Baked Alaska - record December warmth and winter rains
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[December 29, 2021]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - An unusual
winter warm spell in Alaska has brought daytime temperatures soaring
past 60 degrees Fahrenheit (15.5°C) and torrents of rain at a time of
year normally associated with bitter cold and fluffy snow.
At the island community of Kodiak, the air temperature at a tidal gauge
hit 67 F (19.4°C) degrees on Sunday, the highest December reading ever
recorded in Alaska, said scientist Rick Thoman of the Alaska Center for
Climate Assessment and Policy.
He called it "absurd."
The new benchmark high came amid a spate of balmy December extremes,
Thoman said, including 65 degrees at the Kodiak airport, a record 62
degrees at the Alaska Peninsula community of Cold Bay and at least eight
December days of temperatures above 50 at the Aleutian town of Unalaska,
including a 56-degree reading that was Alaska's warmest Christmas Day on
record.
The most serious immediate implication for humans is likely from the
massive amounts of precipitation dumped on interior Alaska, where the
Fairbanks area was hit by its fiercest mid-winter storm since 1937,
Thoman said.
Normally, December is a dry month in interior Alaska because the usually
frigid air cannot hold much moisture. Whatever moisture does flow in
tends to be "the more fluffy powder because the air is nice and cold,"
said Thoman, who lives in Fairbanks.
Not so over the past few days.
So much snow fell that on Sunday it caved in the roof of the sole
grocery store in Delta Junction, a town 95 miles (153 km)southeast of
Fairbanks.
Possibly worse, the heavy snows were followed by torrents of rain that
coated communities in the region with ice, triggering widespread power
outages and prompting closures of major roads and offices, as well as a
nickname: Icemageddon.
The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities warned
that roads will remain treacherous for a long time because of the
cement-like ice coating that has formed on them.
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An Alaska National Guardsman clears snow in Cordova, Alaska, January
11, 2012, in this handout photo obtained by Reuters January 13,
2012. Picture taken January 11, 2012. REUTERS/Spc. Balinda
O'Neal/DOD/U.S. Army/Handout
"Ice is extremely difficult to
remove once it has binded to the road surface. Even though air temps
were warm during #icemageddon2021, roads were at sub-zero temps,
which caused ice to bind to the surface," the department said on
Twitter.
The blasts of warm and wet mid-winter weather have become more
frequent in Alaska over the past two decades than in years prior, a
sign of climate change, Thoman said. "This is exactly what we expect
in a warming world," he said.
The story is similar elsewhere in the far north, where winter rains
have proved treacherous to people and to grazing animals, like
caribou and musk oxen, that struggle when ice on the ground covers
food sources. Such hardships are expected to intensify.
A study published last month in the journal Nature Communications
projected an Arctic climate with more winter rain than snow starting
around 2060 or 2070.
Alaska will still have its winter cold – Fairbanks temperatures were
forecast to plunge below minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit (-29 C) this
weekend - but warm, soggy episodes are expected to be more numerous
in the future, Thoman said.
"A warming, moistening world has put our thumbs on the scale to make
this more likely," he added.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage; Editing by Steve Gorman and
Sandra Maler)
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