Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Late Winter Chill

Clear skies and a cold air mass have produced very chilly overnight temperatures in the past several days across interior and northern Alaska.  Some of the coldest readings have come in from the remote (but high quality) CRN sites, including the Selawik NWR (-38°F this morning), the Koyukuk NWR (-35°F), and the Toolik Lake site (-31°F).  It was -36°F this morning at the Beaver RAWS on the Yukon Flats, and Anaktuvuk Pass dropped to -33°F at the other end of the elevation spectrum.

Fairbanks airport dropped to -7°F, but this isn't at all noteworthy from a historical standpoint; it is typical to see -20°F at some point in the second half of March.

Here are this morning's lows across the central and northern interior (click to enlarge):


Interestingly, the change of weather pattern has brought significant snow to Anchorage for the first time since autumn.  Anchorage saw its least snowy winter (December-February) on record, with a measly 4.6" of snow in those three months, but now they've managed to accumulate 14.6" in the past week.  Adding this month's total to October's heavy snow gives a total of 36.1", well over 3 times the amount that fell in November through February.

The following chart illustrates the contribution of November-February to the total seasonal snowfall in the modern Anchorage climate history.  Typically about 30% of the seasonal snowfall occurs outside of Nov-Feb, and this ratio has been as low as 11% (1986-87) and as high as 62% (2001-02) in past years.  This year the ratio is 78% and the snow season isn't over yet.  Note that there's zero correlation between the two sub-totals over the years.


It's a topic for another day, but there is actually a statistically significant downward trend in the contribution of autumn and spring snow to the seasonal total in Anchorage.  This is what we would expect if the climate warms, because the autumn and spring temperatures are more marginal for snow.  So this winter very much counters the trend, because of the extremely dry winter (from the standpoint of snow - there was rain instead).  Last winter was the polar opposite, with only 12% of snowfall outside of Nov-Feb.

Fairbanks sees only slightly more of its seasonal total snowfall in months other than November-February; the average is about 33%.  The ratio has ranged from only 7% (2016-17) to 63% (1947-48).  Unlike in Anchorage, there is a slight positive correlation between the two sub-totals; but there is no significant trend in the contribution of autumn and spring snowfall in Fairbanks.



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