As Arctic Warms, Scientists Watch Changes in Environment | Arctic Now

The Toolik Lake field site.

By Kelsey Lindsey

TOOLIK LAKE, Alaska — As Alaska's climate changes, almost every veteran researcher at Toolik Field Station, the Arctic research center just north of the Brooks Range, has a story about lightning.

Linda Deegan, a senior scientist at Woods Hole Research Center in Massachusetts, was enjoying a beer by Toolik Lake when she saw her first strike. She remembers uttering an expletive when she saw it.

ϲappSenior Scientist Ed Rastetter, lead principal investigator for the NSF's Arctic Long Term Ecological Research project, at Toolik Field Station in August. Credit: Kelsey Lindsey
ϲappSenior Scientist Ed Rastetter, lead principal investigator for the NSF's project, at Toolik Field Station in August. Credit: Kelsey Lindsey

Deemed impossible in northern Alaska only 30 years ago, thunderstorms eventually appeared, likely due to rising temperatures. Then came fire. In 2007, a lightning strike sparked , which torched 400 square miles just 20 miles from Toolik. 

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