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Melting Sea Ice May Mean the End of Driftwood in Iceland

Justin Rowell by Justin Rowell
29.09.2022
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Logs, sticks, and branches that washed up on the shores of Iceland are piled on a beach.

When the Vikings first arrived and colonized Iceland in the 9th century, much of the wood they used to build their houses and longboats did not come from trees growing on the island. Lands in the far north lack trees suitable for human settlement activities, the trees being too small and sparse to use in construction.

The early settlers of Iceland used driftwood that, like them, floated across the ocean.

Instead, the early settlers of Iceland used wood that, like them, floated across the ocean.

A recent study published in Global and Planetary Change has reported that much of Iceland’s driftwood originates from far across the Arctic Ocean, from felled trees in Russia’s central Siberian region that make a multiyear journey thousands of kilometers long, made possible only by sea ice. Arctic driftwood was essential to Norse settlement and expansion and a vital part of Icelandic history.

“It’s a cultural thing,” said Ólafur Eggertsson, a research scientist for the Icelandic Forest Service and a coauthor of the study. “If it hadn’t been for the driftwood, people would have just not survived in Iceland.”

However, the time of Icelandic driftwood may soon be coming to an end. The new research showed an abrupt decline in driftwood since the 1980s and predicts, based on sea ice loss simulations, that by 2060 driftwood will no longer arrive at Iceland—yet another casualty of climate change and warming oceans.

“The take-home message [of] the paper is expected and has a value of providing a very clear signpost of what sea ice melt means for this material to be transported in the Arctic,” said Marc Macias-Fauria, a University of Oxford ecologist who focuses on cold environments and was not involved in the study.

A Long, Strange Trip

Ólafur Eggertsson examines a piece of driftwood in Reykjanes, Iceland.Ólafur Eggertsson, a researcher with the Icelandic Forest Service, examines a piece of driftwood in Reykjanes, Iceland. Credit: Richard Sima

Trekking along Iceland’s remote, nigh uninhabited northeastern coast, the researchers used a chainsaw to collect 289 samples of Arctic driftwood, an effort that first started during Eggertsson’s Ph.D. studies. They made their first trek in 1989 and returned 30 years later in 2019.

Under a microscope, the international team of researchers identified the species of trees the driftwood samples came from: Scots pine, larch, and spruce. By analyzing the tree rings of the samples, they also were able to determine their provenance by comparing them with Eurasian tree ring records, ultimately finding matches for 73% of the samples to trees from Siberia.

They also were able to determine that 83% of the driftwood samples came from trees felled by logging, while the remaining 17% still had parts of their roots intact, indicating they fell naturally before being carried by river out into the Arctic Ocean.

“Sea ice is a conveyor belt that basically enables the Arctic to be quite connected, even though it’s basically an ocean.”

Floating on open water, wood eventually gets waterlogged and sinks in approximately 10 months, according to previous research. But the Arctic Ocean goes through cycles of freezing and thawing, with ice forming around the fallen timber, allowing it to drift along in the ice without soaking up water.

The timber is finally released when the ice melts again, and can get washed up on a (fairly) nearby shore as driftwood.

“Sea ice is a conveyor belt that basically enables the Arctic to be quite connected, even though it’s basically an ocean,” said Macias-Fauria.

A Warming Sea, Loss of Ice, and Dearth of Driftwood

But this conveyor belt may soon be broken, and already it appears to be slowing down.

There has been a precipitous decline in the amount of driftwood arriving at Iceland from across the Arctic Ocean. In the samples, 80% had tree rings dating to between 1922 and 1976, while 14 trees stopped growing in the 1980s. Only three samples dated to afterward.

The contracting sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, driven by anthropogenic climate change, is likely to blame. With less ice, the driftwood is more likely to sink before it can make it to shore.

Víðimýrarkirkja (Vidimyri Church) in Iceland is about as green a building as you can get. Built in 1834 with turf and driftwood, still in use. pic.twitter.com/jfSX9VSSOV

— Wrath Of Gnon (@wrathofgnon) February 19, 2018

And the loss of sea ice is likely to continue given the predicted warming yet to occur, leading to a collapse of driftwood supply first in Iceland and then in other timber-poor northern regions such as Greenland and Svalbard. Simulations based on global climate models indicate that by 2060, no more driftwood will successfully complete the journey to Iceland.

Though driftwood is no longer as important a source of lumber, Icelandic people still use it for buildings and sculptures and as a source of income, Eggertsson said. They also use it to restore old churches originally made with driftwood.

Losing driftwood would mean losing an important part of Icelandic history and culture beneath the surf.

—Richard Sima (@richardsima), Science Writer

Citation: Sima, R. (2022), Melting sea ice may mean the end of driftwood in Iceland, Eos, 103, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EO220403. Published on 25 August 2022.

Text © 2022. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.


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