Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Two Dan Sullivans Walk Into a Ballot — Alaska's Constitutional Crisis

Alaska Election Law · June 2026

Two Dan Sullivans Walk Into a Ballot — Alaska's Constitutional Collision

A retired schoolteacher from Petersburg just forced a confrontation between the First Amendment, the U.S. Constitution's qualifications clauses, and the limits of state election authority.

On June 15, 2026, Alaska's Division of Elections Director Carol Beecher made it official: Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg could not appear on the August 18 primary ballot to challenge incumbent U.S. Senator Dan S. Sullivan. The stated reason — his candidacy was not filed in good faith but rather to confuse voters.

The same day, Alaska's Legislative Affairs Agency delivered a five-page legal memorandum to Representative Andrew Gray reaching the opposite conclusion: the Lieutenant Governor was likely not legally justified in the rejection. The collision between those two positions opens one of the most genuinely novel ballot-access questions in recent American election law.

The Three Constitutional Qualifications — and Why They're a Hard Ceiling

Start with bedrock. The U.S. Constitution sets exactly three qualifications to serve in the Senate: a candidate must be at least 30 years old, a citizen for at least nine years, and an inhabitant of the state they seek to represent when elected. Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg appears to meet all three.

The Framers intended the Constitution to be the exclusive source of qualifications for Members of Congress, and the Framers thereby divested States of any power to add qualifications.

— U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton, 514 U.S. 779 (1995)

This is the constitutional wall the Lieutenant Governor's office had to scale. In U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton, the Supreme Court was unambiguous: states cannot supplement the Constitution's exclusive list. A "good faith intention to serve" requirement, however reasonable it sounds, adds a fourth qualification — and that addition is precisely what Thornton forbids.

What the Legislative Memo Actually Found

The memo, authored by Legislative Counsel Andrew Dunmire, answered four distinct questions. On each one, the analysis pointed the same direction.

Authority to investigate motives

The Lieutenant Governor has a general mandate under Alaska statute to administer state election laws — but that mandate does not authorize probing why someone wants to run for office. A person's motivation to seek a Congressional seat is simply not a "qualification" reviewable under state law. The division's own recent litigation confirmed this: in 2024, when facing a challenge to federal inmate Eric Hafner's candidacy for Alaska's Congressional seat, the state's own lawyers argued before a court that candidates cannot be removed from the ballot because they "may not — or even probably will not — qualify." Only actual disqualification under the three constitutional tests suffices.

Authority to compel oath testimony

No Alaska statute or regulation expressly grants the Lieutenant Governor the power to require a candidate to answer questions under oath before receiving ballot access. The regulation cited — 6 AAC 25.260 — limits the director's review to candidate qualifications as stated in the declaration of candidacy. It does not extend to investigations of political motive.

Can the state bar Sullivan for refusing to answer?

The memo's answer here is the sharpest: because the U.S. Constitution is supreme over any state administrative regulation, no regulation can deny a constitutionally qualified candidate ballot access. If Sullivan meets the three constitutional tests, his refusal to submit to a sworn interrogation about his motives cannot disqualify him.

The ballot confusion regulation

The Division cited 6 AAC 25.212, which prohibits placing a candidate's name on the ballot "in a manner that is confusing or misleading to voters." The memo reads the plain language carefully: the regulation governs how a name appears, not whether it appears at all. A ballot that lists "Dan J. Sullivan (non-incumbent)" alongside "Dan S. Sullivan (incumbent)" complies with the regulation entirely. Total exclusion is not what the regulation requires — and invoking it to justify exclusion exceeds what the regulation actually says.

The Murkowski-Miller Precedent Next Door

Alaska's own courts have charted the relevant territory. In Miller v. Treadwell, 245 P.3d 867 (Alaska 2010), the Alaska Supreme Court upheld the counting of write-in ballots for Lisa Murkowski that contained misspellings, phonetic variations, and other deviations from her legal name. The court's governing principle was explicit: voter intent is paramount, and election statutes are designed to include votes rather than exclude them.

The parallel to the Sullivan situation is direct. If Alaska courts will not disenfranchise voters over a misspelled write-in candidate's name, the same logic supports ballot design solutions — middle initials, incumbent designation — over the exclusion of an otherwise qualified candidate. The same Division of Elections that Beecher now leads used exactly this inclusive philosophy to defend counting Murkowski's contested ballots in 2010.

Where the Sincerity Argument Has Real Traction — and Where It Breaks Down

The case against the challenger is not legally frivolous. The Division assembled genuinely damning circumstantial evidence: Sullivan had never registered under the name "Dan Sullivan" before filing; he initially asked to appear on the ballot as "Dan S. Sullivan" — borrowing the incumbent's middle initial; he registered Republican two days before filing; and his campaign consultant had previously worked for and donated to Democrats including Mary Peltola, the incumbent's main challenger in the general election.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly acknowledged that states have a legitimate interest — "if not a duty" — to protect the integrity of their electoral processes from fraudulent candidacies. That language gives the state a genuine hook. This isn't a coincidental name collision; the evidence points toward a coordinated spoiler scheme.

Tension 1 — Fraud vs. Added Qualification

The state frames this as fraud prevention. The challenger's lawyers frame it as a fourth qualification — sincerity — that Thornton forbids. Both framings are legally coherent. A court must choose which lens controls.

Tension 2 — The Least Restrictive Means Problem

Even granting the state a compelling interest in preventing ballot confusion, complete exclusion fails if a less restrictive remedy — incumbent labeling, middle initials — achieves the same goal. Courts applying the Anderson-Burdick balancing test weigh the magnitude of the burden against the necessity of the means.

Tension 3 — Mind-Reading by Administrative Fiat

Beecher's determination rested on a preponderance standard applied to circumstantial evidence, with no cross-examination and a 30-day appeal window before ballots print. Conditioning ballot access on an official's judgment about a candidate's private political motivations raises serious First Amendment and due process concerns that courts have historically been reluctant to sanction.

The Supreme Court struck down an Indiana law requiring candidates to swear they did not advocate violent government overthrow, holding the state cannot condition ballot access on a loyalty oath about future conduct. Demanding proof of present sincere intent is arguably more intrusive — it requires the government not merely to police conduct but to adjudicate a candidate's inner mental state.

The Novel Ground This Case Requires

For the exclusion to survive judicial review, a court would need to find all three of the following simultaneously: first, that the "fraudulent candidacy" exception is broad enough to cover deliberate ballot-confusion schemes — not just technically unqualified candidates; second, that this fraud exception operates outside the U.S. Term Limits framework, meaning it functions as a fraud remedy rather than an added qualification; and third, that the evidentiary standard applied — preponderance based on circumstantial motive evidence in an administrative proceeding — satisfies constitutional due process.

Each step is arguable. None is settled law.

