Barrow, Alaska: Ground Zero for Climate Change
Scientists converge on the northernmost city in the United States to study global warming's dramatic consequences
- By Bob Reiss
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
The tundra is a vast watery wilderness filled with snaking rivers and tens of thousands of elliptically shaped lakes supporting moose, caribou and polar bears. From the air, with its clouds and mist, it looked, oddly enough, more like the Amazon basin than the desert that one of Lenters’ colleagues called it and by some definitions it is. (Lenters himself says only that “precipitation is slight.”) But what precipitation there is, Lenters explained, is prevented from seeping into the soil by permafrost, the layer of frozen earth that begins about two feet beneath the surface and goes down, in North Alaska, some 2,000 feet. Globally, permafrost holds an estimated 400 gigatons of methane, one of the greenhouse gases that is hastening the earth’s warming. As the permafrost thaws—which it has begun to do—lakes can drain away and the thawed soil can release billions of tons of methane into the atmosphere.
Lenters pulled up to the buoy and, balanced on the prow of the boat, began wrapping duct tape around some of the buoy’s wires to protect them. “This is the grunt work of science,” he said. A swiveling arm on the buoy measured wind speed. Solar panels on its three sides provided power. A glass-domed instrument on top registered incoming infrared radiation to monitor the greenhouse effect—the rise in temperature that results from the trapping of heat by certain gases, such as carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere.
Lenters said that he and other researchers—aided by decades-old satellite images as well as consultations with Inupiat—are visiting tundra lakes all over the area, walking their perimeters and measuring their size, water depth and temperature. “Everything up here is related to climate change,” Lenters said, “but to understand it you must learn the underlying dynamics.”
In his camouflage clothes and waders, Lenters looked like a deer hunter as he jury-rigged repairs and took measures to protect the buoy from various assaults over the next ten months. Windblown chunks of ice might partially submerge it, and once the lake freezes over, a curious Arctic fox might nibble on its wires. While tending the buoy last year, Lenters spotted two polar bears a quarter-mile away swimming toward him. Bears are an ever-present concern. Guards with shotguns sometimes stand watch at high- school football games. (While I was in Barrow, a bear wandered past BASC headquarters. Another took pieces out of a scientist’s boat; no one was inside.) While Lenters worked, I scanned the horizon.
Lenters said that while he’d collected only about a year’s worth of data, he’d already been surprised by it. Typically, he said, lake beds release as much heat into the water in the winter and spring as they absorb in the summer and fall. This balance keeps the annual sediment temperatures fairly stable. “But what we found was that heat was going into the lake sediment almost all year long.” It’s too soon to draw any firm conclusions, he added, “but the water temperatures are out of equilibrium with the lake sediment, causing a nearly continuous thawing of the underlying permafrost. The lake is out of whack.” Then he turned the boat around and we headed back to town for some hot soup.
Bowhead whales are named for the massive bony skulls that enable them to break through ice to breathe. They can live up to 200 years; adults weigh up to 100 tons. Their biannual migrations between the Bering Sea and the Eastern Beaufort Sea carry them past Barrow each fall and spring. “The whale is central to our culture,” Mayor Itta had told me. “The warmer ocean and currents will markedly shorten our spring whaling season.” He was concerned about possible changes in whale migration patterns and sea ice conditions; hunters must travel over ice to reach whales. “The impacts are around us already. We need more baseline science so we can measure these impacts over time.”
Which was one reason that—about 20 miles out to sea—Eskimo whalers and researchers aboard three small boats rode the chop, looking to tag bowheads with radio devices. Mark Baumgartner, a biologist from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, was looking for answers to the same questions as the whalers with him. “We think the environment is going to change,” he said. “We don’t exactly know how. This is part of a study to learn how the animals forage and how food is organized.” If warming seas cause the whales’ preferred foods to move, the whales could follow—with disastrous consequences for Eskimos.
Carin Ashjian, another Woods Hole biologist, was on a sister ship, the 43-foot-long Annika Marie, studying krill, a shrimplike animal that bowheads eat. Massive amounts of krill pile up on the continental shelf off Barrow each year in the fall. The krill are pushed by sea currents and wind, both of which can be affected by weather patterns. “We want to know whether there will be more or less krill with climate warming,” Ashjian explained. She said her five-year-old study was still too new to yield any firm conclusions: “The Arctic is changing so fast that when it comes to learning basics, we may have started too late.”
