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What do long-dead whalers have to do with climate change?

U.S. Library of Congress

When the steamship Belvedere left San Francisco in the spring of 1897, its crew members couldn’t have known what a treacherous voyage awaited them. 

Their life-and-death experiences would all be captured in the ship’s log, which started out with this unassuming entry:

“Steamer Belvedere departed San Francisco March 9, 1897. At 3 PM took anchor, steamed to sea with a crew of 44 men, all told, bound to the Arctic Ocean.”

The Belvedere and a dozen or so other ships reached the frozen waters of the Beaufort Sea in the late spring and proceeded to hunt bowhead whales, as whalers had done for decades before them. The whales were valued for their oil-rich blubber and for their baleen, which was used for buggy whips and women’s corsets.

Today, the most valuable harvest from the whaling years might be the ships’ logbooks. A team of scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the University of Washington and the U.K. Meteorological Office’s Hadley Centre are enlisting 22,000 volunteers from around the world to comb through hundreds of thousands of pages of old ships’ logs.

They’re looking for old weather data like this: 

“Made the ice at 3:30 PM. Barometer 29.5. Latitude 60.27 N, Longitude 175.51 E. 106:00 Thermometer 8 above, barometer 29.5.”

Each data point from the ship’s logs — the barometric pressure, temperature, wind direction and location of the ice — is kind of like a piece of a larger climate puzzle. By putting them all together, scientists can look back in time to see what the climate in the Arctic was like in the 1800s and how it compares to the Arctic today. 

For Kevin Wood, one of the lead scientists on the Old Weather project with NOAA and UW, the maritime terminology and high seas adventure preserved in ship logs are familiar territory. Before going back to school to become a climate scientist, Wood was a merchant mariner, frequently navigating icy, dangerous waters. 

“They’re the words I used every day when I was an officer. The language hasn’t changed that much, really. It’s very familiar to me,” Wood said from his office at NOAA in Seattle. 

Does he get sucked down historical rabbit holes in his quest for data? Of course. And he enjoys every minute of it. 

Wood spent a recent weekend combing through the log books from the harrowing voyage of the Belvedere in 1897 (prompted, in part, by a request from a pesky reporter). The Belvedere and six other whaling ships were trapped in the ice in the Beaufort Sea near Point Barrow, Alaska. It had a been a successful summer whaling season, until the weather suddenly turned in late September, and a massive sheet of sea ice came down out of the Arctic Ocean and pinned the ships against the coast. The whalers tried to break through the ice sheet to access open water, according to the ship’s log. 

They were trapped by 10 ship-lengths of ice. That was all that stood between 200 men and a safe journey home.

Credit U.S. Library of Congress
The Rosario, a whaler that was crushed by sea ice at Point Barrow, Alaska, in 1898.

The months ticked by: October, November, December, January. Some of the men were lost on the ice. Some got scurvy. They hunted seals and polar bears when they could. It was dark all the time and so, so cold. The ice cracked and roared around them.

One man had such a terrible case of syphilis and no medicine to treat it that he committed suicide by diving through a hole in the ice.

But somehow, the whalers kept recording weather conditions in the ship’s log. 

Credit U.S. Library of Congress
Whaling crew members trapped in Arctic ice blast a wreck for firewood.

As horrible as it was for the whalers, for Kevin Wood, that winter of log books is a climate data gold mine. This was long before the days of satellite weather analysis and remote data collection. Today, scientists want to better understand historical climate patterns, and while ice cores reveal some of the broader patterns, ship’s logs provide essentially a daily weather update from a particularly remote corner of the planet. 

“It’s filling in a part of the map that’s completely blank. The neat thing is they’re winter observations and early season observations,” Wood said. “So that’s just amazing.”  

The researchers involved in the Old Weather project have not published any of their findings yet. But as Wood gathers more data and re-creates ancient weather patterns with it, one thing is becoming alarmingly clear for him. 

“What’s happening to the whalers is very unlikely to happen now because there’s no ice,” he said.

Amid the musty log books are tales of dozens of ships crushed or sunk throughout the 1800s. NOAA is still uncovering the remnants of those shipwrecks in the Arctic today. But the days of ship-eating sea ice may be over. 

“When you compare ships being crushed in September, you compare that to the satellite data that we have, there’s no ice there, and there’s hardly ever any ice there, and certainly not enough to crush a ship. That’s the difference,” Wood said. 

Back in 1897, though, the climate was working against the whalers of the Belvedere and the other ships that were trapped in the ice that year. Sixteen whalers died.

Credit U.S. Library of Congress
Members of a rescue crew haul supplies to ice-bound whaling ships.

The federal government sent an overland rescue mission to the Belvedere — through the heart of Alaska — in the middle of winter. The sea ice didn’t melt away until the next summer — setting the whalers free to make the journey home, after 10 months in the Arctic. 

But what did they do instead? 

They stayed up there and kept whaling.

EarthFix is a public media partnership of Oregon Public Broadcasting, Idaho Public Television, KCTS9 Seattle, KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio, Northwest Public Radio and Television, Jefferson Public Radio, KLCC and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. It also is an Innovation Trail partner.