Lake-effect snow moved eastward off the Great Lakes across the northern United States on Thursday, January 2, bringing snowfall to New York, Pennsylvania, and other states. Satellite imagery released ...
Photo: MODIS satellite image of a lake effect snow event in the Great Lakes ... Credit: BuffaloBills.com While Michigan bore the brunt of several storms, New York’s Lake Erie and Lake Ontario regions ...
The U.S. Coast Guard says a freighter is on the move after it was freed from ice that trapped it in frozen Lake Erie for days ...
Lake Erie ice coverage has increased by 35-40% since mid January when the lake was only partially frozen over. Now with recent freezing temperatures and more snowy conditions, Lake Erie is roughly ...
Lake Erie is already partially frozen over, but the National Weather Service office in Cleveland says it will be at least 50% to 90% frozen over by next week. Why is this good news? Once the lake ...
CLEVELAND - Lake Erie is more than half covered by ice ... Administration measures the Great Lakes ice coverage and takes satellite photos daily. The lakes are about 23% ice-covered now.
The Life on Lake Erie Photo Contest invites photographers to submit up to five images that represent the essence of Life on Lake Erie — whether that’s a scenic capture of the Great Lake Erie ...
State Sen. George Borrello, R-Sunset Bay, thanked the Chautauqua County Legislature for passing a resolution opposing wind turbines in Lake Erie. P-J photo by Gregory Bacon MAYVILLE – Members of the ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — A huge freighter, Manitoulin, was stuck in the Lake Erie ice off the Buffalo shoreline until it was freed Saturday. U.S. Coast Guard Cutters Bristol Bay, Neah Bay ...
New research has tracked the evolution of a glacier lake dammed by a glacier surge using satellite images, to help better understand its life cycle and the hazard it presents to nearby communities.
Lake Erie has seen rapid ice growth, from 38% coverage, to nearly 85% Friday. However, that does not mean conditions are safe for people to be out on the lake’s ice.