In a third study relating to bowheads, Kate Stafford, an oceanographer at the University of Washington, had come to Barrow to service the hydrophones, or undersea microphones, she’d put in the water a year before. She was monitoring sounds—from waves, marine mammals, the breaking of ice and the passing of ships.
“Marine mammals use sound to communicate and navigate,” she said. “When the water is covered with ice it’s pretty quiet down there. During spring breakup it gets noisy. If the ice becomes thinner in winters or goes away, it may become more difficult for animals to communicate.”
Shell Oil representatives, in town for hearings on proposed exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea, are also interested in bowheads. Shell’s attempts to drill in the Beaufort Sea were blocked by a court injunction in 2007, when a coalition of environmentalists, native groups and the North Slope Borough filed suit. The coalition cited the effects on marine mammals, particularly bowhead whales, from the drilling. (The company has approval from the Interior Department to drill this coming summer, but environmental and native groups are challenging the plan.)
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Related topics: Global Warming Alaska Arctic Glaciers
Additional Sources
Watching Ice and Weather Our Way by Conrad Oozeva, Chester Noongwook, George Noongwook, Christina Alowa, and Igor Krupnik, Smithsonian Institution, 2004









Comments (34)
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It is terrible how the artic is melting. That is all due to global warming.
Posted by Joe on February 17,2012 | 07:13 PM
I am a 76 yr old world traveler who has $1650.00 total dollars coming in each month. I have been on six of the continents, traveled to Antarctica and six of the countries in S America earlier in this decade, went four weeks thruout the US West covering every one of the Big League baseball parks, spent 3 weeks in N Europe visiting all the Baltic states to St Petersburg. I have lived in Europe for 7 years 40 years ago and traveled around the world several times on ship or by air. I suffer from Charteau-Marie- Tooth disease, a crippling disease affecting little kids mostly, but I got into the USArmy with it and so I have a 60% disability pension, a good wife who helps me and a desire to see the world. I WANT TO SAIL THRU THE NORTHWEST PASSAGE, can get to Barrow myself, need help for the rest of the trip.
Posted by Curtis DeShong on October 31,2010 | 12:10 PM
I would like to thank all you ignorant people out there who enjoy trotting out the same old stupid stories claiming climate change is a hoax.
Climategate; thousands of emails trawled to find a couple of examples of questionable SEMANTICS! Greenleand; sorry, interior was never GREEN.
Volcanoes; tiny CO2 emissions compared to the plague which now covers the Earth burning everything it can find = HUMANS!
Egypt; good grief you are stupid! Irrigation from the Nile provides water for the crops.
Natural cycles; means the World should be cooling right now, not WARMING.
Thank you for confirming my cynical opinions that the small percentage of wealthy people on this planet (by that I mean everyone who has clothes to wear, food in their belly and a roof over their head) are only interested in their own greedy, self appeasement. With such an attitude, the future of the human race doesn't look good - good riddance!
Posted by Peter on June 16,2010 | 05:06 AM
Disappointing. The denier nuts are here too...
I thought smithsonianmag.com would have better informed posters, but apparently not.
Posted by Rod on June 4,2010 | 09:28 AM
It is amusing and sad at the same time to see these hysterical alarmists insist every scientist in the world is in on the conspiracy to... to.... well, they don't say what the scientists' goals are, but the scientists are are lying about global warming. FUNNY! Note that "climategate" never happened, and that no scientist did anything wrong: not even the America Treason Network, FOX, was able to show any scientist did anything wrong. Meanwhile, humans have caused, and are still causing, Earth to warm; I see that a recent paper by MIT climatologists, using Goddard data, have shown that even sequestering CO2 will not help much--- it is too late to mitigate the damage.
Posted by Desertphile on June 3,2010 | 10:28 PM
The very beginning of this article dictates the one-sided direction..."Scientists converge on the northernmost city in the United States to study global warming's dramatic consequences". This Global Warming" onslaught is the 2nd biggest scam in human history. This is fully political and has nothing to do with concern for the planet or the people.
It is about money (what isn't in politics) that politicians can obtain via another "tax" so they can spend even more.
I've finally figured out why the "lefties" are still pushing this down our throats from every possible political angle in spite of the enormous corruption uncovered - if you keep on repeating something, eventually the mindless masses (yes, that is what we are to politicians) will believe it.
