English: This image shows the western Canadian Arctic a few days after perpetual
sunlight commenced for the entire region. The image captures the
Arctic in a moment of transformation. Signs of
winter are still present, but
summer is clearly on the
horizon.
Sea ice in the
Beaufort Sea has started to break up. A swath of open
water,
black in this image, separates the land from the dense pack of sea ice.
Ice still fringes much of the land, but it is thinning. In many places, particularly around
Banks Island, the land-bound sea ice is
blue, pointing to thin ice or the presence of water on the ice.
Spring is beginning to touch land as well. While frozen lakes punctuate the landscape with white, many lakes are clear. The Mackenzie River flows ice-free to a broad partially frozen delta. Trapped behind a dam of ice, the muddy brown waters blur across the triangular delta. The water that is getting through the ice carries sediment into the Beaufort Sea, colouring the waters near the shore brown and green.
With access to constant light, flowing water, and warmer temperatures, plants are beginning to grow. The land around the Mackenzie River has a deep green hue. The line between tundra and forest runs through this image. The forest is dark green, while the tundra is still brown.
The land also shows the first sign of summer: large
forest fires. One large forest fire is outlined in
red.
Smoke from nearby fires flows across the lower left corner of the image. The boreal forest needs fire to maintain the ecosystem, and large fires happen regularly in the summer. In the remote region shown here,
lightning ignites most forest fires.