The Icy Nenana River

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

The last time I was in Alaska, I had the good fortune to stop by the town of Nenana, home of the Nenana River Ice Classic. Nenana sits at the junction of the Tanana and Nenana Rivers. The dates of the ice breakup at Nenana form one of the longest-term modern temperature proxies in the area, extending back unbroken to 1917. Figure 1 shows my photo of the tripod which is set out on the ice to determine the exact tim of the breakup.

nenana ice classicFigure 1. The tower and the tripod. The tripod is placed out on the ice before the breakup. When the ice breaks up, the tripod falls, tripping the clock. These days the tripod is actually a quadripod, or perhaps a quadruped.

Every year people pay money to bet on the exact time of the breakup, with the winner taking the pot. At present, the pot is $318,500 …

There’s a recent WUWT post by Psalmon about the Ice Classic here. Although I’d written about it previously, there were a couple of things I didn’t understand about Nenana until I’d visited the place.The first was the reason the ice breakup was so important. It was critical because both then and now, the river is navigable, and becomes a main highway for people and supplies during the summer. Until the breakup, little villages and cabins and camps along the river can’t get their supplies or travel by water. Although this is less important now with the advent of highways, there still are many places along the river that can only be reached by traveling along the river. That made the breakup a huge event in the old days.

The second thing I didn’t understand was the reason why the breakup was so sudden and complete. The map shows the Tanana River and surroundings:

ge nenana ice classicFigure 2. The Tanana River and its tributaries flow north to the Yukon River. The Yukon flows from the top center to the upper left of the figure, with a portion appearing dark blue.

The reason the breakup comes suddenly is that unlike most US rivers, the rivers around Nenana are flowing north. As a result, the more southerly upriver parts of the drainage would tend to melt earlier. At some point this increasing upstream meltwater will put pressure on the downriver ice, and as the ice at Nenana rots and melts, the whole thing will break and collapse at once.

Now, you’d think that the river breakup dates would be a perfect temperature proxy. After all, urban warming surely won’t be an issue. However, nature always sides with the hidden flaw, so of course there is a confounding factor—rain. Rain can hasten the breakup significantly by melting the ice from the top. In addition to starting out warmer than the ice, rainwater pools have less albedo than ice, so they warm more for a given amount of sunlight. Rain also increases the volume of water flowing in the river, so it puts additional pressure on the ice. As a result, the breakup dates form the usual imperfect proxy for temperature.

Given all of that, here are the inverse dates of ice breakup since the Classic was first run in 1917.

ice breakup dates at nenanaFigure 3. Nenana ice breakup dates since 1917. The result for 2013 will be equal to or greater than today, May 15th. Blue dots show the standard error of the Gaussian average at the endpoint in 2013.

For me, it is clear that what we are seeing are the effects of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. This is a slow, decades long cycle in the heat distribution in the Pacific Ocean. In about 1945 the PDO shifted to the cool phase, then went back to the warm phase in about 1975, and has recently switched again to the cool phase.

Overall? I’d say there’s not a whole lot to see in the ice records. Temperatures went up a bit, down a bit, up a bit, and appear to be on their way back down again … be still, my beating heart, it’s all too exciting.

I leave you with the current photo from the Nenana Icecam, at 8:47 Alaska Daylight Time May 15, still no breakup, but goodness, it’s a lovely spring day in Alaska … makes my heart leap just to look at it.

ice cam 945 am pdt

Regards to all,

w.

DATA: the historical breakup days are available here.

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Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 5:53 am

HenryP says: “I think we all forgot to make a correction for leap years?”
Why do you think that ?

May 16, 2013 6:51 am

henry
maybe it was just me.
2012 was a leap year.
that makes it 114 days for 2012.
I thought it was 113.
btw
did you take that CO2 data from Barrow, Alaska?

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 7:51 am

I did not have 2012 when I posted above but checking my data I have 114.501 days for 2012.
CO2 data is Mauna Loa Obervatory , regarded as “well mixex” global or at least NH average.
That makes the correlation between d/dt(CO2) and arctic oscillation index all the more remarkable.

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 7:52 am
Poha
May 16, 2013 8:54 am

Heh, w, you’re in’it now. “The earth is … flat.”
Lewandowski et al might run with this:
May 15, 2013 at 9:36 pm
Donald L. Klipstein says:
May 15, 2013 at 8:40 pm
The graph appears to me reasonably honest. It appears to me as usable to support a contention for a warming trend, or for lack of warming in the past 25 years.
Thanks, Donald. The earth is warming or cooling or flat depending on the period chosen.

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 9:04 am

Having post 114.501 I saw it was wrong ( a provisional value I put before I found the time of day). The correct value is : 2012 114.819
Once we have result for this year I’ll repost the full data set with minute level precision values. 😉

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 9:48 am

Poha says: “Thanks, Donald. The earth is warming or cooling or flat depending on the period chosen.”
Heh, go and explain the problem to mainstream climatologists. Fitting linear “trends” to runny means of non linear systems has been the mainstay of climate science for the last 30 years.

