Why It's a Big Deal That Half of the Great Lakes Are Still Covered in Ice

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
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*warming*



Over the winter, as polar vortices plunged the U.S. Midwest into weeks of unceasing cold, the icy covers of the Great Lakes started to make headlines. With almost 96 percent of Lake Superior's 32,000 miles encased in ice at the season's peak, tens of thousands of tourists flocked to the ice caves along the Wisconsin shoreline, suddenly accessible after four years of relatively warmer wintery conditions.

The thing is, all of that ice takes a long time to melt. As of April 10, 48 percent of the five lakes' 90,000-plus square miles were still covered in ice, down from a high of 92.2 percent on March 6 (note that constituted the highest levels recorded since 1979, when ice covered 94.7 percent of the lakes). Last year, only 38.4 percent of the lakes froze over, while in 2012 just 12.9 percent did – part of a four-year stint of below-average iciness.

And as the Great Lakes slowly lose their historically large ice covers over the next few months, the domino effects could include lingering cold water, delayed seasonal shifts, and huge jumps in water levels.

Already, the impact of this icy blockade can be felt. On March 25, five days after the official beginning of spring, the Soo Locks separating Lake Superior from the lower Great Lakes opened for the season. But after a long and harsh winter, Lake Superior's nearly 32,000 square miles were still nearly entirely covered in ice. It would be another eleven days before the first commercial vessel fought its way across Lake Superior – with the aid of several dedicated ice breakers – and down through the locks.


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Why It's a Big Deal That Half of the Great Lakes Are Still Covered in Ice - Stephanie Garlock - The Atlantic Cities

*global warming*
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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It got colder because it got warmer. It makes perfect sense.

When will the arctic lows be coming back to warm it up even more?
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Let's just review a bit here.

The North was/is ice-free as of 2013, yet the Great Lakes to the South are choked with ice

Ironic, non?

It got colder because it got warmer. It makes perfect sense.

When will the arctic lows be coming back to warm it up even more?

Expect a rash of Tropical Vorticies to create mass Armageddon in the next months, according to my flawless computer model, in and around summer
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
I should stay away from Florida or will Florida be coming to me to cool off the smokin' hot prairie summers?
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Of course it is. Why else would it get colder as it warms?



It never snows in April according to my computer.

West coast computer.

This oncomming ice age caused by global warming is going to cost far more to the economy than warming ever could.