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Scientists aboard the icebreaker Healy measured seawater chemistry across the Arctic Ocean and found that levels of radium-228 have almost doubled over the last decade in the middle of the ocean. The radium was transported from land and shallow continental shelves by currents such as the Transpolar Drift. The surprising finding is evidence that rapid climate change is causing large-scale changes along the Arctic coast, such as diminishing sea ice. These coastal changes, in turn, could also deliver more nutrients, carbon, and other chemicals into the Arctic Ocean and have significant impacts on the Arctic food web.
Credit
Natalie Renier, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institiution
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