Chicago Sun-Times

Even Alaskans wish extreme cold would just chill

- Doyle Rice

Following the warmest year ever recorded in the USA’s northernmo­st state, a recent bout of hideous cold in Alaska is a bit of a shock to the system.

“I want to leave,” Cynthia Erickson of Tanana, Alaska, told the Associated Press. “My teeth are frozen to my lips.”

In Tanana, the temperatur­e dropped to 54 below zero on Wednesday, the coldest spot in the state.

“It’s just miserable,” Erickson added. “I hate everybody who lives in a warm place.”

Fairbanks dropped to 50 below zero for the first time in five years Wednesday, Anchorage climatolog­ist Brian Brettschni­der said, triggering spooky ice fog across the city. Ice fog occurs when tiny ice particles are suspended in the air when temperatur­es fall lower than about 22 degrees below zero.

It was so cold that schoolkids in Fairbanks this week were forced indoors for recess, he said. When the temperatur­e is colder than 20 degrees below zero in Fairbanks, outdoor recess is canceled, according to the local school district.

And when it dropped to 40 below in Fairbanks, a meteorolog­ist quipped “Celsius or Fahrenheit?,” knowing that it didn’t matter: That’s the one temperatur­e that’s the same on both scales.

The National Weather Service in Fairbanks reported temperatur­es “warmed” Thursday to 38 below zero. Still, that level of extreme cold can ground planes, freeze pipes and keep cars from starting.

Farther south, the 1- below- zero reading in Anchorage on Wednesday made it the coldest day there since January 2012.

The icy chill is the result of an upperlevel low pressure system containing a lot of cold air that is locked into place over western Alaska, Brettschne­ider told Juneau radio station KTOO.

“We’re kind of under the bulls- eye,” he said. “So if you go over to Canada, the Lower 48, even Southeast Alaska, they’re on the warm side of this upper- level low pressure, so as far as they’re concerned, they’re asking why’s it so warm, while we’re over here to the west asking why’s it so cold,” Brettschne­ider said.

As bad as it has been, it can get colder. The USA’s all- time record low temperatur­e of 79.9 degrees below zero was set in Prospect Creek, Alaska, on Jan. 23, 1971.

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