Bottom Line Legal Assessment

The sincerity argument is the state's only viable path to outright exclusion — but it is a path that requires courts to break new constitutional ground at every step. The least restrictive means doctrine remains a formidable wall even if the fraud argument is accepted: better ballot design solves the voter confusion problem without raising the constitutional costs of exclusion. The Legislative Counsel's conclusion — that the Lieutenant Governor was "likely" not legally justified — reflects exactly this calculus. The word "likely" is doing real work. This is genuinely close, but the weight of precedent from Thornton, Treadwell, and the Supreme Court's consistent skepticism of mental-state tests for candidates all point the same direction: toward the ballot, with better labeling, not away from it.

What Happens Next

Sullivan has 30 days to appeal Beecher's determination. Ballots are scheduled to print June 28. That timeline compresses any judicial review to days, not weeks — which means a court would need to move with unusual speed, and any preliminary injunction ruling would effectively decide the question before full merits briefing is possible.

The parallel FEC investigation into whether federal campaign finance laws were violated in coordinating the challenger's candidacy runs on a separate track entirely. Even if Sullivan prevails legally and appears on the ballot, evidence of coordination with Democratic operatives could expose those involved to federal liability — a consequence the ballot-access constitutional framework does nothing to prevent.

Alaska has always had a talent for producing election law that the rest of the country eventually has to reckon with. The 2010 Murkowski write-in victory reshaped how courts think about voter intent and ballot counting. The 2026 Sullivan name collision may do the same for the limits of state authority to police candidate motive — whether the answer ultimately vindicates the Division's instinct to protect electoral integrity or the Constitution's insistence that qualified candidates belong on the ballot.

Legal analysis prepared June 17, 2026 · Based on Alaska Legislative Affairs Agency Memorandum 26-190.lei · Miller v. Treadwell, 245 P.3d 867 (Alaska 2010) · U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton, 514 U.S. 779 (1995) · Alaska Democratic Party v. Beecher, 572 P.3d 556 (Alaska 2025)

The Awakening — Thomas Lamb
The Gradient Series · Post Three
The Awakening

El Niño is not new. What is new is the system it is expressing itself within.

On June 16, 2026, meteorologist Jeff Berardelli posted a weather map showing a heat dome settling over southern Europe. Temperatures reaching 43°C across Sevilla, Madrid, Paris, Milan, Rome. The jet stream visible on the map as a sweeping meridional wave — looping far north over the Atlantic then plunging south around the stalled warm air mass beneath it.

His caption: Here we go again.

That map is a precise illustration of what this series calls the awakening. Not because the event is unprecedented. But because it is becoming the norm.

El Niño Is Not New

El Niño is a natural oscillation of the Pacific Ocean that has operated for millions of years, long before any human influence on the atmosphere. During an El Niño phase warm water that normally sits in the western Pacific spreads eastward across the tropical Pacific. Trade winds weaken. Cold upwelling off the South American coast is suppressed. The eastern Pacific surface warms significantly.

The atmospheric response is well documented. El Niño shifts the jet stream into a more meridional configuration over the Atlantic and Europe. It amplifies warm air mass dominance at mid-latitudes. It reduces the organized cold air mass formation that drives the baroclinic storm systems described in the previous post.

None of this is new. El Niño has always done this.

The awakening is not El Niño doing something different. It is El Niño doing what it has always done — in a system that has less capacity to correct.

The Jet Stream Signal

The jet stream on the June 16 map is not running in a tight organized west-to-east band. It is buckled into a deep meridional wave — looping north and south rather than tracking predictably across the Atlantic. The warm air mass beneath it is not being disrupted by organized shear. It is sitting. Stalling. Producing a heat dome across southern Europe.

This behavior has a documented basis in the observational record. Research by Francis and Vavrus found approximately a 10% decrease in hemisphere-mean mid-latitude zonal winds at 500 hPa during fall since 1979, as the reduced pole-to-equator temperature gradient slows west-to-east flow and increases wave amplitude. Related work from the University of Reading documents approximately 15% weakening in storm track activity and eddy kinetic energy in some sectors since the late 1970s.

Importantly the more consistent signal in the literature is not simply slower winds but increased waviness and slower wave progression — Rossby waves that meander further north and south and take longer to move through. The practical consequence is weather systems that stall rather than track. Heat domes that persist for weeks. Cold outbreaks that extend further south and linger. Blocking patterns that would historically have broken up within days remaining in place for weeks.

The underlying mechanism is well established even where precise quantification is debated: as the Arctic warms roughly three to four times faster than the global average — Arctic amplification — the thermal gradient driving the jet stream weakens, and the jet stream's organizing energy diminishes.

Jet Stream & Cold Lens — Observational Record
Mid-latitude zonal wind decrease (fall, since 1979)
~10%
Francis & Vavrus / IOP Science
Storm track & eddy kinetic energy weakening
~15%
Univ. of Reading / met.reading.ac.uk
Arctic warming rate vs global average
3–4x faster
IPCC AR6 / NOAA
Arctic sea ice volume loss since 1979
~75%
NSIDC satellite record
Current ENSO state
El Niño active
NOAA June 2026
What The Cold Lens Provided

The previous post described the cold lens as the source material for cold core storm systems — the pool of cold Arctic air that served as the cold wedge driving baroclinic instability. There is a direct relationship between that cold lens and the corrective capacity of La Niña.

La Niña restores cold upwelling in the eastern Pacific, strengthens trade winds, and reasserts the thermal contrast that organizes the jet stream. During the Holocene calm, when the cold lens was intact and robust, La Niña had sufficient cold source material to mount that correction fully. The oscillation between El Niño and La Niña was roughly balanced.

As the cold lens retreats, the source material for cold correction weakens. La Niña events are becoming shorter in duration and less complete in their restoration of thermal contrast. The oscillation is losing its symmetry. El Niño conditions are becoming more persistent relative to the corrective La Niña phase.

The planet is not doing something new. The balance between its natural systems is shifting.

Three Converging Signals

The awakening in the observational record is defined by three converging signals.

The cold lens is measurably retreating. Arctic sea ice volume is down roughly 75% since satellite records began. Greenland is losing mass at an accelerating rate. Permafrost is thawing across Siberia and Alaska. These are measurements not projections.

The jet stream is measurably weakening and becoming wavier. Mid-latitude zonal winds have weakened and storm track activity has declined. Blocking events are increasing in frequency and duration. The meridional wave visible on the June 16 heat dome map is not an anomaly — it is the observable expression of a weakening thermal gradient.

El Niño is expressing itself within a system of diminished corrective capacity. The current El Niño is amplifying warm air mass dominance across mid-latitudes in ways consistent with reduced cold lens corrective capacity.

The heat dome over Europe on June 18, 2026 is not simply a weather event. It is the signature of a planetary system rebalancing — the same natural system that drowned Beringia and stabilized the Holocene, expressing itself now with less corrective capacity than at any point in the past 11,000 years.

What This Post Does Not Claim

The awakening described here is a natural planetary rebalancing. El Niño predates human civilization entirely. The jet stream waviness documented in the literature has precedents in earlier centuries. The directional trend — weaker gradient producing a wavier slower jet stream amplifying warm air mass dominance — is robust in observations and models, even where the precise attribution and rate remain areas of active research.

