Arctic sea ice melt 3rd-biggest on record

ByABC News
September 18, 2009, 9:23 PM

WASHINGTON -- The summer melt of Arctic sea ice was not quite as bad this year as the last two years. But it still ranked as the third-biggest melt on record.

The National Snow and Ice Data Center announced Thursday that the Arctic sea ice reached its annual low last week. Ice extended just shy of 2 million square miles. That is 620,000 square miles less than the 30-year average.

But there was more ice this September than the record low set in 2007 about one-third of a million square miles more. Last year ranked No. 2.

Arctic sea ice is important because it helps moderate warmer temperatures elsewhere. Experts blame global warming for the increased melting of sea ice.