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.
Eureka Sound consists mostly of first-year fast ice with some old and second-year ice present. The Queen Elizabeth Islands comprise multi-year, second year, and first year ice. The ice is beginning to fast among the islands, although there is still a significant amount of mobile ice in the area. New and young ice continue to form along the western coast of Greenland. Davis Strait consists of bergy water. The Gulf of Boothia, Prince-Regent Inlet and southern Committee Bay consist of young and new ice with some bergy water present in eastern and western Committee Bay. Frobisher Bay contains bergy water, with limited new ice development near Iqaluit. Labrador Sea is bergy water.
The Arctic Ocean contains mainly old ice with some second year and first-year ice present. Nares Strait contains a roughly even mixture of old and first-year ice with some second-year and young ice present. Jones Sound contains mostly young ice with some old and second-year ice present. Lancaster Sound contains mostly young and new ice with a trace of old ice present. Some first-year ice and second-year ice are present in its eastern section. Western Baffin Bay consists mostly of new ice with a trace of old ice. A mixture of old, second-year, first-year and young ice is present in the Bay’s extreme northwestern section having originated from Nares Strait. Eastern and southern Baffin Bay contain bergy water. Cumberland Sound contains bergy water except for very small amounts of new ice present in isolated coastal areas.
M’Clure Strait and western Viscount Melville Sound contain predominantly multi-year ice with some second-year and first-year ice. Eastern Viscount Melville Sound, Barrow Strait and M’Clintock Channel contain a mix of younger and first-year ice with trace amounts of multi-year and second-year ice. The ice in Larsen Sound, Queen Maud Gulf and Rae Strait is predominantly new and grey ice with some grey-white ice beginning to develop. There has been significant new ice growth in Dolphin and Union Strait and Coronation Gulf. Grey-white ice with some grey ice has pushed into the Alaskan coast east of Point Barrow. The Yukon and Northwest Territories coasts continue to develop young ice. Canada Basin is filled with mostly multi-year ice with some first-year ice filling in the gaps. First-year and younger ice gradually mixes into the pack ice into the Beaufort Sea.
Sea ice movement in the Greenland Sea remains highly dynamic; the pack ice experienced a northward drift before shifting into the expected southeastern pattern along the East Greenland Current. Air temperatures remain well below freezing, allowing for continued growth and development of sea ice across the region.
Northern Hudson Bay is predominantly ice-free, except for the western coastline and the shores of Southampton Island, where new ice is forming along their full extent. Southern Hudson Bay is largely ice-free, with areas of new ice developing along the coastline. James Bay is mostly open water, with new ice forming along the shoreline. Hudson Strait is characterized by bergy water, with limited new ice developing along the northern coastline. Ungava Bay is primarily bergy water, with a localized area of new ice formation along the southern coast. Lake Melville is ice-free. Foxe Basin consists mainly of open with some young and new ice present it its northern section and along most of its coastline.