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Arctic Ocean Ice Crashes on Alaska Shores (20'high x100'wide ice tsunami)
ap ^ | Jan 27, 2006 | ap

Posted on 01/27/2006 6:22:19 PM PST by RedBloodedAmerican

ANCHORAGE, Alaska Jan 27, 2006 — Ridges of Arctic Ocean sea ice were shoved onto a Barrow road in quantities not seen in nearly three decades.

Two ice surges, known to Alaska Natives as ivus, stunned residents who had never seen large blocks of ice rammed ashore.

"It just looked like a big old mountain of ice," said L.A. Leavitt, 19, who left his nightshift job at the city early Tuesday to check out the ridges.

Ivus are like frozen tsunamis and crash ashore violently. They have killed hunters and are among the Arctic's most feared natural phenomena.

Residents said the northernmost ivu, about 20 feet high and 100 feet long, contained car-size blocks and left coastal Stevenson Road with only one lane.

The ice stopped about 30 feet short of a borough pump station that provides access to Barrow's underground water and sewer system, said North Slope Borough disaster coordinator Rob Elkins.

Strong winds from Russia and eastward currents began pushing pack ice toward Barrow on Saturday, Elkins said.

By late Monday night, thick, old sea ice, called multiyear ice, had shoved younger, thinner ice onto shore.

Elkins, who got a 5 a.m. Tuesday wake-up call from police, said a second ivu on the south side of town came to rest near a smaller coastal road and an empty playground. That ridge stretched about 200 feet.

"It was just an amazing sight," said Elkins, a five-year Barrow resident. "It looks like huge stacks of huge ice cubes."

The ivus, about two miles apart, had stopped moving when Elkins arrived. Bulldozers cleared the ice.

Winds from the west slowed Tuesday afternoon. Whalers also noted that a protective pressure ridge had formed more than a mile offshore.

Whaling captain Charlie Hopson, who coordinates oil spill responses in the area, said he could see blocks of ice churning slowly in the frozen ocean.

Whalers were happy to see the approach of multiyear ice. A solid platform of nearshore ice means safer travel and butchering.

"We always want this thing to happen before the whaling season to help get the ice solid and safe to travel on and then we can pick our way out to the lead," Hopson said.

Whaling co-captain Lloyd Leavitt said he had not seen such a big ivu since 1978, when winds peaked at 80 mph and blocks of multiyear ice about 12 feet thick slid ashore like pancakes from a frying pan.

"It knocked down all the power poles on the beach front, every last one from the Barrow mechanical building to Browerville," he said.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: alaska; algore; globalcooling; globalwarming; globalwarminghoax; ice; iceage; tsunami
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To: Burt13
We only had to go Barrow a couple of times, but out on the flats when your setting up for final leg for landing, you could see a couple of old fashion style drill rigs.

Normally we'd just go to Deadhorse on the old Arco charter.

What kind of job took you to Barrow?

Welcome to FR!
101 posted on 01/31/2006 6:41:33 AM PST by Issaquahking (Islam refusing to accept responsibility for it's renegades, we are speeding their meeting with Allah)
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To: Issaquahking

I worked for the National Weather Service (still do but moved far, far south).

I never saw those. It seems every time we flew back in there from an Anchorage or Fairbanks sanity break the ceilings were about 100 feet. Any idea how far inland they were?


102 posted on 02/18/2006 3:48:51 AM PST by Burt13
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