Why the corrective capacity of the cold lens is weakening — and what is driving the thermal imbalance that underlies it — is the subject of the next post.

Previous The Cold Lens
Next The Furnace Below — the heat source the models are missing
The Cold Lens — Thomas Lamb
The Gradient Series · Post Two
The Cold Lens

After the cataclysm the Earth found equilibrium. What maintained that stability — and what it made possible.

The previous post established what this planet is capable of on its own terms: an entire continent submerged within 2,000 years, driven by nothing more than the convergence of orbital mechanics and an ice system fully loaded after 50,000 years of accumulation.

But that cataclysm ended. The planet calmed. And the stability that followed is the reason human civilization exists at all.

Understanding what produced that stability — and what maintained it — is the subject of this post.

The Holocene

By roughly 11,000 years ago the great meltwater pulses had largely spent themselves. The Laurentide and Fennoscandian ice sheets had discharged the bulk of their accumulated mass. Sea level rise decelerated sharply — from meters per century to centimeters per century. The planet entered what geologists call the Holocene epoch: a period of relative climatic stability that has now lasted approximately 11,700 years.

By geological standards this is a remarkably long calm. In the 800,000 years of ice core records we can read, periods of stability comparable to the Holocene are unusual. They are the exception between glacial cycles, not the rule.

What produced and sustained this particular calm comes down to a single physical reality: the cold lens.

What The Cold Lens Actually Is

The cold lens is not one thing. It is a system of interconnected cold surfaces and cold water masses that together anchor the planet's thermal gradient — the temperature difference between the poles and the equator that drives all weather, all ocean circulation, and all atmospheric organization.

Its components are Arctic sea ice, the Greenland ice sheet, Antarctic sea ice and the Antarctic ice sheet, high-altitude mountain glaciers, the permafrost layer across Siberia, Alaska, and Canada, and the deep cold water masses formed when dense cold polar water sinks and spreads along the seafloor.

Each component contributes differently. The ice sheets and sea ice reflect incoming solar radiation back into space rather than absorbing it as heat. The permafrost layer locks away carbon accumulated over millennia. The deep cold water masses provide enormous thermal inertia — a vast reservoir that moderates surface warming over centuries. Together they maintain cold temperatures at high latitudes and sustain the temperature contrast between poles and equator.

The cold lens is not decoration on a warm planet. It is the mechanism by which the planet regulates itself.

The Cold Lens And Storm Violence

To understand what the cold lens does for weather, it helps to understand the two fundamental types of storm systems.

The first is the warm core system — the tropical cyclone and hurricane. These draw their energy from warm sea surface temperatures. They are symmetric, powerful, and entirely dependent on the heat of the ocean surface beneath them. They are not gradient dependent — they are temperature dependent.

The second is the cold core system — the extratropical cyclone, the nor'easter, the bomb cyclone. These draw their energy from something fundamentally different: the collision of air masses with sharply contrasting temperatures. A cold Arctic air mass undercuts a warm air mass, cold air pushes aloft, and the resulting instability organizes into a violent frontal storm system. The technical term is baroclinic instability — the atmosphere converting thermal contrast directly into kinetic storm energy.

The cold lens was the physical source material for these cold core systems. It maintained the pool of cold dense Arctic air that served as the cold wedge. It kept cold air aloft at high latitudes. The sharper and more extensive the cold lens, the more extreme the contrast available when Arctic air masses collided with warm mid-latitude air — and the more violent the resulting storms.

The cold lens drove the thermal gradient. The gradient drove the violence. The violence was organized, directional, and predictable enough that civilizations built themselves around it.

Monsoons ran on schedule. Storm seasons had defined timing. Even the most violent weather systems tracked along reliable corridors. This organized violence was the atmospheric expression of a functioning thermal gradient anchored by an intact cold lens.

Holocene duration so far ~11,700 years
Arctic sea ice summer extent (1980s) ~7 million km²
Arctic sea ice summer extent (2025) 4.18 million km²
Greenland ice loss per year ~280 billion tonnes
Carbon stored in permafrost ~1,500 petagrams
The Lens Is Shrinking

Arctic sea ice summer extent has declined by roughly 40% since satellite measurements began in 1979. Greenland is losing ice mass at an accelerating rate. Antarctic sea ice reached its lowest recorded extent in 2023. Mountain glaciers worldwide are in broad retreat. The permafrost active layer is deepening across Siberia and Alaska.

These are measurements, not projections.

As surface ice retreats the cold lens loses its geographic extent. Less reflective surface means more solar absorption. Less cold air mass formation means less source material for the cold wedge that drives baroclinic storm systems. The thermal gradient that organized Holocene weather is moderating — not uniformly or linearly, but measurably and in a consistent direction.

The trajectory is clear. A decreasing cold lens means a moderating gradient. A moderating gradient means the cold core storm systems that shaped Holocene weather patterns are losing their energy source. What replaces them — and what that means for the billions of people whose food, water, and infrastructure were built around Holocene weather patterns — is the subject of the posts that follow.

Previous The Continent That Drowned
Next The Awakening — what happens when the gradient begins to moderate
The Continent That Drowned — Thomas Lamb
The Gradient Series · Post One
The Continent That Drowned

What Beringia tells us about what this planet is capable of — on its own terms, within a human timeframe.

Most people have heard of the Bering Land Bridge. Few understand what it actually was.

It was not a narrow strip of land connecting two continents. It was a landmass roughly the size of Australia — a broad, ecologically rich environment called Beringia — stretching 1,600 kilometers from what is now Siberia to interior Alaska. It supported vast herds of mammoths, horses, and bison across a productive grassland steppe. It was home to some of the earliest human populations in the Americas.

And within approximately 2,000 years it was gone. Completely submerged beneath what we now call the Bering and Chukchi Seas.

What Happened

Around 21,000 years ago sea levels were roughly 120 meters lower than today. The shallow continental shelf between Asia and North America was dry land. The Arctic was cold, frozen, and stable.

Then three planetary cycles converged.

Earth's orbital shape, its axial tilt, and its rotational wobble — the Milankovitch cycles — aligned in a configuration that delivered maximum solar radiation to Northern Hemisphere summers. The great ice sheets that had accumulated over 50,000 years began to destabilize.

What followed was not gradual. Around 14,700 years ago a meltwater pulse raised sea levels by an estimated 15–20 meters in just a few centuries. Coastal lowlands flooded rapidly. The Beringian margins went underwater first — the lowest lying areas, which also happened to contain the deepest deposits of ice-rich frozen soil called Yedoma.

By around 11,000 years ago the land bridge was severed permanently. By 7,000 years ago the last remnants of high-ground Beringia had disappeared beneath the sea.

An entire continent-sized landmass — gone. Within a timeframe roughly equivalent to the span from the Roman Empire to today.

