Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Vol. 15, No. 1, September, 1949
The Frozen Lake
By Franklin C. Potter, Ranger-Naturalist
The biggest news of the year from
Crater lake is that its surface froze solid in the winter of 1949. The
lake that pamphlets said would never freeze because it was too deep has
frozen; and, moreover, stayed frozen for almost three months.
An examination of the winter weather
reports since 1926 reveals that the lake had never frozen during that
time. However, in The Providence Manual of Information, compiled
by the ranger-naturalist staff of 1934, H. H. Waesche reported that the
lake was frozen over for two days in 1924. He adds that E. I. Applegate
"suspects" that it was frozen at times during the winter of 1897-98 when
the temperature at Fort Klamath reached -42° F. Although the lake often
has skim ice sometimes over its whole surface, its resistance to
freezing is due to the heat reservoir in the immense volume of water.
During the past winter the mean
temperatures were lower than ever recorded. December had a mean
temperature of 19, January 18, and February 22. The extremes were -9
December, -14 in January, and -8 in February. Considering that only
eight out of 17 past winters had weather below zero, it was a cold
winter on Mount Mazama.
A limnological survey of Crater Lake
revealed that temperature stratification of the lake occurs at about 200
feet. Below that depth the water remains perpetually at 38 degrees. In
the upper 100 feet the water temperature varies from 32 to 67, depending
upon external factors; the highest temperature is near shallow shores.
One reason that the lake fails to warm under the summer sun is a lack of
suspended material which would absorb heat and warm the surface water.
Because water becomes denser as it cools to 38 in colder weather there
is some turnover in the upper layer, the warmer water rising from below.
As the surface is cooled below 38 it becomes less dense and the water
below imparts heat toward the surface, retarding ice formation. Crater
Lake, with its great depth, stores a large amount of heat, even in water
of 38 degrees.
This past winter a long period of
abnormally low temperatures forced the upper water strata down to 32
degrees and the surface even lower. Heat absorption from the lake by the
air was faster than convection of heat from the depths. Ice first
appeared around the shoreline and gradually grew towards the center of
the lake. After the surface was solid heavy snowfalls deposited four
feet of snow on the two inches to one foot of ice. Now that it is known
that the lake can freeze under certain conditions, another delicate
environmental balance is added to those which determine the character of
the mountain and the lake.