{"id":58775,"date":"2020-02-27T09:36:00","date_gmt":"2020-02-27T18:36:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/river-piracy-strikes-the-yukon\/"},"modified":"2020-02-27T13:41:46","modified_gmt":"2020-02-27T22:41:46","slug":"river-piracy-strikes-the-yukon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/river-piracy-strikes-the-yukon\/","title":{"rendered":"‘River Piracy’ strikes the Yukon"},"content":{"rendered":"
While skiing with two friends on the frozen Yukon River a few weeks ago, I visited the eight people who live between the towns of Eagle and Circle, which are 160 river miles apart.<\/p>\n
The adults in those three households all shared the same observation: The Yukon River’s average level has dropped recently. They all mentioned “river piracy” that happened in an unseen high valley, 500 miles away, as a probable cause.<\/p>\n
These people are among the keenest observers of the river as it enters Alaska.<\/p>\n
They fish for salmon with nets and fishwheels, they drive boats up and down the big river, they walk its muddy banks and they hold their breath during spring flood season.<\/p>\n
Though the river peoples’ views of a shrinking river are not based on hard data, professional hydrologists agree with them.<\/p>\n
The Yukon River measured at Eagle had its lowest annual water flow on record in 2019, with low levels also in 2017 and 2018, according to Crane Johnson, who works for the Alaska-Pacific River Forecast Center in Anchorage.<\/p>\n