Sea level at glacial maximum ~120m below present
Sea level rise within 2,000 years 40–50 meters
Meltwater Pulse 1A rise 15–20m in ~300 years
Beringia land area lost ~1,000,000 km²
Equivalent timeframe today Rome to present
The Yedoma Factor

Beringia was not just frozen ground. It was underlaid by Yedoma — a unique permafrost formed over tens of thousands of years from wind-blown dust, ancient vegetation, and organic material from the mammoth steppe ecosystem. Up to 90% ice by volume in places. Up to 50 meters deep. Holding an estimated 400–500 petagrams of ancient organic carbon — accumulated and frozen over millennia.

When the flooding began, warm shallow water sat directly on top of this frozen carbon bank. The thermal shock was immediate and severe. Ground that had been frozen at minus 20 to minus 30 degrees Celsius was suddenly covered by water reaching 10–15 degrees in summer. A temperature swing of 35–45 degrees Celsius at the sediment interface — delivered in decades, not centuries.

The permafrost began collapsing. The carbon began releasing. Ice core records from Greenland and Antarctica show a clear atmospheric methane spike corresponding exactly to this period — estimated at roughly 3.5 teragrams of methane per year from Beringian coastal wetlands alone.

The flooding did not just drown a continent. It unlocked an ancient carbon reservoir that had taken 50,000 years to accumulate.

What This Establishes

This is not a climate change story. It is a geology story.

The forces that drowned Beringia were entirely natural — orbital mechanics operating on timescales of tens of thousands of years, discharging through an ice system loaded over 50,000 years. No human involvement. No industrial emissions. Pure planetary mechanics expressing themselves on a geological timescale that happened to fit within a span of human history.

The significance is this: we now know with certainty what this planet is capable of doing to itself, on its own terms, within a timeframe a human civilization could have witnessed from beginning to end.

The Beringia event is not a warning about what we might cause. It is a baseline — establishing what this planet does naturally, when conditions align.

Everything that follows in this series builds from that established geological fact. Before we examine what is happening now and where the trajectory leads, it matters to understand what the planet has already demonstrated it can do without us.

The prologue is written in the seafloor of the Bering Sea. We are reading it now.

Next in the series The Cold Lens — what stabilized after the cataclysm, and what that stability made possible.

Monday, June 15, 2026

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · Part XIV

The Self-Defeating Lease

How Washington Is Undermining Its Own Norton Sound Mineral Strategy
The same administration pursuing seabed mineral independence in Norton Sound is dismantling the instruments required by federal law to develop it.

This is not a political argument. It is a legal and operational fact with direct consequences for Alaska's mineral future.

Section 1 — What BOEM Is Doing

On January 29, 2026, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management published a Request for Information for the first-ever Alaska Outer Continental Shelf minerals lease sale. The RFI covers 113 million acres. It specifically names two nearshore heavy mineral sand deposits as priority targets.

One of them is Norton Sound.

BOEM describes Norton Sound as containing heavy mineral sands in shallow water — 10 to 25 meters deep — adjacent to the Seward Peninsula coast. The stated goal is straightforward: domestic critical mineral supply chain security, reducing dependence on foreign sources, keeping jobs and investment in America.

The goal is correct. The location is correct. The strategic rationale is sound.

The execution is self-defeating.

Section 2 — What The Same Administration Is Doing To Norton Sound

While BOEM advances the Norton Sound lease, the following has occurred simultaneously:

The Ocean Observatories Initiative — Removed 900 deep-sea instruments costing $370 million to install — pulled from the water. Instruments that would have operated for another 15 years. Gone. The OOI was the only network capable of detecting low-temperature hydrothermal venting along submarine fault zones — precisely the geological signal that would characterize what lies beneath Norton Sound's hard substrate zones.
The Northern Bering Sea Bottom Trawl Survey — Not Conducted In 2026 The survey that measures bottom temperatures in Norton Sound runs only in selected years — 2010, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2025. In 2026 — the year NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation, the year BOEM launched its Norton Sound lease — the northern survey did not run. Only the eastern Bering Sea survey is operating. Norton Sound has no bottom temperature data in the year its seafloor is being offered for mineral lease.
NOAA Budget — Cut By $1.7 Billion The Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research — eliminated as a line office. The Integrated Ocean Observing System Regional Observations program — eliminated. The National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science — cut in half. NOAA staff — reduced by 20 percent through layoffs and early retirement, with 2,317 more positions proposed for elimination.

The federal agency responsible for generating the baseline oceanographic data required by law for OCS mineral lease environmental analysis has been systematically dismantled — while the lease process it legally must support advances on schedule.

Section 3 — The Legal Problem

Federal law does not allow BOEM to issue OCS mineral leases without adequate environmental analysis. The National Environmental Policy Act requires it. The OCS Lands Act requires it. BOEM's own 6-step lease process requires it at Step 3 — Environmental Analysis — before any Proposed Leasing Notice can be published.

That environmental analysis requires baseline oceanographic data:

  • Bottom temperature profiles across the lease area
  • Sediment transport patterns and mineral distribution
  • Current dynamics affecting mining plume dispersal
  • Biological baseline data for the benthic ecosystem
  • Water chemistry profiles documenting existing geochemical conditions

Every one of those data streams has been degraded or eliminated by the same administration advancing the lease.

Section 4 — The Alaska Dimension

Norton Sound is not an abstraction. It is Inupiaq territory. The communities of Nome, Unalakleet, Shaktoolik, Elim, Golovin and White Mountain depend on it for subsistence. Pacific walrus, ringed seal, bearded seal, salmon, crab — the seasonal rhythms of Norton Sound structure life across the region.

Alaska Senator Dan Sullivan has expressed concern that NOAA staffing losses will affect the agency's ability to fulfill its statutory responsibilities. The North Pacific Fisheries Management Council depends on NOAA bottom trawl survey data for stock assessments and quota management. The fishing industry that drives Alaska's coastal economy requires the same data the mineral lease process requires.

The instrument removal does not just impair the mineral lease. It impairs fisheries management, subsistence monitoring, ecosystem assessment, and the scientific baseline that every Norton Sound user — commercial, subsistence, indigenous, and industrial — depends on.

Alaska's congressional delegation has a direct interest in restoring the instruments that their constituents, their fisheries, and now their mineral development prospects all require.

Section 5 — The Solution

The data gap created by federal budget cuts does not have to stop Norton Sound mineral development. It creates an opportunity.

A prospecting permit issued to a qualified applicant under 30 CFR Part 581 — with a documented geological framework and a commitment to private baseline data collection as a permit condition — would accomplish two things simultaneously.

It would advance the mineral development objectives of Executive Order 14285 — identifying and characterizing domestic critical mineral resources in American territorial water.

And it would generate the baseline oceanographic and geochemical data that BOEM's environmental analysis legally requires — data that federal agency action alone can no longer provide.

Private exploration with a public data commitment. Mineral development that funds its own environmental baseline. Strategic resource identification that serves both the lease process and the legal requirements the administration has otherwise undermined.

This is not opposition to Norton Sound mineral development. It is the path that makes Norton Sound mineral development legally viable — despite Washington's self-defeating budget decisions.

The removal of NOAA and NSF oceanographic monitoring instruments from the Norton Sound and northern Bering Sea region has created a baseline data gap that directly impairs BOEM's ability to conduct legally adequate environmental analysis for the Norton Sound Heavy Mineral Sands lease area.

