• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Lake Tahoe Has Flipped, Here’s What That Means

March 9, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Lake Tahoe has reportedly flipped, and while we’d love to report that it’s just stuck the landing on a very wet 360, the realities of lake turnover are a little more nuanced. Lakes flipping like this can happen episodically each year and are a natural and normal phenomenon that comes with the added benefit of giving aquatic animals a fresh flush of oxygen and nutrients.

The flipping, or mixing, of Lake Tahoe was reportedly completed sometime around late February, says UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC) in a piece for YubaNet. We know this because their research teams have been sampling the lake’s water weekly, which enables them to get data on the water’s quality and health, as well as what phytoplankton are swirling around in the mix.

Advertisement

Lake flipping, more conventionally known as lake turnover, is facilitated by the wind and can see vast quantities of water effectively turn over so that the layers become an even mix. Imagine blowing into a B52 shot and watching its defined layers get all messy. Lake flipping is basically the same, just without all the alcohol.

lake turnover flipping

If lakes could feel, we imagine this would be very satisfying. Image credit: © IFLScience

In lakes, those layers represent different temperatures of water and in true scientific jargon fashion, they have some intriguing and difficult to pronounce names:

  • Epilimnion – this layer sits at the top of the water column and is the coldest in winter when the weather up top gets hectic. Come summer when things get a bit balmy, it becomes the warmest layer.
  • Thermocline – the easiest to say is also the easiest to place, as the transitional thermocline sits in the middle between the epilimnion and the…
  • Hypolimnion – this is the bottom layer and like the epilimnion its temperature changes depending on the season. In the summer, the hypolimnion is where the coldest water pools, but come winter it’s home to the warmest water.

The flip, as you can imagine, is pretty slow. Driven by wind and air temperature changes, it sees the defined layers of the lake (known as stratification) disappear as water mixes and turns over. Once the turnover is complete, the lake will theoretically be the same temperature top to bottom.

Flipping began in fall for Lake Tahoe, and saw the surface water cooling and sinking further and further as the seasons progressed into the winter. By February 1, mixing had extended to a depth of 150 meters (500 feet), but just over a month later on March 3, the entire lake had flipped. Buoys deployed to the top and bottom of the lake were reading as the same temperature by February 28, which is when the mixing really gets going.

Advertisement

Some degree of lake turnover happens every year, but they don’t always achieve a full flip. This is because the right combination of extreme air temperatures and storms are needed to get the mixing happening all the way from the top to the bottom.

A full flip like Lake Tahoe’s is cause for celebration as it will help to create the best conditions for aquatic plants and animals by redistributing nutrients, oxygenating the water, and keeping the bottom cool in the face of geothermal heating. It can also be fun for human observers, as the lake gets much clearer after a flip meaning you can see to a much greater depth.

If you want our advice, take a good look. Everything from shipwrecks to ritual offerings and a 3,000-year-old castle have been found hiding in the murky depths of Earth’s lakes.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. European shares turn positive as easing U.S. inflation data offsets luxury drag
  2. Tennis – Raducanu hits Met Gala red carpet in New York victory lap
  3. Robot response team
  4. Fermented Foods And Fibre May Lower Stress Levels – New Study

Source Link: Lake Tahoe Has Flipped, Here's What That Means

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Are Space-Made Medicines The Future? Find Out More In Issue 38 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • An Alien-Like Fish With A See-Through Head And Green Eyes Lurks In The Ocean’s Dark Depths
  • Africa Wants To Change Misleading World Map, The “Wow!” Signal Was Likely From An Extraterrestrial Source, And Much More This Week
  • A “Good Death”: How Do Doctors Want To Die?
  • People Are Throwing Baby Puffins Off Cliffs In Iceland Again – But Why?
  • Yet Another Ancient Human Skull Turns Out To Be Denisovan
  • Gen Z Might Not Be On Course For A Midlife Crisis – Good News, Right? Wrong
  • Glowing Plants, Punk Ankylosaur, And Has The Wow! Signal Been Solved?
  • Pulsar Fleeing A Supernova Spotted Where Neither Of Them Should Be
  • 20 Years After Hurricane Katrina: Is It Time For A New Approach To Hurricane Classification?
  • Dog Named Scribble Replicates Quantum Factorization Records – So We Tried It Too
  • How Old Is The Solar System? (And How Can We Tell?)
  • Next Week, A Record-Breaking Over 7 Billion People Will See The Total Lunar Eclipse
  • The Goblin Shark Has The Fastest Jaws In The Ocean, Firing Like A Slingshot At Speeds Of 3.1-Meters-Per-Second
  • We Thought Geological Boundaries Were Random. Now, A New Study Has Identified Hidden Patterns
  • Do Fish Sleep?
  • The Biblical Flood Myth That Inspired Noah’s Ark Had A Sinister Twist
  • Massive Review Of 19 Autism Therapies Finds No Strong Evidence And Lack Of Safety Data
  • Giant City-Swallowing Cracks In Earth’s Surface Are A “New Geo-Hydrological Hazard”
  • Three Incredible Telescopes Looked At The Butterfly Nebula To Learn Where Earth Came From
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version