Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009

This study was motivated by the potential development of offshore oil exploration leases in the Canadian Southern Beaufort Sea, an area within the Inuvialuit Settlement Region. Sea ice concentration, extent, motion, and thickness data are vital to the success of potential oil operations in this regi...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Authors: Galley, Ryan J., Else, B.G.T., Prinsenberg, S.J., Babb, D., Barber, D.G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/67317
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author Galley, Ryan J.
Else, B.G.T.
Prinsenberg, S.J.
Babb, D.
Barber, D.G.
author_facet Galley, Ryan J.
Else, B.G.T.
Prinsenberg, S.J.
Babb, D.
Barber, D.G.
author_sort Galley, Ryan J.
collection Unknown
container_issue 1
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 66
description This study was motivated by the potential development of offshore oil exploration leases in the Canadian Southern Beaufort Sea, an area within the Inuvialuit Settlement Region. Sea ice concentration, extent, motion, and thickness data are vital to the success of potential oil operations in this region, and relevant data cannot be gleaned from larger-scale hemispheric studies. We therefore undertook regionally specific sea ice analyses in the southern Beaufort Sea during the summer drilling season (July, August, and September) in 2009 and over the long-term (1996 – 2010). On average, the Canadian oil lease areas contain mostly old sea ice during the drilling season and have not experienced significant decreasing trends in total or old sea ice. The average sea ice motion in the region for the period was anti-cyclonic at 20 – 25 cm·s-1, acting to transport sea ice southward toward the lease areas. Summer 2009 was used as a case study of regional ice concentration, motion, and thickness and to compare September sea ice thickness measurements to data collected in April 2009. In the summer of 2009, old sea ice was the predominant ice type in the lease areas. Sea ice motion was anti-cyclonic and faster than the long-term average, reaching 60 cm·s-1 west of Banks Island and across the north end of the lease areas. September 2009 sea ice thickness (mean = 1.03 m, σ = 0.97 m) was modal about the 0.20 – 0.29 m thickness bin. The sea ice thickness distri­bution was spatially variable, with the thickest ice occurring at the north end of the study area, in an area dominated by high old ice concentrations. Ice thicknesses greater than 10 m (the upper limit our instruments could measure) were encountered. Thinner sea ice predominated at the periphery of the core Beaufort Sea multi-year pack. Near the oil lease areas, the sea ice thickness distributions were shifted left on the histogram in comparison to those farther north, resulting in a greater proportion of relatively thick sea ice due to the thermodynamic loss of thinner ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
Banks Island
Beaufort Sea
Inuvialuit
Mer de Beaufort
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Banks Island
Beaufort Sea
Inuvialuit
Mer de Beaufort
Sea ice
geographic Mer de Beaufort
geographic_facet Mer de Beaufort
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language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-138.005,-138.005,69.500,69.500)
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op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 66 No. 1 (2013): March: 1–138; 105–116
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/67317 2025-06-15T14:15:03+00:00 Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009 Galley, Ryan J. Else, B.G.T. Prinsenberg, S.J. Babb, D. Barber, D.G. 2013-03-08 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/67317 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/67317/51227 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/67317 ARCTIC; Vol. 66 No. 1 (2013): March: 1–138; 105–116 1923-1245 0004-0843 sea ice ice concentration ice extent ice motion ice thickness Beaufort Sea offshore oil exploration glace de mer concentration de la glace étendue de la glace déplacement de la glace épaisseur de la glace mer de Beaufort exploration pétrolière au large info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 2013 ftunivcalgaryojs 2025-05-27T03:29:43Z This study was motivated by the potential development of offshore oil exploration leases in the Canadian Southern Beaufort Sea, an area within the Inuvialuit Settlement Region. Sea ice concentration, extent, motion, and thickness data are vital to the success of potential oil operations in this region, and relevant data cannot be gleaned from larger-scale hemispheric studies. We therefore undertook regionally specific sea ice analyses in the southern Beaufort Sea during the summer drilling season (July, August, and September) in 2009 and over the long-term (1996 – 2010). On average, the Canadian oil lease areas contain mostly old sea ice during the drilling season and have not experienced significant decreasing trends in total or old sea ice. The average sea ice motion in the region for the period was anti-cyclonic at 20 – 25 cm·s-1, acting to transport sea ice southward toward the lease areas. Summer 2009 was used as a case study of regional ice concentration, motion, and thickness and to compare September sea ice thickness measurements to data collected in April 2009. In the summer of 2009, old sea ice was the predominant ice type in the lease areas. Sea ice motion was anti-cyclonic and faster than the long-term average, reaching 60 cm·s-1 west of Banks Island and across the north end of the lease areas. September 2009 sea ice thickness (mean = 1.03 m, σ = 0.97 m) was modal about the 0.20 – 0.29 m thickness bin. The sea ice thickness distri­bution was spatially variable, with the thickest ice occurring at the north end of the study area, in an area dominated by high old ice concentrations. Ice thicknesses greater than 10 m (the upper limit our instruments could measure) were encountered. Thinner sea ice predominated at the periphery of the core Beaufort Sea multi-year pack. Near the oil lease areas, the sea ice thickness distributions were shifted left on the histogram in comparison to those farther north, resulting in a greater proportion of relatively thick sea ice due to the thermodynamic loss of thinner ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Banks Island Beaufort Sea Inuvialuit Mer de Beaufort Sea ice Unknown Mer de Beaufort ENVELOPE(-138.005,-138.005,69.500,69.500) ARCTIC 66 1
spellingShingle sea ice
ice concentration
ice extent
ice motion
ice thickness
Beaufort Sea
offshore oil exploration
glace de mer
concentration de la glace
étendue de la glace
déplacement de la glace
épaisseur de la glace
mer de Beaufort
exploration pétrolière au large
Galley, Ryan J.
Else, B.G.T.
Prinsenberg, S.J.
Babb, D.
Barber, D.G.
Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title_full Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title_fullStr Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title_full_unstemmed Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title_short Summer Sea Ice Concentration, Motion, and Thickness Near Areas of Proposed Offshore Oil and Gas Development in the Canadian Beaufort Sea – 2009
title_sort summer sea ice concentration, motion, and thickness near areas of proposed offshore oil and gas development in the canadian beaufort sea – 2009
topic sea ice
ice concentration
ice extent
ice motion
ice thickness
Beaufort Sea
offshore oil exploration
glace de mer
concentration de la glace
étendue de la glace
déplacement de la glace
épaisseur de la glace
mer de Beaufort
exploration pétrolière au large
topic_facet sea ice
ice concentration
ice extent
ice motion
ice thickness
Beaufort Sea
offshore oil exploration
glace de mer
concentration de la glace
étendue de la glace
déplacement de la glace
épaisseur de la glace
mer de Beaufort
exploration pétrolière au large
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/67317