A prospecting permit issued to a qualified applicant with documented geological framework and commitment to baseline data collection would advance both the mineral development objectives of EO 14285 and fulfill the environmental baseline requirements of NEPA that federal agency action alone can no longer provide.

Washington created the problem. Alaska can provide the solution.

Section 6 — The Legal Challenge

Who Holds The Leverage And Why

OCSLA does not merely suggest environmental safeguards. It requires them. The distinction matters because it creates an enforceable legal standard — and when that standard is not met, it creates standing for challenge.

The Administrative Procedure Act allows any party with standing to challenge a federal agency action as arbitrary and capricious when that action proceeds despite acknowledged data gaps that prevent legally adequate environmental analysis. BOEM advancing the Norton Sound Heavy Mineral Sands lease without the baseline oceanographic data its own environmental analysis requires meets that standard precisely.

The parties who hold standing to assert that challenge are not abstractions. They are present and documented in Norton Sound:

The Inupiaq tribal governments of Nome, Unalakleet, Shaktoolik, Elim, Golovin and White Mountain hold treaty and subsistence rights in Norton Sound that give them direct standing to challenge any federal action that proceeds without adequate environmental baseline data affecting their waters and food systems.

The North Pacific Fisheries Management Council and the commercial fishing industry whose stock assessments depend on the same NOAA bottom trawl survey data that is not running in Norton Sound in 2026 hold economic standing to challenge a lease issued without adequate marine productivity assessment as required by OCSLA.

Environmental organizations with established litigation capacity in Alaska OCS matters have standing and the legal framework to halt operations under injunctive relief pending adequate environmental review.

The resolution is not complicated. Adequate baseline data collection — privately conducted, publicly committed, as a condition of prospecting permit issuance — would satisfy OCSLA's environmental safeguard requirements, protect the lease from APA challenge, and advance the mineral development objectives of Executive Order 14285 simultaneously.

The monitoring gap is not just a scientific problem. It is a legal vulnerability that will be exploited — unless Washington restores what it removed, or enables private parties to fill what federal budget cuts have eliminated.

The instruments were the protection. Removing them removed the shield.

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026 Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004)
Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006)
Part II: The Furnace Below
Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive
Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA
Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration
Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire
Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska
Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean
Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop
Part X: The Fish Have Moved
Part XI: The Southern Mirror
Part XII: The Ratchet at the Source
Part XIII: The Norton Sound Blind Spot
Part XIV: The Self-Defeating Lease (this post)

Two Senators, One Blind Spot, One Lease That Won't Hold

Senator Lisa Murkowski is right.

Senator Dan Sullivan needs to catch up.

On June 15, 2026, Murkowski joined a bipartisan letter demanding the National Science Foundation halt its plans to dismantle the Ocean Observatories Initiative — a $386 million network of 900 ocean monitoring instruments being pulled from Alaska waters under the Trump administration's budget priorities.

Sullivan was not on the letter.

That absence matters — not because Sullivan needs to pick a fight with the administration he largely supports, but because of what is sitting directly in Norton Sound waiting to be developed, and what the instrument removal does to Alaska's ability to develop it.

The BOEM lease Sullivan supports is being undermined by the same administration.

The Lease

On January 29, 2026, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management — a federal agency under the same Department of Interior both senators have championed for Alaska development — published a Request for Information for the first-ever Alaska OCS minerals lease sale. One of only two specifically named nearshore deposit areas is Norton Sound Heavy Mineral Sands.

This is exactly the kind of domestic critical mineral development both senators say they want. American resources. American jobs. American supply chain security. Shallow water. Accessible location. Adjacent to Nome.

Now here is the problem both senators need to understand.

The Legal Problem

The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act requires BOEM to conduct adequate environmental analysis before issuing any OCS mineral lease. That analysis requires baseline oceanographic data — bottom temperature profiles, sediment transport patterns, water chemistry, biological baseline — for the specific lease area.

The OOI instruments being dismantled were generating that data for Alaska waters. The Northern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey — the instrument that measures bottom temperatures in Norton Sound specifically — did not run in 2026. NOAA's budget has been cut $1.7 billion. The Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research has been eliminated as a line office.

The result is precise and legal: BOEM cannot conduct legally adequate environmental analysis for the Norton Sound Heavy Mineral Sands lease without data that no longer exists.

Murkowski Sees This

That is why she signed the letter.

The OOI dismantling is not just a climate science issue. It is an Alaska development issue. It is a fisheries management issue. It is a mineral lease issue. It is a legal liability issue for every federal action in Alaska waters that depends on the baseline data the OOI was generating.

Murkowski's letter to NSF framed it as a public safety and scientific integrity issue. That framing is correct as far as it goes.

But there is a harder economic argument that neither senator has yet made explicitly:

You cannot legally lease Norton Sound for mineral development without the environmental baseline the OOI was providing. Removing the instruments removes the legal foundation for the lease.

Sullivan's Position

Sullivan supports the Norton Sound OCS mineral lease. Sullivan supports Alaska resource development. Sullivan is running for re-election on August 18, 2026 with an Alaska-first platform.

Sullivan needs to explain how the Norton Sound lease he supports survives legal challenge without the oceanographic baseline the administration he supports has eliminated.

That is not a gotcha question. It is the central operational question for Alaska's mineral development future in Norton Sound.

The answer is not complicated. Restore the instruments. Or enable private parties with documented geological frameworks and commitments to baseline data collection to fill the gap through prospecting permit conditions that serve both the lease process and the legal requirements OCSLA mandates.

One Voice

Alaska's congressional delegation speaks with one voice when it matters. This is one of those times. The Norton Sound lease — the first-ever Alaska OCS minerals lease sale — deserves that unified voice. Not a split record where one senator signs the letter and the other stays silent while the legal foundation of the lease erodes.

Murkowski is already there. Sullivan needs to get there.

The instruments were the protection for the lease. Removing them removed the shield.

Both senators know it. Only one has said so publicly.

#akleg   #aksen   #akgov   #BOEM   #NortonSound   #Murkowski   #Sullivan   #Alaska   #CriticalMinerals   #NOAA   #OOI
The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · Part XIII

The Norton Sound Blind Spot

The Submarine Architecture Nobody Is Looking At
The hot springs of the Seward Peninsula do not stop at the coastline.

The fault system that drives Pilgrim Hot Springs, Serpentine Hot Springs, and the geothermal belt documented from Manley Hot Springs to the Bering Sea continues offshore. Its parallel fault zones — the Port Clarence fault, the Bering Strait fault, the Norton Sound fault zone — are active, documented, and mapped. The channels and ridges visible on the Norton Sound seafloor follow that same fissure architecture. The hard substrate zones in the northern sound sit above it. The warm bottom temperature anomalies recorded in the limited survey data that exists align with it.

The question nobody has asked is the one this series was built to ask.

If the onshore faults produce hot springs at 171°F — what are the offshore faults producing beneath Norton Sound?

