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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May 18, 2013 2:24 am

The record is 20th May at 11:4am

Ashby
May 18, 2013 7:14 am

Two days and four hours ’til the record is broken? Not sure it’s going to make it. http://www.wunderground.com/weather-forecast/US/AK/Nenana.html
Currently 23°, but warming into the 40s with 20% chance of rain, down to 19° tonight but into the fifties tomorrow, and who knows how much water is flowing underneath the ice…

May 18, 2013 8:27 am

Henry
Thanks, but are you sure? the record for 1964 was 20th of May.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/15/the-icy-nenana-river/#comment-1306779
1964 was a leap year, and the equivalent time in days in 2013 would be 21 May?
just asking.
what is the rule, for the record?

May 18, 2013 8:44 am

HenryP says:
May 18, 2013 at 8:27 am
Henry
“Thanks, but are you sure? the record for 1964 was 20th of May.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/15/the-icy-nenana-river/#comment-1306779
1964 was a leap year, and the equivalent time in days in 2013 would be 21 May?
just asking.”
HenryP, this brilliant detailed bit shows why one can’t get away with much these days with a world-wide crowdsourcing critique awaiting them. It has proven the downfall of sloppy climate science and promises to be the real incorruptible peer review of future scientific work that has to be paid attention to. Now this detail you point out is only a small one but it proves the point nicely.

Walter Sobchak
May 18, 2013 8:48 am

It is 07:45 on 2013-May-18 as I write this and the tripod is still up.
http://www.nenanaakiceclassic.com/

May 18, 2013 11:51 am

I note that the “tripod” on ice
Has moved toward the shore just a trice
There’s a cable-link loop
That today has more droop
An inch or two move would suffice
But there’s more ice today than last night
So there’s no “today” breakup in sight
A world record is near
“I can see it from here”
But we must get the leap-year stuff right!
===|==============/ Keith DeHavelle

Frank K.
May 18, 2013 12:00 pm

Right now in Nanana (3 PM EDT), it is 24F – and the tripod is still standing, a beacon shining in the darkness that is the CAGW lunacy…

May 18, 2013 12:06 pm

Henry and frank
True and funny!

Hans H
May 18, 2013 12:27 pm

Good luck to us all, watchmen in the fellowship of the Tripod of Nenana 🙂

M.C. Kinville
May 18, 2013 1:13 pm

Today’s high here in North Pole (just outside of Fairbanks) is 26.9 °F, last year on this day the high temperature was 68.8 °F. We have had 45 straight days of colder than average temperatures. Migratory birds have stacked up and are arriving out of their usual sequence, insects haven’t made their usual appearance, trees have failed to bud, moose are hungry…I’m using a lot (a lot) of firewood. For what it’s worth, I chose April 28th 2:28am for my ticket in the Ice Classic.
I may drive to Nenana for lunch tomorrow. The Monderosa Grill, a couple of miles North of Nenana has a great burgers.
On another note, I missed 1964 by a single year, but it must have been a rough year with the Good Friday earthquake and a super cold winter.
Cheers.

Fred Martushev
May 18, 2013 2:55 pm

Is wonder if any body knows how many % tickets left as of to day.

May 18, 2013 3:25 pm

Willis,
In the earlier pic above there are 4 lines out to the marker. In the last pic there is only one. Any idea why that is?

May 18, 2013 3:36 pm


Those lines are in sight
They’ve swung to the right
They move by degrees
In very cold breeze!
But a moment ago
I noted a flow
A mid-river open
That might quash our hoping
===|==============/ Keith DeHavelle

faboutlaws
May 18, 2013 3:39 pm

Was that Dr. Gleick’s car there a little while ago? Was that him throwing rock salt onto the ice?

May 18, 2013 4:29 pm

@faboutlaws
Gleick the sneak of oblique physique
Would not halt the gestalt of his fault with salt
A decline of line he’d define by brine
Would inspire ire — and backfire on the [trier]
===|==============/ Keith DeHavelle

M.C. Kinville
May 18, 2013 5:36 pm

Dr. Kramm, that pretty well nails it. On a personal note, I’ve read your comments in our local paper with great interest. A tip of the hat to you sir.

May 18, 2013 5:51 pm

When I gave a presentation on the climate of Alaska before the Joint Alaska Climate Impact Assessment Commission in April 2007 I also discussed the paper of Sagarin and Micheli (2001), Climate Change in Nontraditional Data Sets, Science Mag. 294, p. 811, as a typical example of foolish statistics used in climatology. These authors only considered the temperature records of Fairbanks from 1949 – 2000 even though the record started in 1906. But around 1949 the annually averaged temperature in the Fairbanks record was relatively low. The linear trend in the Fairbanks data was adopted for the temperature record of Nenana to fill a gap of observations between 1955 and 1975 even though there was a jump in the temperature record of Fairbanks in 1976 due to a regime shift usually related to the PDO (see Hartmenn and Wendler, 2005, http://climate.gi.alaska.edu/ResearchProjects/Hartmann%20and%20Wendler%202005.pdf). Before and after this temperature jump there was always a slight decrease of the temperature (see Fig. 5 of Hartmann and Wendler, 2005). This means that this linear long-term did not represent the Fairbanks record in an adequate manner.

RACookPE1978
Editor
May 18, 2013 9:05 pm

Somebody moved the 3x large concrete blocks that used to be on the left edge of the parking lot.
A question was raised above about the number of lines, and whether they had changed.
No. There were 4x lines, 3 above and one below, then they all get twisted together into one about at the 2/3 point into a single larger line. You can see all 4 in the first picture, and in today’s live webcam view.
But! the Nanananonopod has moved to the right with respect to the camera pole – I assume that the camera is fixed and has not itself moved over in the parking lot.

May 18, 2013 9:36 pm

Now, our winter tires will become all season tires.

May 19, 2013 12:21 am

@RACookPE1978

But! the Nanananonopod has moved to the right with respect to the camera pole – I assume that the camera is fixed and has not itself moved over in the parking lot.

I don’t see that. I’ve scanned back several days
Using a blink-comparator split
The tripod’s in place, and fixed in its ways
But the cable-mount pole did slide right a bit
When looking for this just now (time to kill)
I happened upon a bit of surprise
The river, back on the 16th, did fill
And lifted the tripod. It’s since kept the rise
===|==============/ Keith DeHavelle

RACookPE1978
Editor
May 19, 2013 12:21 am

Little bit of sunshine left in the web-camera.
Hmmmmn. Looks like a fresh dark, jagged line down through the middle of the river ice though.

RACookPE1978
Editor
May 19, 2013 12:27 am

Thank you for the poemtry. 8<)
Odd. Did the third rope fall/grow slack?