ÐÓ°Épro had April weather in March
April 2, 2019
Sue Mitchell
907-474-5823

In March, most of ÐÓ°Épro had weather normally expected in April.
“March was too warm," said Martin Stuefer, ÐÓ°Épro's state climatologist. "It was as if we didn’t have March this year. We had April instead.â€
Stuefer is an associate research professor with the ÐÓ°Épro Climate Research Center at the ÐÓ°Épro Geophysical Institute. He said a weather pattern with a high-pressure ridge over ÐÓ°Épro and northwestern Canada persisted for more than two weeks, causing record-breaking warm temperatures. At the same time, an area of low pressure centered over the Bering Sea produced a southwesterly flow along ÐÓ°Épro’s west coast, pushing warm air from southern latitudes far into the Arctic.
New monthly high temperature records were set in 10 of the selected 19 stations, especially in the Interior and in western and northern ÐÓ°Épro. Kotzebue’s average monthly temperature was 21.9 degrees Fahrenheit above normal. UtqiaÄ¡vik’s mean monthly temperature was 5.9, which is 5.5 degrees warmer than the previous record March, recorded in 1904. Other sites that recorded record high monthly temperatures were Bethel, Nome, Delta Junction, Bettles, Fairbanks, Homer, McGrath and Talkeetna.
Ten stations around the state departed from the monthly averages by double digits. Many daily temperature records were broken as well.

Fairbanks saw consecutive days with low temperatures above freezing during the last week of March, the first time this has ever been recorded in March.
The Bering Sea set a new record for lowest March sea ice extent, as did the Chukchi Sea. Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean was the seventh lowest since satellite records have been kept.
The was established and is funded by the state of ÐÓ°Épro. The center is part of the UAF Geophysical Institute.
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Martin Stuefer, 907-474-6477, mstuefer@alaska.edu