Wading into the icy Yukon River for science

A woman stands in a river with ice chunks on its banks while another woman watches from the bank.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Heather Best (in water), a U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist, prepares to toss a road-grader blade with a river-measuring device attached into the Yukon River near Eagle, ֱֻ. USGS hydrologic technician Liz Richards watches for icebergs.

EAGLE, ALASKA — Snow geese flew in a ragged V overhead, rasping as they looked down upon ֱֻ’s bumpy face for the first time in 2022. 

Nine hundred feet below, the Yukon River flowed by quietly, except for the dull thuds of icebergs skidding along the river bottom near the shore.

Sensing a break in the ice traffic, U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist Heather Best — wearing chest waders with a hole she would soon discover — stepped into the river. In both hands, she held a 3-foot portion of grader blade. Running along the blade was river-measuring tube secured by hose clamps.

That hunk of steel held the business end of a device Best and others use to measure the flow of the Yukon River at Eagle, a town of about 110 people just downstream of the Canada border. 

A few days earlier, ice formed by the cold air of winter had knocked the river-measuring instrument offline. During river breakup at Eagle, rising meltwater lifted a sheet of ice that had been in place most of the winter. 

Brown water then ferried immense shards of ice downstream at about 5 miles per hour. Some of it crashed into the bank on an outer river bend just down from Eagle. Those icebergs ripped the river-measuring hose from the shore where it entered the river, shearing it in a few places.

A woman in chest waders pulls a cable from silty river, where chunks of ice float by. In the background are riverbank cliffs and, in the distance, snow-capped mountains.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Liz Richards, a USGS hydrologic technician, pulls an anchor attached to a river-level measuring device from the Yukon River just downstream of Eagle, ֱֻ.

Best and USGS hydrologic technician Liz Richards had driven from their office in Fairbanks to see if they could fix the instrument. They stopped at other waterways during the 10-hour journey, to see if stream information being sent to the internet was accurate and fix things that got dinged up as winter’s ice turned to water.

On the shoreline of the Yukon River, after an hour’s work that included scrambling over ice chunks large as pickups, Best and Richards had spliced the measuring tube where the ice severed it. They reattached it to the grader blade. Then came the trickiest part — the redeployment of the tube beneath the surface of the Yukon.

Trying to keep her time immersed in ice water to a minimum, Best sidestepped out on rocks she couldn’t see beneath the surface. Once the river reached the belt around her waist, she stopped.

Best heaved the grader blade as far as she could into the water. She then retreated toward the shore.

“Nice work,” Richards said from a sliver of gravel shoreline in front of a pile of ice.

“I hope it’s deep enough,” Best said.

The submerged end of a hose would release bubbles of nitrogen into the river in a complicated, somewhat magical system that converts sensed water pressure at the opening of the underwater hose to river depth. 

Best said the underwater end had to be deep enough to stay submerged in the coming weeks. If not, she or someone else would have to come back in midsummer, after the river level dropped, to throw the grader blade a little deeper.

“We need it to be at least 4 feet deep,” she said.

Carrying bits of broken hose and a cardboard box of equipment and tools, Best and Richards toed into a steep slope, reaching a small cedar cabin on a grassy bench near the National Park Service field station in Eagle.

Inside the structure were the plastic pipes, glass bulbs and nitrogen tanks that make up the “Conoflow gas-purge system,” a staple of USGS river-and-stream measuring sites around the country.

After a little fiddling with the system, Best had good news.

A map of ֱֻ shows the location of the town of Eagle, near the border with Canada, and the course of the Yukon River through the state.
Image by UAF Geophysical Institute
A map shows the location of the town of Eagle, near the border with Canada, and the course of the Yukon River.

“It looks like it’s in 5 feet of water,” she said.

“Yay,” Richards said.

The women then tidied the little shelter. Best shut the door and padlocked it, and the pair walked to their car, which would take them a few hundred feet to their room with a view of the big river. They would drive out of Eagle on the Taylor Highway the next day, doing a bit more fieldwork on the way home.

As for the town of Eagle, the geese kept passing over in mixed flocks, songbirds flooded the local aspens and people mentioned seeing the first returning swallows. 

The river, almost free of ice but soon to swell with meltwater from winter’s snow still in the mountains of Canada and ֱֻ, once again had its level visible to people far from Eagle, on the USGS website at .

Since the late 1970s, the ֱֻ Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.