The earth has experienced "climate Change" for billions or hundreds of millions of years, and these changes occur over hundreds and/or thousands and/or tens of thousands of years. The Middle Ages Warming period (800 A.D. - 1300 A.D.) and every other prior Warming Period must have an anthropogenic cause, right!!! Must have been all the fossil fuels to heat the caves and mud huts, along with the gas powered oxen. Lastly, the "little Ice Age" (1400 A.D. - 1850 A.D.) must also have been due to global warming, as any weather related event is now being shoved down our throats as global warming. There is no end to the insults being fed to us individuals.
Follow the Money ...
Posted by Ray Aronson on April 12,2010 | 05:41 PM
Dr. Johnson, the point is that the Climategate people were at the apex of their scientific field, supposedly the best and brightest (and most honest?) in meteorology, telling us we need sweeping carbon emissions reduction legislation.
And since global warming has not occurred over the last decade (not what the Climategate people who agree with you said), your statement that it's a big problem rings hollow. Besides, with any global warming (by solar flux), the surface of the ocean is heated for the formation of more cooling clouds.
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on March 26,2010 | 07:05 PM
Were there 6 polar bear hides on the rack in the picture? I know that the natives are allowed to shoot polar bears, but that seems like an excessive number
Posted by Janet McCormick on March 18,2010 | 08:19 PM
It is indeed unfortunate and scandalous that several scientists "manipulated" data on maybe 19 documents of various importance. What many readers don't fully realize however, is that there are over 100 peer-reviewed articles published in the US and internationally each month documenting compelling evidence of global warming and its impact. The journals I am referring to include, Science, Nature, American Naturalist, American Scientist, Ecology and Ecology Letters to name a few in addition to Smithsonian. In fact Nature publishing has even begun a new journal to act as a venue for increasing numbers of high-quality global change research manuscripts; it is called Nature Global Change. As a scientist, my assessment of all the work I have seen over the course of 20 years is that global climate change is happening at an increasingly rapid rate and that anthropomorphic causes are highly probable.
Posted by Robert H Johnson PhD on March 18,2010 | 05:42 PM
CAS, the whole point is why did they feel compelled to fudge the data, to fool themselves, is that it? The only reason is that the data didn't, and doesn't, say what they want it to say for their nefarious agenda, very simple.
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on March 16,2010 | 09:48 AM
hay... these guys should go to the east coast of the us and check out how hot it is here!!!
Posted by john on March 15,2010 | 06:44 PM
To infer that climate change is a hoax seems ridiculous to me. The majority of the scientists of the world from all disciplines of science are coming to the same conclusion that the climate is changing. The impact of humanity on our planet is undeniably tremendous. I think a reasonable person could see that trying to organize a hoax of such magnitude and involving so many people is a little farfetched. The hoax is so big that nearly 100 leaders from around the world are fooled and meet to discuss it each year at the climate change summit? To point out some inconsistencies in an evolving set of knowledge is not exactly what one would call hard evidence against the reality of the situation when the pool of evidence is so vast and diffused. It seems to me that the people who have something to loose, such as money from a policy change would be the ones to vehemently deny it. They would be the ones to invest the big money into a propaganda campaign to convince less educated people that it was a hoax. The Smithsonian is a reputable magazine and I thought the article was excellent. It gave a different perspective to an important issue our generation needs to deal with. The reality of the situation is that the legacy of humanity from this and last century may be that we chemically altered the climate. I think it is a shame that I saw so many negative comments related to this article.
Posted by CAS on March 15,2010 | 04:16 PM
Interesting about any global atmospheric warming (actually from temporary solar output increases), the warming causes more evaporation of the ocean which increases the global cloudcover generally, a buffer system, the greater cloudcover which cools the atmosphere back down. The Ice Age was caused by greater cloudcover from a geothermally heated ocean.
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on March 13,2010 | 10:13 PM
While in the Air Force and stationed in St. Louis Mo. from 1957 thru 1958, I was a supporter/contributor to a local AM radio station's promation to purchase a snow mobile for one Chester Noongwook, an Alaskan Eskimo mail-carrier who delivered mail by dog sled. Throught the years I've told that story whenever a relative conversation arose. The March 2010 issue totally floored me and reconfirmed my 50 plus years memory. Its an additional pleasure knowing Mr. Noongwook is still with us as well as seeing his smiling face.
Posted by Anthony Korch on March 13,2010 | 09:25 AM
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