup Islands and the western Parry Islands is mostly first-year ice with some old ice present. Parry Channel consists of mostly first-year ice with some old ice present in its eastern section. Significant old ice is present in its western section, especially north of Victoria Island. M’Clintock Channel, Peel Sound, Queen Maud Gulf, and Coronation Gulf contain fast first-year ice. A small polynya of mobile first-year ice remains present in Victoria Strait. Amundsen Gulf consists of a mixture of first-year, young and new ice. The fast ice along the Northwest Territories, Yukon and Alaska coastline is first-year. Offshore of this coastal area, in the Beaufort Sea, the ice is mostly first-year with some young ice present in the Beaufort Sea’s southern section. Beaufort Sea consists of old and first-year ice in roughly equal proportion. North of 73N, the ice is predominantly old whereas the ice is mostly first-year south of that parallel. The western extent of old ice predominance in the Beaufort Sea is approximately 155W. Central Beaufort Sea contains a large area of mostly first-year ice. The Arctic Ocean consists of old ice except for some young and first-year ice along the northern coastlines of the QEI.
Hudson Bay, James Bay and Southern Foxe Basin contain mostly first-year ice. Hudson and James Bay have reduced ice pack concentrations, and many areas of open water forming. Hudson Strait contains mostly first-year ice and some young ice along the northern shoreline. Ungava Bay is primarily first-year ice. Lake Melville has a low concentration of first-year ice.
Much of the White Sea ice has been lost to seasonal melt. The remaining ice is limited to fasted ice within protected bays and inlets as well as drifting rotted ice. Small pockets of higher concentration are present, albeit only as seas and currents consolidate brash ice into pockets which will continue to meander until melted.