The largest of the great lakes in the United States, Lake Superior
Lake Superior’s ice coverage has greatly surpassed expectations this year.
Earlier in the season, forecasters predicted the lake would reach a little more than 50 percent ice coverage this winter. But as of Friday, Lake Superior was over 85 percent covered, far exceeding the prediction and the lake’s long-term average of 55 percent, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, or GLERL.
This year’s frigid conditions triggered the rapid expansion of the ice that exceeded predictions, said Jia Wang, a research ice climatologist and physical oceanographer at GLERL.
[...] Earlier this week, ice coverage increased about 10 percent within 12 hours, rising from around 75 percent at 2 p.m. Wednesday to nearly 85 percent by 2 a.m. Thursday.
[...] The last time the lake ice reached 100 percent coverage was 1996, which is the only time 100 percent coverage on Lake Superior has been noted since records started in 1973, according to GLERL data.
[Updated to fix title; changed "Exceeds 90 Percent" to be "Exceeds 85 Percent". --martyb]
(Score: 2, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 07 2019, @05:49PM (2 children)
I have never seen a fund raiser for climate change research, but i have seen one for a stupid wall!
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 07 2019, @10:06PM
Maybe one of those two things willa ctually do something useful.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Friday March 08 2019, @01:29AM
OTOH, I see them all the time. But that may be due to adverse climate change in my locale. For example, here's a great example [procon.org] from 1988.