NSIDC - Arctic Sea Ice Maximum March 13th; 7th Lowest Extent In Instrumental Record
The United States National Snow & Ice Data Center (NSIDC), part of the University of Colorado Boulder Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), monitors Arctic and Antarctic sea ice in near real-time and is one of the worlds leading authorities on the history and science of how climate change is impacting our planets icy poles.
According to NSIDCs most recent update, published on Wednesday, Arctic sea ice appears to have reached its annual maximum extent on March 13 at 14.78 million square kilometers (5.71 million square miles). The maximum extent of the Arctics and Antarctics sea ice refers to the area of ocean where there is at least some sea ice, measured therefore in square kilometres (and not an as-the-crow-flies measurement from some arbitrary middle). Usually, scientists define a threshold of minimum concentration to mark the ice edge; the most common cutoff is at 15%, explains NSIDC. Scientists use the 15% cutoff because it provides the most consistent agreement between satellite and ground observations.
This is the seventh-lowest maximum in the 40-year satellite record, tying with 2007s maximum extent, and 860,000 square kilometers (332,000 square miles) below the 1981-2010 average maximum of 15.64 million square kilometers (6.04 million square miles) and 370,000 square kilometers (143,000 square miles) above the lowest maximum of 14.41 million square kilometers (5.56 million square miles) set on March 7, 2017.
EDIT
https://cleantechnica.com/2019/03/22/arctic-sea-ice-ties-for-seventh-lowest-maximum/