Alaska temperature changes analyzed for first decade of 21st century

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2013-01-08
Teaser Title: 
Alaska temperature changes analyzed
Teaser Text: 
19 of 20 first order stations in state show a cooling trend

Alaska map of 1st order meteorological stationsWhen the rest of the nation grapples with the results of a scorching hot 2012, scientists at the Alaska Climate Research Center found that Alaska got colder from 2000 to 2010. The cooling trend was identified after examining the 21st century's first decade of data on annual and seasonal values from Alaska's first order meteorlogical stations.

Department
Department: 
Atmospheric Science
Outreach Office

Alaska Science Forum: Bowheads rise, Barrow sinks, fire scars the tundra

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2013-01-02
Teaser Title: 
Bowheads, Barrow, fire scars on tundra
Teaser Text: 
More science snippets from the 2012 AGU Fall Meeting

 

Craig George in Barrow, AKBy nrozell [at] gi [dot] alaska [dot] edu (Ned Rozell)

 

From my notebook, here’s more northern news presented at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, a five-day gathering of more than 20,000 scientists held in early December 2012 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco:

 

Department
Department: 
Outreach Office
Snow Ice Permafrost
Other

Girls on Ice 2013: Call for applications until February 1

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2013-01-02
Teaser Title: 
Girls on Ice 2013
Teaser Text: 
Call for applications until Feb. 1

 

Organizers announce that the Girls on Ice 2013 Expeditions are now accepting applications. The 2013 program includes two expeditions. The original North Cascades expedition on Mount Baker in Washington State will be held July 21 through Aug. 1, 2013, and an Alaska-based expedition will take place June 21 through July 2, 2013. 

 

Department
Department: 
Outreach Office
Snow Ice Permafrost
Other

Alaska Science Forum: Alaska forests in transition

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2012-12-19
Teaser Title: 
Interior AK forests are in decline
Teaser Text: 
Quarter to half of aspen, white spruce and birch are dead

 

aspen trees in Fairbanks, AKBy nrozell [at] gi [dot] alaska [dot] edu (Ned Rozell)

 

In almost every patch of boreal forest in Interior Alaska that Glenn Juday has studied since the 1980s, at least one quarter (and as many as one-half) of the aspen, white spruce and birch trees are dead.

 

Department
Department: 
Outreach Office
Other

Science for Alaska 2013

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2012-12-14
Teaser Title: 
Science for AK 2013
Teaser Text: 
Popular series to move back to UAF, feature GI scientists only

 

SFALS 2013 posterMark your calendars for Science for Alaska 2013! Our 21st year of the popular lecture series will experience some changes. Lectures will take place in Schaible Auditorium on the UAF campus and occur on Saturdays throughout January. We're hoping the smaller space and the coffee to follow each of the lectures will lead to a more intimate exchange between our line-up of lecturers and the community. 

Department
Department: 
Atmospheric Science
Outreach Office
Seismology
Snow Ice Permafrost
Space Physics
Other

Dramatic report card for the Arctic in 2012

SAN FRANCISCO — Northern sea ice is at its lowest summer coverage since we’ve been able to see it from satellites. Greenland experienced its warmest summer in 170 years. Eight of 10 permafrost-monitoring sites in northern Alaska recorded their highest temperatures; the other two tied record highs.

2012 was a year of “astounding” change for much of the planet north of the Arctic Circle, said four experts at a press conference here at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, a five-day gathering of more than 20,000 scientists that ended Dec. 7, 2012.

Alaska Weather Summary - November 2012

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2012-12-12
Teaser Title: 
November 2012 weather summary
Teaser Text: 
Cold temps. created poor air quality

 

Statewide temps for November 2012, AlaskaTemperature

Department
Department: 
Atmospheric Science
Outreach Office
Other

40 years of change on top of the world

George Divoky, left, talks with Geoff Haines-Stiles at the 2012 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.

Photo by Ned Rozell.

SAN FRANCISCO — From a lecture hall within a land of warm breezes and flowering December plants comes a story of a creature 2,600 miles north, where the sun will not rise for another 50 days.

Alaska Science Forum: Forty years of change on top of the world

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2012-12-10
Teaser Title: 
Arctic change measured by birds
Teaser Text: 
Black guillemots provide clues

 

black guillemot photo by USFWS.By nrozell [at] gi [dot] alaska [dot] edu (Ned Rozell)

 

SAN FRANCISCO — From a lecture hall within a land of warm breezes and flowering December plants comes a story of a creature 2,600 miles north, where the sun will not rise for another 50 days.

 

Department
Department: 
Outreach Office
Other

Alaska Science Forum: Dramatic report card for the Arctic in 2012

Publishing Information
Release Date: 
2012-12-10
Teaser Title: 
2012 was a year of "astounding" change
Teaser Text: 
AGU scientists share details at press conference

Photo by Ned RozellBy nrozell [at] gi [dot] alaska [dot] edu (Ned Rozell)

 

Northern sea ice is at its lowest extent since we’ve been able to see it from satellites. Greenland experienced its warmest summer in 170 years. Eight of 10 permafrost-monitoring sites in northern Alaska recorded their highest temperatures; the other two tied record highs.

 

Department
Department: 
Outreach Office
Snow Ice Permafrost
Other

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