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Scientists: Lake Superior warming rapidly
[Link is Broken] http://www.cnn.com
DULUTH, Minnesota (AP) — Lake Superior has been warming even faster
than the climate around it since the late 1970s because of reduced ice cover,
according to a study by professors at the University of Minnesota Duluth.
Summer surface temperatures on the famously cold lake have increased about
4.5 degrees since 1979, compared with about a 2.7-degree increase in the
region’s annual average air temperature, the researchers found. The lake’s
“summer season” is now beginning about two weeks earlier than it did 27 years
ago.
“It’s a remarkably rapid rate of change,” Jay Austin, an assistant
professor with the university’s Large Lakes Observatory and Department of
Physics, told the Star Tribune newspaper. Austin co-authored the study with
geology professor Steve Colman.
The study is based on data collected by National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration buoys on the lake and on 102 years’ worth of daily temperature
readings at a hydroelectric plant near Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.
Austin said the surface temperature increase is not only “a symptom of
climate change,” but also could reinforce itself. A trend toward warmer winters
would mean less winter ice cover, which would allow more solar radiation of the
lake and continued warming, he said.
Lake Superior freezes over completely about once every 20 years, according
to the Minnesota DNR’s climatology office. If trends continue, it could be
routinely ice-free by about 2040, the study found. This would cause water levels
to continue to drop because the lake loses more water to evaporation in a winter
without ice cover than it does during the summer. In recent months, the lake’s
level has been lower than at any equivalent time since 1926.
The study was first published by the American Geophysical Union on March
23.
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