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.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

172 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Larry Ledwick (hotrod)
May 16, 2013 4:34 pm

Looking at some of the posts above and following the link for the ice breakup on the tornio river, I also found an interesting chart on permafrost temperatures.
http://www.grida.no/publications/vg/climate/page/3084.aspx
I find it interesting that they cut off the chart at 1995. I have not been able to find a continuous series of permafrost temperatures at a specific location that spans the period from 1950 to date.
I wonder what a current data plot would show is happening to permafrost temperatures at depth in say Fairbanks Alaska over that 60+ year time span?

TerryMN
May 16, 2013 7:55 pm

The ice is getting rotten in a hurry – looks like it will be out tomorrow.

Steve B
May 16, 2013 8:41 pm

anyone know how to copy an image to the comments? I refreshed the ice cam at Nenana and got a whole heap of bikies standing around. Thought it might be cool to share.
[Reply: You have to post a link to an image. — mod.]

Jo Sydney Australia
May 17, 2013 12:29 am

Wow! not sure what all the stats mean, but interesting reading. Was in Nenana last June with my family. We are now watching almost non-stop for the Break-up. Very exciting for us southern hemisphere folks as we don’t have rivers that freeze over, some of our rivers don’t even have water in them. Cheers Jo

Greg Goodman
May 17, 2013 1:33 am

Steve , AFAIK mere mortals cannot include an image in a comment. I gave up long ago.
Some manage to get youtube links in but I’ve never tried that.
I think only those with posting articles can add images to comments.
It’s a shame because it breaks up lone masses of text.

Chris R.
May 17, 2013 4:29 am

Looks like the Nenana ice breakup is at least 2nd all-time now, because the ice is still there.
Time slug on the Web cam is 03:27:32 AM, 17 May, Alaska Daylight Time. Can it make it past Monday and set a new record?

Greg Goodman
May 17, 2013 4:44 am

Atfer a lot of digging, some online OCR and editing I finally have a numerical time series for the Tornio river break-up dates. Similar to Nenana here.
http://climategrog.wordpress.com/tornio-rive-break-up-dates/

May 17, 2013 4:49 am

ChrisR says
Can it make it past Monday and set a new record?
henry says
it looks to me like some water there on the left hand side of the tripod?

Frank K.
May 17, 2013 6:49 am

The tripod still standing (Friday morning EDT). Temperatures at the freezing point in Nenana. If the cold temps can hang around, it just may hold up on over the weekend. In any case, it’s a solid #2 🙂

Frank K.
May 17, 2013 6:53 am

By the way, I was looking at the forecast temperatures at Nenana, AK, and they make set a new low temperature record over the weekend…stay tuned.

Eric N WY
May 17, 2013 9:30 am

Thought it was getting close to breaking up yesterday as you could see water flowing near both shores, looked again this morning and all that water has ice on it again! Looking more like that old record is going down

May 17, 2013 9:46 am

Anchorage AK-All I can say is it is damn cold up here-we are forecast to get about 6 inches of snow Friday/Saturday. The last 3/4 years have been cold and wet. The picture of the tripod with the blue sky must be a Chamber of Commerce pix!

faboutlaws
May 17, 2013 10:00 am

I don’t know if it will make it to Monday or not, but the watery ice got a nice coat of white lipstick over night as surface water froze. I think though that the flowing water in the center channel under the ice is the primary force that causes break-up. As it erodes the bottom closer to shore where the ice hugs to the river bed, the whole mass will start to move slightly causing massive cracking, then catastrophic break up. My questions are: How cold is the flowing water? How much is the water flowing? How much heat can the open water upstream of the ice pack lose if a cold front moves in?

Frank K.
May 17, 2013 10:15 am

This will be interesting. Watch for record low temperatures tomorrow morning (near 20F). Right now it’s overcast, and there is a cold rain/snow in the forecast, high only in the mid 30s.
I think it’ll break up on Sunday…but who knows?

faboutlaws
May 17, 2013 10:46 am

It looks like a few cracks are developing near the shore and pointing to the center of the river. But I have no idea how long it takes to get from a few cracks to full break-up?

May 17, 2013 10:48 am

david says
Anchorage AK-All I can say is it is damn cold up here-we are forecast to get about 6 inches of snow Friday/Saturday. The last 3/4 years have been cold and wet.
henry says
It is not going to get better anytime soon up there > 40….
http://blogs.24.com/henryp/2013/04/29/the-climate-is-changing/
Perhaps make other plans?

May 17, 2013 11:31 am

Greg says
Tornio river data:
ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/paleo/historical/europe/tornio2011temperature.txt
henry says
I looked at the data from 1850
took a linear trend and then a 4rth polynominal
Just like CET, it runs exactly opposite my 88 year sine wave;
this is due to the GH effect (more clouds there, in that place, during global cooling)
the upward trend could be due to a no. of factors including
an additional solar cycle (200 yrs. 500 yrs?)
etc.
CO2 unlikely to have any influence…;.

Psalmon
May 17, 2013 11:36 am

With temps below freezing this weekend (teens at night), it now looks like the vigil will be Monday to see if the tripod makes it thru Tuesday. With highs next week in the 60s and temps all above freezing, the contest will almost certainly end (despite dreams of summer ice fishing by some).
I don’t mean to pick on the guy, but I’ll leave you this from Martin Jeffries of UAF and Office of Naval Research, from Dec 6, 2012:
“We can expect to see continued widespread and sustained change [in the arctic], with new record highs and new record lows, depending on the variable you are looking at throughout the arctic system.”
You must admit, he’s never wrong.

Karl
May 17, 2013 2:25 pm

Greg Goodman says:
May 17, 2013 at 4:44 am

Tornio river break-up dates. Similar to Nenana here.
http://climategrog.wordpress.com/tornio-rive-break-up-dates/

Excellent!
Greg gave a link to a study http://www.geophysica.fi/pdf/geophysica_1993_29_1-2_073_kajander.pdf
I find the scientific process very interesting:

Unlike instrumental records consisting of numerical values of a variable for a given time, obtined by using a more or less well-calibrated instrument, cryofenological records consist of verbal expressions referring to an event that occured at a given time. The expressions are of different lenght, from single words to several long sentences.

So it is not trivial to find out what is the actual date of break-up. The expressons are also in two languages finnish and swedish.

Ashby Manson
May 17, 2013 4:41 pm

Almost 4 pm Friday, still standing. Would be fun if it beat the old record.

May 17, 2013 5:06 pm

In 2003, “at least 19 tickets” had the exact time of 6:22PM on the day of the breakup. The pop was about the same size as this year, a bit over $300k. It would be interesting to see a graph of the ticket guesses for the current year, and see how many people guessed (based on the very gold winter) that the breakup would be unusually late.
It appears that, ten years ago, they organized the tickets by time bucket and only did data entry on the ones that had the right time. I don’t know what their current practice is.
===|==============/ Keith DeHavelle

May 17, 2013 8:55 pm

Looks like the ice is setting up again as the cold sets in. 18:51 AKDT and still frozen.

May 18, 2013 1:56 am

When exactly would the record be broken?

Steve B
May 18, 2013 2:23 am

The ice has made it to the 18th