Objective Comments and Analysis - All Science, No Politics
Primary Author Richard James
2010-2013 Author Rick Thoman
Friday, February 21, 2025
Freezing Rain Trends
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Winter Notes
Here are a couple of quick illustrations of the lack of winter that some parts of Alaska are having. First, Nome's mean temperature is running at second warmest on record both since November 1 and since December 1.
Remarkably, about a third of days since December 1 have seen a high temperature at or above freezing - including the last 3 days, and 7 of 12 days so far this month!
Down in Anchorage, it's a top-10 warm winter so far, but the lack of snow is the real story. With only 4.3 inches of snow since December 1, it's the least snowy winter (Dec-Feb) on record so far - although we mustn't forget that there was heavy snow at the very beginning of the season:
https://ak-wx.blogspot.com/2024/11/more-snow-in-anchorage.html
A lengthy spell of daily data is missing from last winter, unfortunately, but we know it was extremely snowy - the second snowiest on winter for the entire cold season.
The following chart shows the remarkable absence of meaningful snow after that early initial dump. It's quite bizarre.
Monday, February 10, 2025
January Climate Data
Wednesday, February 5, 2025
Volatile in the North
First a follow-up note regarding the late January storm. I was interested in whether the moisture content of the atmosphere reached record levels for January across southern Alaska; I thought it was quite possible based on the prodigious amounts of precipitation.
Looking at ERA5 reanalysis data, however, it's a null result: the precipitable water only set a new January record (1950-present) over a small area near the southern tip of Kodiak Island. The January record for much of south-central, the southeastern interior, and also northwestern Alaska was set way back in 1963, and on the 16th of that month (Jan 1963) the statewide daily average precipitable water reached 12.4mm (0.49"). For reference, the recent storm's statewide average atmospheric moisture content peaked at 10.0mm.
On another topic, it's quite notable how volatile temperatures have been in northern Alaska in recent weeks. Umiat has reached or exceeded 32°F on 4 separate occasions in the past 3 weeks, but has also been as cold as -48°F on the last day of January. And check out the swings in daily maximum temperature at Utqiaġvik since about the 10th of January.
The chart doesn't show it, but the temperature has plummeted again in the last 36 hours: yesterday morning it was only just below freezing in Utqiaġvik, but this evening it's back down to -20°F. High winds and blowing snow occurred earlier today.
This volatility reflects a profound clash of contrasting air masses: warm subtropical air has been drawn up from the subtropics repeatedly because of a ridge over the northeastern Pacific, but air temperatures aren't much higher than normal overall in the high Arctic.
In other news from Alaska's far north, there's been another subsurface cable break, apparently again caused by ice scouring on the ocean bed. This happened only about 18 months ago in almost exactly the same location: see this blog post
https://ak-wx.blogspot.com/2023/09/subsea-cable-fixed.html
I find this rather fascinating, because I would certainly not have expected generally thinner and weaker sea ice (than in former decades) to cause severe ice scouring, exceeding the design expectations of the engineers.
Here are a couple of news links about the latest event:
http://www.nomenugget.com/news/not-nome%E2%80%99s-first-rodeo-dealing-cut-fiber-optic-cable