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Thread: Lake turnover

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    Lexington Ohio
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    Default Lake turnover

    I have had alot of questions about "what is a lake turnover?" This is a great example of what happens when a cold front hits us in the summer or vice versa......enjoy

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSFSNTI67wc&NR=1

    Think of the cold nights and cold fronts we have had this season so far. it is killing us.

  2. #2

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    Quote Originally Posted by spoontang View Post
    I have had alot of questions about "what is a lake turnover?" This is a great example of what happens when a cold front hits us in the summer or vice versa......enjoy

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSFSNTI67wc&NR=1

    Think of the cold nights and cold fronts we have had this season so far. it is killing us.
    is lake erie turning over if so it wont be worth a **** to fish if it is like the lake here

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Lexington Ohio
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    497

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jig View Post
    is lake erie turning over if so it wont be worth a **** to fish if it is like the lake here
    I think so and has been for a few days. The temp chart is about the same from top to bottom. The lake was warming nice and the surface dropped big time a couple of weeks back. I'm not marking a good thermocline either. There is alot of clutter on my screen that I think came up from the bottom and some are mayflies coming up too.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    Reside in Columbus, OH. Have place in Perrysburg, OH.
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    424

    Default Lake Turnover

    As far as Lake Erie goes, "turnover" is not a quick or single weather event occurance.

    Turnover is when the cooler water on the bottom, or lower part of a lake's water column, warms enough for it to mix with the upper water in the water column. In the fall it's the reverse.

    Colder water is denser than warmer water, so the cooler water will be found on the bottom. When the water starts to warm in the spring, the surface water warms first, gradually warming the deeper water as the season goes on. The transition from warm to cold water is called the Thermocline. In the shallow Western Basin of Lake Erie, this process has taken place usually by about right now, the end of June. I've scuba dived in western Lake Erie in May and June and seen thermoclines at 6-8 feet off the bottom all the way down to 6 inches off the bottom.

    Single day weather events don't have much, if any, significant effect on this process, with the exception of a big wind blow, which causes currents and helps move tha waters around right at the transition time. Once the water column is all within a few degrees of the same temperature, the water column will "mix" easily during wind events.

    As you may expect, the deeper waters mix last (usually), and the central and eastern basins do not completely mix at all (summer thermocline down around 20 feet or so, and I've dove the central basin sunmmer thermocline and the transition is a real shock, going from over 70 degrees to 50 or less degrees in 5 feet).

    From this point on through the summer, there is no thermocline in the Western Basin, so water temperature isn't as important as in the other two basins.

    West


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