Section 1 — The Belt

From Manley to the Sea

In 1982, geothermal investigators at the University of Alaska documented something that has been largely overlooked in the four decades since. Manley Hot Springs — located in the Tanana River drainage of interior Alaska, 160 road miles west of Fairbanks — is not an isolated phenomenon. It is one node in a documented geothermal belt extending from east-central Alaska to the Seward Peninsula and the Bering Sea.

Every hot spring in that belt shares the same geological architecture. Meteoric water circulates downward through deep fractures in high heat production granitic bodies — tin-bearing, uranium-rich, anomalously mineralized granite intrusions — heats to temperatures exceeding 120°C at depth, and returns to the surface along the faulted and fractured margins of those plutons. The Manley Hot Springs Granite contains uranium and thorium concentrations three to ten times that of typical subduction-related granite, with anomalous concentrations of tin, beryllium, boron, fluorine and rubidium. The Oonatut Granite Complex on the Seward Peninsula — which drives Serpentine Hot Springs to a documented surface temperature of 171°F — is the largest of seven tin-bearing granite intrusions forming a 170 km belt across northwestern Seward Peninsula.

The same granite. The same architecture. The same belt.

On the Seward Peninsula the belt has a surface expression that has been documented, named, and visited for twelve thousand years. Serpentine Hot Springs issues from serpentinite bedrock above the Oonatut Granite at 171°F. Pilgrim Hot Springs — located on the Kigluaik fault system just north of Nome on the Norton Sound coast — is being actively explored for geothermal power generation sufficient to supply the city of Nome.

The Kigluaik and Bendeleben normal faults extend 175 km across the Seward Peninsula. They are active. They are associated with hot springs at multiple points along their length. And they terminate at the coast — where Norton Sound begins.

This is where the documented geology stops. Not because the belt stops. Because the water starts.

Field Observation — June 2026 The serpentinite samples collected from Serpentine Ridge near Boulder Creek in the Manley Hot Springs district confirm the belt's eastern expression. The rock — dark green matrix with white hydrothermal veining, characteristic chrysotile and lizardite serpentine minerals with fracture patterns consistent with active tectonic stress — was collected from the Boulder Ridge Formation, the formally named geological unit through which the Manley geothermal system circulates.

The ground near Boulder Creek has no permafrost. The creek flows year-round.

In a region where winter temperatures reach -77°F and permafrost underlies 85% of Alaska, year-round creek flow and permafrost absence at a specific location is not a climate anomaly. It is a thermal anomaly. Subsurface heat from the geothermal system is keeping the ground unfrozen. The belt is thermally active at its eastern end. It is thermally active at its western end on the Seward Peninsula. And between those two documented nodes, it continues northwest — toward Norton Sound.

Section 2 — The Offshore Architecture

What The Seafloor Reveals

Norton Sound was not always ocean.

During the last glacial maximum approximately 18,000 years ago, sea level was 120 meters lower than today. The Bering Land Bridge — the landmass connecting Asia to North America across which the first humans migrated — covered what is now the floor of the Bering Sea and Norton Sound. The Seward Peninsula was not a peninsula. It was the eastern edge of a continental interior. The geological belt that today terminates at the Norton Sound coastline extended across dry land — all the way to what is now open water.

When the ice age ended and sea level rose, that land drowned. But the geology beneath it did not change.

The rivers that crossed that landscape carved their courses into whatever bedrock lay beneath them. Those courses followed the path of least resistance — and in a fault-controlled landscape, the path of least resistance follows the faults. The channels cut along the fissure zones. The ridges formed along the uplifted fault margins. The hard substrate exposed on the channel floors was the same mineralized bedrock that the geothermal belt had been intruding and mineralizing for millions of years.

Those channels are still there.

Scientists identified a previously undescribed seafloor channel of unknown origin in the Bering Strait area, with its southern end near the western end of three larger seafloor channels extending out of Norton Sound — suggesting a common origin as paleodrainages formed thousands of years ago. Three documented paleodrainage channels extending out of Norton Sound toward the Bering Strait. Their origin — unknown. Their direction — northwest, following the same structural trend as the Kigluaik-Bendeleben fault system onshore.

The Norton Sound fault zone is documented as an active offshore fault system parallel to the onshore Kigluaik and Bendeleben faults. The parallel Bering Strait, Port Clarence and Norton Sound fault zones are active offshore, with normal and strike-slip motion documented and associated hot springs showing variable isotopic evidence for mantle-derived helium.

Mantle-derived helium. In the hot springs associated with this fault system. That is not meteoric water heating through passive geothermal gradient. That is a direct mantle connection — the deepest possible confirmation that the system taps geological heat from below the crust.

The Seafloor Sediment Map Confirms The Architecture

The Norton Sound sediment distribution — hard, soft, and sticky substrates mapped by NOAA — shows a pattern that cannot be explained by Yukon River deposition alone. Modern Yukon very fine sands and silts do not form a continuous blanket in Norton Sound. Despite the proximity of this large sediment supply, the modern muds tend to deposit along the southern border of the sound, leaving substantial areas in the north-central area with little or no recent cover. The explanation for the slow rates of accumulation in the northern half is the result of strong tidal and storm currents along with an advective transport pattern that diverts the bulk of the Yukon silt to other areas.

The Yukon reaches the southwest. The hard substrate clusters appear in the north — precisely where the Yukon does not reach. Precisely where the offshore projection of the Seward Peninsula geological belt would extend. Precisely where the Norton Sound fault zone runs.

The Nome Offshore Placer Zone Confirms The Mineral Architecture

At Nome, the basement hosting offshore sediments is shallow in the western inshore part of the area, where a thin auriferous gravel lag sits directly on bedrock. Not current-formed sand ridges. Not Yukon sediment. Bedrock — the same geological units that onshore host the tin-bearing granite intrusions, the serpentinite terrane, the hot spring systems.

And in that bedrock zone, during offshore placer gold mining operations in the 1980s and 1990s, chromium was specifically detected and measured in Norton Sound sediments and biota. Chromium is the signature mineral of serpentinite and ultramafic geology. It does not arrive via the Yukon. It comes from the geological belt — either delivered by rivers draining the serpentinite terrane, or expressed directly from offshore bedrock outcrops along the fault zone.

The Norton Sound seafloor is not a passive sediment basin. It is the drowned continuation of an active geothermal fault system — the same system that today produces hot springs along 175 km of the Seward Peninsula onshore, that keeps Boulder Creek flowing year-round without permafrost in the Manley district, and that the geological literature documents extending offshore as the active Norton Sound fault zone.

Section 3 — The SST Question

What The Water May Be Telling Us

The warm bottom temperature anomalies in northern Norton Sound are the most difficult element of this analysis to document — precisely because the data to document them properly does not exist.

What exists is fragmentary. The northern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey — the instrument that measures bottom temperatures in Norton Sound — has been conducted in only seven years since 2010: 2010, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2025. In 2026 — the year NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation on June 11 — the northern Bering Sea survey was not conducted. Only the eastern Bering Sea survey ran.

