DULUTH - From Duluth, Lake Superior is a colossal expanse of blue this week with no otherworldly ice shards smashed against the shore or colorful fish houses decorating stretches of white.
At about 2%, the amount of ice on the lake is the lowest it has been at this point in recorded history, a phenomenon that is true for the Great Lakes as a whole.
It’s a disappointing winter without the icy lunar landscape that the Park Point beach is known for this time of year, said Jake Kapsner, who lives on the sandspit.
“I absolutely love being able to get out on the ice,” he said, both on the lake and bay sides of the point. “If you caught the bay at the right time, you could skate for miles.”
But not this year. The Great Lakes crossed a threshold, NOAA’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory reported recently, with mid-February ice levels the lowest they’ve been since the federal agency began keeping records in 1973.
The average ice cover on Lake Superior this time of year is 40%.
A longer shipping season aside, this year’s strange winter has been bad for an economy that relies on snow and ice, and it won’t be good for lake ecology, either.
Combined with record-breaking mild air temperatures of a snowless El Niño winter, Lake Superior is expected to warm at the surface much more quickly this year than typical, creating conditions for coastal erosion and fertile ground for harmful algal blooms and invasive species that kill native fish. And as the days get longer with more sun shining on the deep, iceless lake, the chances of ice formation grow slimmer. It isn’t freezing because it hasn’t had the chance to cool to that point.