Scientific American: News In Brief: Long-Standing Betting Contest Reveals Effects of Global Warming: October 26, 2001
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Long-Standing Betting Contest Reveals Effects of Global Warming

tripod setup
Image: Stanford University

Given the heated debate surrounding global warming, you probably won't find many people willing to wager money on its specific effects. That is, unless you live in Nenana, Alaska. For the past 84 years, participants in the Nenana Ice Classic have placed bets on when, exactly, the ice in the nearby Tenana River will melt. A study published today in Science by two Stanford University researchers exploits this unconventional data set to investigate the effects of our changing climate.

Because of the high stakes involved in guessing the correct time for the breakup of the ice (this year's jackpot was $308,000), the scientists assert that the contest's records are quite accurate. Additionally, the location of the tripod on the frozen river (see image) has not changed significantly over the course of the competition, thereby providing consistent statistics. The tripod moves when the melting river ice breaks up, triggering a clock once it moves 100 feet. "Because scientists weren't think about climate change 80 or 90 years ago, it's really important that people kept these data," co-author Raphael Sagarin says.

The scientists determined that the ice breakup now occurs five and a half days earlier than it did in 1917. "Warmer climate would be expected to advance the time of breakup through both thermal (direct melting) and dynamic effects (mechanical forces from upstream drift ice)," they write, "due to thinning ice and increased snowmelt runoff into rivers." The researchers further note that the records from the contest also match well with other climate data available for the area. "These results show that springtime is coming earlier," Sagarin says.

In a related report in the same issue, Josep Pequelas and Iolanda Filella of the Center for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications in Barcelona cite growing evidence that climate change is affecting the annual cycles of plants and animals. The leaves of deciduous plants in both Europe and North America, they report, unfurl some six to 26 days earlier than they did several decades ago, and plant flowering is similarly affected. "All these plant phenological changes are highly correlated with temperature changes," the authors write. The warmer climate also affects animals, they assert, noting that changes in insect flight behavior, frog calling and bird egg-laying and migration have all been detected. -Sarah Graham

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150 Years of Warming (September 11,2000)

Get your ice skates sharpened. At least 150 years of steady global warming in the Northern Hemisphere has dramatically shortened the outdoor rink season, a new study notes. The report, published in the September 8th issue of Science, tracks patterns of freezing and thawing ice between 1846 and 1995. As such, it is one of the largest and longest records of climate data ever assembled.

Limnologist John Magnuson of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a team of 13 scientists compiled data on 39 lakes and rivers across the U.S., Canada, Europe, Russia and Japan by drawing on newspaper archives, transportation ledgers and religious observances. At all but one site, they found evidence of rising temperatures over 150 years, with freezing dates occurring on average 8.7 days later and breaking up dates, 9.8 days earlier. "The importance of these records," Magnuson says, "is that they come from very simple direct human observations, making them difficult to refute."

Magnuson's team at the UW-Madison Center for Limnology plans to continue this work over the course of a decade, building a database of lake and river ice information. Some of their information already dates back much further than 150 years: they know, for instance, when Lake Constance, between Germany and Switzerland, froze back to the 9th century. Whenever it did, a cleric would carry a Madonna figure over the ice from one church to another on the other side.--Kristin Leutwyler