What are ice pancakes? Photos show stunning disc-shaped formations on Lake Michigan
Stunning ice formations named after a breakfast favorite are forming on Lake Michigan, providing amazing visuals recently at the body of water along the Chicago shoreline.
But what are ice pancakes and how are they formed? Here’s what to know about the cold-weather phenomenon.
Ranging anywhere from one to 10 feet in diameter, ice pancakes begin as a thin ice layer on the surface of the water before accumulating into circular disks, according to The Weather Channel.
If the body of water has a rough current, loose ice crystals will form into the pancake-like formation, the National Snow & Ice Data Center said. Pancake ice often feature “raised edges or ridges on the perimeter,” which occur when the “pancakes” bump into each other.
Lake Michigan's ice pancakes are a feast for the eyes this time of year.
: lynda_myszkowski via IG#CaptureChicagoExcitement pic.twitter.com/xpvnitF0r6— Choose Chicago (@ChooseChicago) January 20, 2022
Floating pancakes under Chicago’s ice age. pic.twitter.com/z8MMHi6gTX
— Arij Daou (@DaouArij) January 17, 2022
“Pancake ice is really interesting because it needs a specific temperature to form it. It usually forms just right below freezing, and in areas that have a little bit of wave action,” Andrea Vander Woude, a researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, told Block Club Chicago.
She described them as “tiny little floating icebergs” that usually move quickly.
Mother Nature is a cook. Pancake ice floating on lake Michigan. pic.twitter.com/yLOOMMsbNQ
— Indranil Roy (@neelroyy) January 20, 2022
Pancakes, Chiberian-style. Thursday in Chicago. #weather #news #ilwx #chicago #pancakeice #winter pic.twitter.com/69yFDfCu98
— Barry Butler Photography (@barrybutler9) January 21, 2022
Ice pancakes are most common in cold oceans, National Geographic reported, but they can be formed anywhere with the perfect conditions.
It’s not quite the same as regular ice, however. Ted Scambos, a lead scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center says it’s “more like a slush,” according to National Geographic.
Man oh man oh man I love this city in winter. pic.twitter.com/984qHZn41x
— Dennis Rodkin (@Dennis_Rodkin) January 16, 2022
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