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Climate Watchers Place Own Big Bet On Alaska's ThawSubmitted by Charles Frost on Wed, 03/12/2008 - 19:22.
Climate Watchers Place Own Big Bet On Alaska's Thaw
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Associated Press |
Volunteers help lift the Nenana tripod on the Tanana River as part of the Nenana Ice Classic. |
In Nenana, climatology is folk art. There are no laser altimeters, seismometers or strain gauges to monitor the ice flow. Instead, there is a 26-foot-high pyramid of painted spruce logs anchored in the crust of river ice. When the ice breaks up, the contraption collapses. A trip wire triggers a siren and stops a clock on shore.
"This data didn't come from a long-term planned scientific monitoring scheme. This was a home-grown effort by people to pay attention to what was going on in the world," said Duke University ecologist Raphael Sagarin, who analyzed the lottery records. "It speaks to a larger issue in climate-change science."
By happenstance, the snowbound surveyors who founded the event in 1917 set up a system that today can help researchers begin to understand the interplay of climate, land-use changes, solar cycles, ocean currents and fluctuating levels of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane. The natural variations of weather can mask long-term trends, especially in regions where records are sparse.
Lately, the world weather has been especially perplexing, influenced by the cold ocean temperatures of a La Niña current in the equatorial Pacific.
For Earth's land areas, 2007 was the warmest year on record. This year, record cold is more the norm. Global land-surface temperatures so far are below the 20th-century mean for the first time since 1982, according to the National Climatic Data Center. Last month in China, snowstorms stranded millions of people, while in Mumbai, officials reported the coldest day in 46 years.
Yet, England basked in its fourth-warmest January since 1914, the British Met Office reported. The crocus and narcissus at the U.K.'s Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew flowered a week earlier than last year -- 11 days ahead of their average for the decade and weeks ahead of their pattern in the 1980s. In Prague, New Year's Day was the warmest since 1775.
"It is difficult to judge the significance of what we are seeing this year," said Kew researcher Sandra Bell. "Is it a glitch or is it the beginning of something more sinister and alarming?"
Seeking the order underlying so much variation, scientists have combed generations of farm records, maple-sugaring notes, bird-watchers' logs, botanical files, museum indexes and religious documents. Assembling a mosaic of incremental shifts, researchers believe they detect the effects of rising temperatures on seasonal rhythms touching on hundreds of species.
"The year-to-year variation confuses people," said University of Wisconsin freshwater-ice expert John Magnuson. "Over the long-term -- 150 years -- the trend is unmistakable."
After studying notes kept by amateur pond-watchers, for instance, scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey concluded that lakes in the New England highlands now thaw almost two weeks earlier than in 1850, a sign of a warming climate.
This spring, the behavior of Nenana's frozen river is anyone's guess. Last Sunday, lottery workers were out on the ice -- already 41 inches thick -- setting up the spruce pyramid, anticipating a breakup in late April or May. They celebrated the construction with fireworks, sled-dog races and a fur-hat contest.
Over the decades, the river ice has confounded predictions. Some players have bet based on computer analysis of past temperatures and ice thickness; others have looked to sunspot activity.
None of them have won.
"Sometimes I use birthdays and sometimes I pull numbers out of a hat," said lottery manager Cherrie Forness. "We almost won one year. It was a second away from our minute. But a second away doesn't count."
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