A photo posted by our friends at Michigan's Interlochen Public Radio is so cool we just had to know more about it and about what's going on with the Great Lakes during this extra-frigid winter.
As you'll see, the satellite image from the shows clouds and snow blowing across the now partially ice-covered Lake Michigan.
Interlochen Public Radio used the photo to illustrate this post:
" Grand Traverse Bay Freezes, Lake Michigan Half Frozen"
IPR's Peter Payette writes in the post that, "Grand Traverse Bay [in northern Michigan] is now mostly frozen along with almost half of Lake Michigan."
More specifically, as this chart from NOAA's Great Lakes CoastWatch website shows, about 45 percent of Lake Michigan is considered to be frozen.
The iciest of the five Great Lakes, as usual at this time of the year because it's the shallowest, is Erie — which is about 95 percent ice-covered.
As for the others:
-- Lake Superior is about 85 percent ice-covered.
-- Lake Huron comes in around 70 percent.
-- Lake Ontario is the least frozen, at just about 25 percent.
Peter asked around about whether the visits from the polar vortex have led to unusually early lake freezes. The answer is basically no. He found that we're really just having a good old-fashioned winter like those many may remember (correctly or not) from their childhoods.
Here's what he discovered:
"George Leshkevich is a researcher at NOAA's Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory. He says you have to go back about 25 years to find this amount of ice in the Great Lakes this early but he says it is not unusual.
" 'In comparison to the last few years this is quite a bit more,' he says. 'In comparison to winters in the 70s and 80s, this is not that anomalous.' "
But whether or not the lakes' current conditions are all that remarkable, that photo still makes us shiver.
Related:
-- "Deep Freeze Reveals Lake Superior's Secluded Ice Caves." ( Smithsonianmag.com)
-- "Ice Cover Affects Lake Levels In Surprising Ways." ( National Geographic)
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