JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE .

A new paper is out trying to explain why Antarctica isn’t warming.
“These findings suggest the Southern Ocean responds to greenhouse gas forcing on the centennial, or longer, timescale over which the deep ocean waters that are upwelled to the surface are warmed themselves. It is against this background of gradual warming that multidecadal Southern Ocean temperature trends must be understood.
There is a little name calling aimed at deniers (who happen to be right)
Those who said there was a conundrum were just deniers. It’s right there in the press release, paragraph two:
The study resolves a scientific conundrum, and an inconsistent pattern of warming often seized on by climate deniers.
Which rather begs the question: If there was a conundrum then the skeptics who pointed it out were not deniers, but correct. And if there was no conundrum, and deniers were denying something, then this is not a new finding at all. Alternately perhaps some researchers “knew” the answer they were going to find, and the other researchers, who can’t see the future, are deniers?
But the thought that came to me was … if there have been episodes of global warming in the past that last a few hundred years …. the ice cores would have missed them completely. Right?
JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE shows a very low Arctic as well. But not as low as JAXA.
JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE shows a very low Arctic as well. But not as low as JAXA.

JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE shows a very low Arctic as well. But not as low as JAXA.
JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE shows a very low Arctic as well. But not as low as JAXA.
JAXA sea ice extent data from Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency.
MASIE shows a very low Arctic as well. But not as low as JAXA.