Southern Hemisphere
Ice Charts, GIS, Metadata, and Coverage Files
Click on the region above for the most current color chart or
click on the dropdown menu
++To
improve the visual quality of our weekly analysis, our files are now produced
in PDF Format. Please contact NIC Liaison if
you have any questions.++
Analyses of current ice conditions are produced bimonthly for the twelve regions. All NIC regional sea ice analyses are derived from the near real-time integration of remotely sensed and in-situ oceanographic/ meteorological observations. These analyses are produced following standard analysis procedures, which optimize the use of data that widely vary in availability, scale, and resolution. These operational data sources can be grouped into the following categories: satellite derived data, aerial ice reconnaissance, ship/shore station observations, drifting buoy reports, meteorological guidance products, ice prediction model output, climatology and sea ice information obtained from international partners such as foreign ice services. Documentation recording the percentages of each data type used in each analysis can be found in a weekly metadata narrative. NIC analysis and forecast guidance products are produced on global, regional, and tactical scales. These products are disseminated through a variety of communications paths in both digital and analog formats. Digital products include:
GIF charts are labeled using the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) international sea ice symbology known colloquially as the "Egg Code". ARC/INFO coverages are produced in Polar Stereographic projection with the standard parallel at 60S. All ARC/INFO sea ice attribute information is coded in modified text strings derived from the WMO digital sea ice standard known as SIGRID. All future NIC digital products will use this attribute standard to describe analyzed sea ice parameters. This system also provides users with ice forecast products which are not available via the NIC web page. A seasonal Ross Sea (90 day) forecast for the McMurdo Sound resupply is available on 15 October of each year. Users are encouraged to submit suggestions, recommendations
and questions to the National
Ice Center Liaison. |
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