Lake Layers
In some temperate regions, lakes often go through dramatic changes in temperature as the seasons change.
Summer Layers
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In the summer, the water temperature in lakes is not the same from top to bottom. There are three different layers. The top layer of water is heated by the sun and stays warm. The middle layer is cooler than the top layer and the bottom layer is the coldest. Because of the warmer waters and more plentiful food supply, almost all lake creatures spend the summer months in the upper layer.
Evening It Up
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In the fall there is less sunlight to heat lake water during the day. Lakes can lose more heat at night and wind can mix up the water layers. When all of this happens, the water in lakes can become close to the same temperature at all levels. This is called
fall overturn.
Winter Flip
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During cold winter months, lake temperatures can reverse! The top layer becomes coldest layer! When a lake's surface water reaches 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius), it begins to freeze. When the surface of the lake freezes, the water underneath is protected from wind and heat loss. In the winter, the deeper you go in a lake, the warmer the water will be!
Making Some Weather
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Some lakes are so large that they can create weather!
Lake effect snow happens when a cold air mass passes for long distances over warmer lake water. The air picks up moisture and heat from the lake. When the air mass reaches the lake shore, it often drops the moisture as snow. The Great Lakes generate lots of lake effect snow for surrounding areas.
Lakes By the Numbers
There are about 30,000 cubic miles (48,270 cubic kilometers) of lake water in the world.
Lake water makes up about 0.4 percent of all the world's fresh water!
About 80 percent of all the lake water in the world can be found in 40 large lakes and 70 percent of all the lake water in the world can be found in North America, Africa, and Asia.
Close to half of all the world's lakes are in Canada!
The deepest freshwater lake in the world is Lake Baikal in Siberia. It is 5,371 feet deep!
Lake Superior is the largest freshwater lake in the world. It has a surface area of 31,700 square miles and is over 380 miles long. At its widest part it is 160 miles across! Parts of Lake Superior are in Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Ontario.
New Hampshire has 1,300 lakes and ponds. The largest lake in New Hampshire is Lake
Winnipesaukee. It is
72 square miles and has over 253 islands in it. The distance around the lake is 184 miles!