Frank K.
May 16, 2013 9:58 am

It’s nearly 1 PM EDT, May 16, 2013, and the tripod is still standing…

May 16, 2013 10:06 am


We know! We r all watching.
Proof that CO2 does not drive climate…..at all….

Frank K.
May 16, 2013 10:16 am


Well, it is already #2 on the all time list. Anthony needs to put the Nenana Cam on the WUWT home page so we can root it on over the weekend. Go, ice, go!!

Bruce Cobb
May 16, 2013 10:27 am

I’m guessing this is giving Nenana Alaska the biggest boost in notoriety they’ve ever had. I know I had never heard of the place before now. T-minus 25 min. now to break the 2nd-place record.

May 16, 2013 10:31 am

Henry
Clearly you don’t understand. Global cooling is a serious problem. The dust bowl drought will follow in about six years. You guys do not realize the seriousness of the situation yet.

Bruce Cobb
May 16, 2013 10:53 am

Done! This year is now in 2nd place.

Karl
May 16, 2013 11:41 am

Torne (Tornio) river ice break up dates extend back to 1693.
Publication: Loader, N., Jalkanen, R., McCarroll, D. & Moberg, A. 2011. Spring temperature variability in Northern Fennoscandia AD1693–2011 (pdf). Journal of Quaternary Science 26(6) 566–570.
Graph with dates:
http://www.grida.no/publications/vg/climate/page/3083.aspx
The Finnish Forest Research Institute (Metla) website:
http://www.metla.fi/uutiskirje/mil/2012-01/uutinen-1.html
Google translation:
http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.metla.fi%2Fuutiskirje%2Fmil%2F2012-01%2Fuutinen-1.html
Over the last 300 years the temperature has increased 2.5 degrees.

Spring began to warm up before the industrial period

The series is quite uniform throughout the entire 319-year period, despite the fact that about half of the series take place in the period before the amount of carbon dioxide or greenhouse gas emissions in a significant increase in the beginning. At that time (in about 1850) of the series is hard to find anything different

Frank K.
May 16, 2013 11:53 am

Forecast for Nenana, AK. Rain/snow tomorrow – high 38F. Cooler Saturday, high 35 F. Lows below freezing each night through the weekend. Go, ice, go!!

May 16, 2013 12:21 pm

Frank K: Don’t you mean “stay, ice, stay!!”?
Rich.

May 16, 2013 12:26 pm

Henry
I also wonder now! Perhaps Frank is a warmist?

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 12:31 pm

Henry
Clearly you don’t understand. Global cooling is a serious problem. The dust bowl drought will follow in about six years. You guys do not realize the seriousness of the situation yet.
I quite agree. It seems rather foolish wishing ourselves into an ice age just so we can go “yay, I told you so!”
It’s about a dumb as warmists wanting the world to self-destruct so that they can make us do something save it. They are cheering on for a total melt down in the Arctic so that we have to let them dictate our lives. Then , and only then will they start to want global warming to stop.
They are also cheering “Go”, ice go!”

Frank K.
May 16, 2013 12:39 pm

No no, guys! I’m rooting for the ice to hang on over the weekend so they’ll have a new all time record at Nenana.
And no, I don’t wish there to be another ice age. I’m simply lampooning the fact that every time some heat “record” is broken, our esteemed scientific establishment uses it as a proxy for unprecedented human-caused global climate change. Now we have a well-established event that goes against the CAGW orthodoxy – let’s see how they spin it. I’m sure you’ll see big headline in all of the major newspapers, right?

Robert M
May 16, 2013 12:40 pm

The wind is really blowing up here guys, I don’t know if that will affect the ice or not. If the ice lasts until tomorrow, there is a very cold air mass moving into the area, If the ice makes it another 24 hours, I think there is a real shot at the record.

Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 12:46 pm
Greg Goodman
May 16, 2013 12:54 pm

Dana’s on his way with on his moped and Super Mandia is flying up on his hockey stick. Believe me, they’re not going to let this happen !

May 16, 2013 1:05 pm

Henry
Agreed! Don’t worry. We were just toying…
The cooling could become a problem though.
Best to move more towards the equator and start farming there.

Frank K.
May 16, 2013 1:54 pm

Robert M says:
May 16, 2013 at 12:40 pm
The wind is really blowing up here guys, I don’t know if that will affect the ice or not. If the ice lasts until tomorrow, there is a very cold air mass moving into the area, If the ice makes it another 24 hours, I think there is a real shot at the record.

Yeah, the forecast for the Nenana area is for wet snow and freezing night time temperatures over the weekend. The ice was looking a bit soft in the web cam, but snow on top of the ice could keep it alive for a few days. We shall see…
I wonder if anyone who entered the contest bet on a new record???

May 16, 2013 2:55 pm

At $2.50 a guess I would have entered a guess for every 6 hours past the 10th of May until a week past the oldest record.