What the fragmentary data shows is this.

In the 2026 eastern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey data collected June 1 through June 11, the warmest bottom temperature cells in the survey area appear in the northern zone adjacent to the Seward Peninsula coastline near 165°W. Anomalously warm relative to surrounding waters. In shallow coastal water. In the northern Norton Sound margin.

Precisely where the hard substrate clusters appear on the sediment map. Precisely where the Yukon soft sediment does not reach. Precisely where the offshore Norton Sound fault zone runs. Precisely where the paleodrainage channels extend from the Seward Peninsula geological belt.

The Conventional Explanation Must Be Considered First

Shallow coastal water warms faster than deeper offshore water. Solar heating of shallow nearshore zones in summer produces temperature gradients visible in any coastal survey. The warm cells near the Seward Peninsula coast could be entirely explained by shallow water solar heating with no geothermal component whatsoever.

This is the honest scientific position. The data available does not allow the conventional explanation to be ruled out.

But the conventional explanation has a problem. These are bottom temperatures — not surface temperatures. Solar heating of shallow water affects surface temperature. Bottom temperature anomalies in the same zone are a different signal. They require a heat source at or near the bottom — either warm water advection from elsewhere, or local bottom heat generation. In the northern Norton Sound hard substrate zone — where the Yukon current does not reach, where advective transport diverts Yukon water away — the source of anomalously warm bottom temperatures is not self-evident from atmospheric or oceanic forcing alone.

The Submarine Hot Spring Hypothesis

The onshore Kigluaik fault system produces hot springs at documented temperatures of 127°C subsurface and 171°F at the surface. That fault system terminates at the Norton Sound coastline and continues offshore as the documented Norton Sound fault zone.

In low-temperature diffuse venting systems, heated fluids emerge unrestricted from cracks and fissures — diffuse vents emitting low-temperature clear waters up to 30°C from cracks and fissures in the seafloor. A low-temperature diffuse vent system along the Norton Sound fault zone — emitting thermal water at even 10-20°C above ambient bottom temperature — would produce exactly the bottom temperature signature visible in the trawl survey data. It would not be dramatic. It would not be a black smoker. It would be a quiet, diffuse, thermally elevated zone along a fault-controlled hard substrate seafloor.

Invisible to satellite SST sensors looking at the surface. Invisible to atmospheric temperature models. Invisible to the standard Bering Sea cold pool monitoring which focuses on the eastern shelf and runs in Norton Sound only in selected years.

And completely consistent with the geological architecture documented in this series.

The Mineralization In Norton Sound Water Is The Chemical Fingerprint

Ultrabasic water with pH greater than 11 issues from fresh ultramafic bodies — the properties of these ultrabasic solutions believed to be due to current reactions yielding serpentine from primary olivines and pyroxenes, with low concentrations of divalent iron, divalent magnesium, and dissolved silica. That geochemical signature — ultrabasic pH, specific mineral depletion patterns, elevated chromium — is detectable in water.

The Alaska Geochemical Database contains 416,333 samples from across Alaska. Nobody has specifically queried that database for the ultrabasic geochemical signature in Norton Sound bottom water overlying the hard substrate zones along the fault trend. The chemical fingerprint of an active submarine geothermal system in Norton Sound may already exist in a database. Unqueried. Unconnected. Unnamed.

This series does not claim a submarine hot spring system exists in Norton Sound. The data to confirm that claim does not exist. What can be said — and what this series documents precisely — is that the geological conditions necessary for submarine geothermal expression along the Norton Sound fault zone are fully present and documented. The onshore belt is thermally active. The offshore fault architecture is documented. The hard substrate distribution aligns with the fault trend. The bottom temperature anomalies appear in the right location. The chemical fingerprints may exist in an unqueried database. And the instruments that could resolve the question are not being deployed.

Section 4 — The Blind Spot

What We Cannot Know And Why

On June 11, 2026, NOAA declared the strongest El Niño in a generation.

On the same day, the Ocean Observatories Initiative — the instrument network that was beginning to accumulate the subsurface data that might eventually quantify heat injection from geological sources into the northern Pacific system — was removed from the water.

In 2026, the northern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey was not conducted. The eastern Bering Sea survey ran. Norton Sound did not receive a single bottom temperature station in the year the strongest El Niño in a generation began.

These are not coincidences of timing. They are the compounding consequence of a systematic dismantling of the observational infrastructure this series documented in Part IV — Going Blind. What that part could not yet show was the specific geographic location where the blindness matters most. This section identifies it precisely.

The Four Measurements That Would Answer The Question

First — continuous bottom temperature monitoring along the fault trend. Not the annual snapshot of a trawl survey conducted in selected years. Continuous moored instrument data tracking bottom temperature at stations positioned along the Norton Sound fault zone over multiple seasonal cycles. The Ocean Observatories Initiative was developing exactly this capacity. It is gone.

Second — water column geochemical sampling over the hard substrate zones. A targeted sampling program querying for the ultrabasic geochemical signature of active serpentinization — pH above 11, depleted magnesium and silica, elevated chromium — in bottom water over the northern Norton Sound hard substrate clusters. No such program has ever been conducted specifically for this purpose.

Third — high resolution bathymetric analysis of the northern Norton Sound fault zone specifically querying whether the channels and ridges follow fault-controlled structural trends consistent with the onshore Kigluaik-Bendeleben system, and whether any bathymetric features suggest active seafloor venting along those trends. The smooth sheet bathymetry exists. The fault zone analysis does not.

Fourth — a targeted query of the Alaska Geochemical Database against the 416,333 samples it contains, specifically for ultrabasic geochemical signatures in Norton Sound sediment samples overlying the hard substrate zone along the fault trend. The answer may already exist. Nobody has asked the question.

None of these four measurements require new technology. None require extraordinary resources. All four are within the capacity of existing federal scientific programs — programs that are being systematically reduced, defunded, or terminated.

The Seabed Mining Paradox

The administration pursuing seabed mineral extraction as a strategic priority is simultaneously dismantling the four measurement capabilities needed to determine whether the Norton Sound fault zone hosts a submarine geothermal system — and whether that system has concentrated the critical minerals of the Seward Peninsula geological belt into an offshore deposit accessible from shallow water.

The Seward Peninsula geological belt contains documented occurrences of tin, platinum group metals, chromium, gold, rare earth elements and associated critical minerals onshore. The offshore extension of that belt along the fault-controlled channels and ridges of northern Norton Sound has never been systematically assessed. The placer gold already mined from Norton Sound confirms the mineral transport pathway exists. The chromium detected in Norton Sound sediments confirms the serpentinite signature reaches the seafloor. The hard substrate zones mark where that mineralized bedrock is exposed.

A systematic geothermal mineral concentration assessment of the Norton Sound fault zone could be conducted for a fraction of the cost of a single deep ocean seabed mining expedition. The deposit — if it exists at the scale the geological architecture suggests — is in shallow water, within sight of Nome, above a documented fault zone, in American territorial waters, accessible without deep ocean technology.

And nobody is looking.

