November 16, 2025
  • Hartford
  • Bridgeport
  • New Haven
  • Stamford
  • UConn
  • Login
  • Register
CT News Buzz Logo
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Local News
  • Weather
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Health & Wellness
  • Entertainment & Lifestyle
  • Crime & Public Safety
No Result
View All Result
CT News Buzz Logo
  • Local News
  • Weather
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Health & Wellness
  • Entertainment & Lifestyle
  • Crime & Public Safety
CT News Buzz Logo
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT

UConn Professor Uses Thoreau’s River Records to Trace Climate Change Through Shifting Seasons

May 9, 2025
in Education, CT News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
Thoreau river records, UConn phenology study, Robert Thorson, climate change New England, historical climate data

UConn’s Robert Thorson uses Henry David Thoreau’s detailed 1850s river records to track seasonal shifts and build a phenological baseline for climate change in New England.

ADVERTISEMENT
Share on FacebookShare to LinkedInShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on Reddit

STORRS, CT — Henry David Thoreau didn’t just walk the woods—he tracked the river like a scientist, season by season, year by year.

Now, UConn Professor Robert Thorson is turning Thoreau’s meticulous 1850s river logs into a data tool to measure climate change in New England.

“I don’t pick Thoreau for his philosophy, he’s just a damn good observer,” Thorson said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Published in The Concord Saunterer, Thorson’s new paper analyzes more than 6,000 of Thoreau’s dated entries, using them to define ten specific “river seasons” based on physical phenomena like freeze-up, breakup, drought, and aquatic spring. These weren’t marked by calendar months, but by exact environmental cues Thoreau witnessed while walking, boating, and skating across 50 square miles around Concord, Massachusetts.

Thorson sees this work as a bridge between historical and modern data.

His goal: use Thoreau’s journal as a 19th-century phenology baseline, then compare it to today’s river patterns using U.S. Geological Survey discharge records.

“From these observations, we can establish the timings of discrete phenomena from the mid-19th century using simple statistics,” Thorson said.

The records show stark contrasts.

Thoreau once described skating 60 miles on frozen rivers and measuring two-foot-thick ice floes—conditions almost unimaginable in today’s warmer winters. “Now the river hardly freezes at all,” Thorson said.

Phenology—the timing of natural events—offers powerful insight into shifting climate. Thorson says people often miss these changes unless they directly disrupt human life. But river ice breakup, disappearing snow, or sudden seasonal shifts offer personal, visible markers.

“Breakup is the most instantaneous and dramatic point in the entire year,” Thorson said. “You can read dry numerical facts about how New England’s nighttime average temperatures have risen… But when you make climate change dramatic, as with a bridge being torn apart by a spring freshet, that’s a phenomenon associated with emotion.”

Thorson’s hope is that readers—and future collaborators—will recognize Thoreau’s journals not just as literature, but as a scientific goldmine: a two-million-word environmental dataset that still speaks, season by season, to what we’re losing.

You May Also Be Interested In…

UConn Gilman Scholarship, study abroad scholarship, UConn global education

Record 31 UConn Students Awarded Gilman Scholarships for Global Study

UConn golf transfer, Kai-Jun Huang, UConn men’s golf 2025

UConn Men’s Golf Adds Transfer Kai-Jun Huang for 2025-26 Season

Tags: UConn
Share250Share44Tweet156Pin56Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

UConn Research Redefines Music as Brain Resonance, Not Just Pattern Prediction

Next Post

Winsted Woman Now Facing 40 Animal Cruelty Charges Across Three Connecticut Cities

K.M. Martinez

K.M. Martinez

KM Martinez is a politics and governance journalist. She has served in government and writes for media outlets in both the Philippines and the United States. Off deadline, she studies Nihongo and explores libraries, archives, and museums.

Related Posts

Record 31 UConn Students Awarded Gilman Scholarships for Global Study

UConn Gilman Scholarship, study abroad scholarship, UConn global education

STORRS, CT — UConn has set a new institutional record with 31 students earning Gilman Scholarships in the most recent...

Read moreDetails

UConn Men’s Golf Adds Transfer Kai-Jun Huang for 2025-26 Season

UConn golf transfer, Kai-Jun Huang, UConn men’s golf 2025

STORRS, CT — UConn men’s golf continues its strategic roster build with the addition of Kai-Jun Huang, a transfer from...

Read moreDetails

Four UConn Athletes Qualify for NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships

UConn track and field, NCAA Outdoor Championships, UConn NCAA qualifiers

STORRS, CT — UConn’s track and field contingent will send four athletes to the national stage following a strong showing...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Sarah Smolak, animal cruelty charges, Winsted animal neglect, Norwalk dog abuse, Connecticut animal welfare

Winsted Woman Now Facing 40 Animal Cruelty Charges Across Three Connecticut Cities

Pope Leo XIV, first American pope, Fairfield County Catholics, Sacred Heart University, Catholic Church leadership

Fairfield Catholics Celebrate Historic Election of First American Pope

Bridgeport school budget, Connecticut education funding, student protest Hartford, teacher layoffs Bridgeport, special education funding

Bridgeport Students Plead for Aid at Capitol as $30M School Budget Crisis Deepens

TOP 5 CT NEWS THIS WEEK

Connecticut’s First Level99 Set to Transform West Hartford Retail Space

Connecticut Level99 • Level99 West Hartford • West Hartford attractions • Corbin Collection gaming venue

WEST HARTFORD, CT — Work has officially begun on Level99, a large-scale social gaming venue set to open in late...

Read moreDetails

Connecticut Flags Lowered to Half-Staff in Honor of Pope Francis

CT flags half-staff, Pope Francis death, Governor Lamont announcement

Hartford, CT — Governor Ned Lamont has ordered all U.S. and state flags in Connecticut to be flown at half-staff...

Read moreDetails

Fire Destroys Multiple Units at River Run Condos in New Hartford

New Hartford condo fire, River Run Condos fire, Main Street structure fire

New Hartford, CT — A fire tore through a condominium complex in New Hartford on Saturday morning, destroying at least...

Read moreDetails

Bridgeport DTC Member Arrested After Assault on Firefighter

Bridgeport DTC Member Arrested After Assault on Firefighter

Tony Barr, a member of the Bridgeport Democratic Town Committee (DTC), was arrested early Saturday morning following an altercation with...

Read moreDetails

Trump Rally Shooter Identified as 20-Year-Old Thomas Matthew Crooks

A 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks. with glasses and a gray shirt is in a portrait-style photo. In the bottom right corner, there is a small image Former President Donald trump bleeding.

In a tragic incident that has shocked the nation, Thomas Matthew Crooks, a 20-year-old from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, has been...

Read moreDetails
  • Latest News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2024 CT News Buzz - Your Daily News Buzz | Designed by: KDigitalStudios | Hosted by: KDigitalHosting.
-----
CTNewsBuzz offers news recaps and commentary based on public sources. We cite when relevant and don’t claim original reporting unless noted.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Local News
  • Weather
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Health & Wellness
  • Entertainment & Lifestyle
  • Crime & Public Safety
  • About Us
  • Subscribe

© 2024 CT News Buzz - Your Daily News Buzz | Designed by: KDigitalStudios | Hosted by: KDigitalHosting.
-----
CTNewsBuzz offers news recaps and commentary based on public sources. We cite when relevant and don’t claim original reporting unless noted.

This website uses cookies. No, not the delicious, gooey kind you dip in milk. We're talking about the virtual ones that make your online experience smoother. To find out more about the cookies we use, see our Privacy and Cookie Policy.