Visualizations : Bubble Chart: Change in Sea Ice Extent, 1979-2004 : Thanks, Monica! I guess the coastline...
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Monica
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Change in Sea Ice Extent, 1979-2004
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Data source: IPY |
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Monica
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Monica says:
In the polar region, much of the sea is covered by ice. The amount of water that is covered is called the extent. Because the ice is melting, the extent is decreasing in the Northern Hemisphere. However, the Southern Hemisphere appears to be experiencing a slight increase. (Toggle Color between Hemisphere and No Selection to see colors according to North/South or Increase/Decrease.) According to the data source, “The IPCC20 concluded The Treemap visualization attached to this same data is also quite useful. |
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Fernanda B. Viegas says:
Click on this thumbnail to see a pretty dramatic view of the situation. Monica, thanks for creating this visualization! Can you tell us a bit more about why there is such a big difference between the Northern and Southern hemispheres? |
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Monica says:
Updated :-) |
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Martin Wattenberg says:
The Indian Ocean has sea ice? I guess it extends farther south than I would have thought. |
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Monica says:
This picture shows it extending all the way down to Antarctica. |
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Monica says:
:-) |
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Martin Wattenberg says:
Thanks, Monica! I guess the coastline of Antarctica must hit a bunch of different oceans. |
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Woody says:
This is cool. I’m no scientist, but wouldn’t it make sense to use the area (or volume) of the sea as a variable (instead of a simple count)? If some dinkly little sea is increasing or decreasing it throws off the visualization, right? The question we all have is what is the overall volume impact? Thanks! |
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include snapshot of visualization?