The Indigenous Dimension

Norton Sound is Inupiaq territory. The communities of Nome, White Mountain, Golovin, Elim, Shaktoolik and Unalakleet depend on Norton Sound for subsistence — Pacific walrus, ringed seal, bearded seal, salmon, crab, and the seasonal rhythms of ice formation and breakup that structure Inupiaq life across generations.

The Inupiaq communities have observed Norton Sound for thousands of years. Their traditional ecological knowledge of anomalous water temperatures, unusual ice patterns, and unexpected species distributions in the northern sound represents an observational dataset that predates any scientific monitoring program — and that has never been systematically compared to the geological hypothesis this series documents.

That knowledge exists. It is held by the communities. It has not been asked for.

Section 5 — The Paradox

Two Sides. One Failure. One System Nobody Is Measuring.

The political battle over Norton Sound has not yet begun. When it does, it will follow the familiar script.

The pro-mining position will cite strategic mineral independence, critical resource security, domestic supply chains for defense and technology, and the need to reduce dependence on Chinese rare earth processing. The environmental position will cite ecosystem destruction, indigenous rights, unknown impacts on subsistence communities, and the precautionary principle applied to an understudied ocean system.

Both positions will be argued with conviction. Both will be incomplete. Both will be arguing about a system neither side has measured.

What The Pro-Mining Position Gets Wrong

The administration pursuing seabed mineral extraction as strategic policy is operating without the geological baseline needed to identify, characterize, or safely extract what it claims to want.

The Norton Sound fault zone has never been assessed as a potential submarine mineral deposit. The placer gold already extracted from Norton Sound demonstrated the mineral transport pathway exists. The chromium signature in Norton Sound sediments confirms the serpentinite geology reaches the seafloor. The hard substrate distribution aligns with the fault trend where mineral concentration would be highest.

A strategic mineral assessment of the Norton Sound fault zone conducted through the four measurements identified in Section 4 would cost a fraction of a single deep ocean mining expedition — and could identify a domestic critical mineral resource in shallow American territorial water, accessible without exotic technology, within sight of an existing port at Nome.

Project 2025 defunded the programs that would conduct that assessment. The pro-mining position is destroying its own evidence base.

What The Environmental Position Gets Wrong

Blanket opposition to seabed mineral assessment in Norton Sound without understanding the geological baseline is not precaution. It is ignorance dressed as principle.

The Norton Sound fault zone is an active geothermal system. It has been injecting heat, mineralizing fluids, and chemically altering the seafloor along its fault trend continuously — not since humans arrived, not since industrial activity began, but since the geological belt was formed. The hydrothermal activity this series hypothesizes along the Norton Sound fault zone, if it exists, is not an industrial disturbance of a pristine system. It is a natural geological process that has been operating for millions of years and that the Norton Sound ecosystem has evolved within and around.

The precautionary principle applied to an unmeasured system is not science. It is politics wearing the language of science.

Both sides need the data. Both sides are arguing without it.

The Thesis — Stated Precisely

The Norton Sound fault zone is the offshore continuation of the same geothermal belt that drives Serpentine Hot Springs at 171°F, keeps Boulder Creek flowing year-round without permafrost in the Manley district, and has been documented from east-central Alaska to the Bering Sea coast. The channels and ridges of the Norton Sound seafloor follow the fault architecture of that belt. The hard substrate zones mark exposed mineralized bedrock along the fault trend. The bottom temperature anomalies in the northern sound align with that architecture. The chemical fingerprints of the system may exist in an unqueried database. The mineral potential of the offshore extension has never been assessed.

The instruments that could resolve every one of those questions are being removed, defunded, or simply not deployed — in the year of the strongest El Niño in a generation, in the year seabed mining is being pursued as strategic national policy, in the year the Norton Sound fault zone sits unmonitored for the first time in a generation of scientific observation.

The Convergence Series began in 2004 with a simple question. Is it a coincidence that the warmest ocean on Earth sits above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth?

Part XIII arrives at a simpler and more local version of the same question.

Is it a coincidence that the bottom temperature anomalies in northern Norton Sound appear precisely where a documented geothermal fault belt enters the sea — in shallow American territorial water, above exposed mineralized bedrock, adjacent to indigenous communities who have observed this system for twelve thousand years — and that nobody has measured it?

The Convergence Series documents what is known. It identifies what is unknown. It names what is preventing the unknown from becoming known.

The Norton Sound fault zone is the northern node of a geological system that has been hiding in plain sight — announced by hot springs onshore, confirmed by field samples in the Manley district, mapped in fault zone literature, visible in seafloor sediment patterns, suggested by bottom temperature anomalies, and connected by a geothermal belt that the published scientific record documents but has never followed to its offshore conclusion.

This series followed it.

What lies beneath Norton Sound remains, for now, unanswered.

That is not a failure of the hypothesis.

It is a failure of the instruments.

The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026 Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004)
Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006)
Part II: The Furnace Below
Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive
Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA
Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration
Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire
Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska
Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean
Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop
Part X: The Fish Have Moved
Part XI: The Southern Mirror
Part XII: The Ratchet at the Source
Part XIII: The Norton Sound Blind Spot (this post)
SOURCES
Till, Dumoulin, Werdon, Bleick — Bedrock Geologic Map of Seward Peninsula, USGS SIM 3131 (2011)
East, J. — Preliminary Geothermal Investigations at Manley Hot Springs, UAF Geophysical Institute (1982)
NPS — Geology of Serpentine Hot Springs, Bering Land Bridge National Preserve (2020)
Cacchione et al. — Sediment Transport in Norton Sound, Alaska, USGS (1980)
Nelson & Hopkins — Sedimentary Processes and Distribution of Particulate Gold, Northern Bering Sea, USGS Professional Paper 689 (1972)
Miller et al. — Regional Tectonic Setting of Pilgrim Hot Springs, Stanford Geothermal Workshop Proceedings (2024)
USGS — Geochemical Evidence of Present-Day Serpentinization (2008)
USGS — Alaska Geochemical Database Version 4.0, ScienceBase (2023)
BOEM — Types of Relevant Marine Mineral Deposits, Critical Minerals (2025)
NOAA Fisheries — Smooth Sheet Bathymetry of Norton Sound, NOAA Tech Memo NMFS-AFSC-298
NOAA Fisheries — Near Real-Time Temperatures, 2026 Eastern Bering Sea Bottom Trawl Survey
Zimmermann et al. — Bering Strait Seafloor Mapping, NOAA Fisheries (2023)
Bond, J.D. — Paleodrainage Map of Beringia, Yukon Geological Survey Open File 2019-2
Jewett & Naidu — Assessment of Heavy Metals in Red King Crabs Following Offshore Placer Gold Mining, Norton Sound (1999)
Mining News North — Exploring for Alaska-Type Platinum Metals (2020)
Original framework: Thomas Lamb, Climate Science Revisited, March 2004
Field samples: Serpentine Ridge, Boulder Creek drainage, Manley Hot Springs district, June 2026
Research assistance: Claude, Anthropic · June 15, 2026