WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.260 --> 00:00:04.260 2 00:00:04.260 --> 00:00:08.470 Sea ice is getting thinner and younger. 3 00:00:08.470 --> 00:00:12.480 4 00:00:12.480 --> 00:00:16.660 A new NASA study combined satellite data and declassified submarine sonar records and found Arctic sea ice cover is much thinner overall. 5 00:00:16.660 --> 00:00:20.670 6 00:00:20.670 --> 00:00:24.860 Approximately 70 percent of all Arctic sea ice is now seasonal. This ice forms in the winter and melts in the summer, instead of lasting from year to year. 7 00:00:24.860 --> 00:00:28.880 8 00:00:28.880 --> 00:00:32.890 That's an important change. Seasonal ice is thinner and weaker than perennial ice, which builds up and lasts for many years. 9 00:00:32.890 --> 00:00:36.900 10 00:00:36.900 --> 00:00:41.080 For 40 years, NASA has tracked the extent of the Arctic sea ice as it reaches a minimum every September. 11 00:00:41.080 --> 00:00:45.090 12 00:00:45.090 --> 00:00:49.100 This annual minimum has been trending lower for decades because of climate change. However, the loss of most thick perennial ice might change that trend. 13 00:00:49.100 --> 00:00:53.110 14 00:00:53.110 --> 00:00:57.140 15 00:00:57.140 --> 00:01:01.150 The thinner ice is more vulnerable to weather and wind, so the observed changes are now more variable, not just dominated by warming. 16 00:01:01.150 --> 00:01:05.330 17 00:01:05.330 --> 00:01:09.340 18 00:01:09.340 --> 00:01:11.221