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Data Set ID:
G00803

GLERL Great Lakes Ice Thickness Data Base, 1966-1979, Version 1

During the winters of 1965/66 through 1976/77, NOAA/Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) collected weekly ice thickness and stratigraphy data at up to 90 stations per year on the Great Lakes. Data include station name, latitude, longitude and period of record as well as thickness of up to six ice layers, total ice thickness, snow depth (on top of ice), snow condition, ice condition, and ice type code.

This is the most recent version of these data.

Overview

Parameter(s):
  • Snow/Ice > Ice Depth/Thickness > ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
  • Snow/Ice > Lake Ice > LAKE ICE
  • Snow/Ice > Snow Depth > SNOW DEPTH
Data Format(s):
  • ASCII Text
Spatial Coverage:
N: 49, 
S: 41, 
E: -76, 
W: -93
Platform(s):GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
Spatial Resolution:
  • Varies
Sensor(s):ICE AUGERS, VISUAL OBSERVATIONS
Temporal Coverage:
  • 1 January 1965 to 1 May 1977
Version(s):V1
Temporal ResolutionVariesMetadata XML:View Metadata Record
Data Contributor(s):Frederick Sleator

Citing These Data

As a condition of using these data, you must cite the use of this data set using the following citation. For more information, see our Use and Copyright Web page.

Sleator, F. E. 1995. GLERL Great Lakes Ice Thickness Data Base, 1966-1979, Version 1. [Indicate subset used]. Boulder, Colorado USA. NSIDC: National Snow and Ice Data Center. doi: https://doi.org/10.7265/N5KW5CXG. [Date Accessed].

Documentation

Overview

The Great Lakes Ice Thickness Data Base is made up of observations made by paid and cooperative ice observers who made ice thickness observations at approximately 30 bays and harbors per year during the years 1966-1979. The period of record varies from 4 to 10 years depending on when the site was established. Data were acquired using augers and visual observations. The data are useful for site-specific shoreline engineering studies, winter navigation projects and remote sensing ground truth. Constraints on the data include the relatively short period of record (eleven seasons maximum for any one station). Additionally, the time series may not reflect the full winter severity range. Nearshore data may not be valid for nearby locations or representative of offshore conditions, and ice type codes (the visual observation code) changed in 1974/75. Both old and new code lists are available.

Detailed Data Description

Parameters and Format

The columns of data in each file are listed in Table 1. Data files are in ASCII format.

Table 1. Column Descriptions of the Data Files
Column Description
Station Number The GLERL station number.
Year Year of observation.
Month Month of observation.
Day Day of observation.
Estimation Flag 'E' if data are estimated.
Total Thickness Total ice thickness in inches for data1.dat or centimeters for data2.dat
Lake Ice Thickness Total thickness of any lake ice.
Snow Ice Thickness Total thickness of any snow ice.
Columns 8 through 15, four sets of: Additional Layer Code: See Table 2 for description. 
Additional Layer Thickness: Total thickness of layer.
Water Level The distance from the top of the water surface to the bottom of the ice sheet.
Snow Depth The depth of snow on the ice.
Snow Condition Numeric code describing the condition of the snow. See Table 3 for details.
Ice Condition Numeric code describing the condition of the ice. See Table 4 for details.
Event Code Numeric code describing significant events affecting the observation site. See Table 5 for details.
Event Day Day which the above event occurred.
Event Month Month which the above event occurred.
Visual Observation Numeric code describing the condition of the ice surface on the lake. See Table 6 for details.

Table 2. Additional Layer Codes
Code Description
1 Snow
2 Slush
3 Snow Ice
4 Lake Ice
5 Water
6 Frozen Rain
Table 3. Snow Condition Codes
Code Description
1 Wet
2 Dry
3 Packed
4 Melting
5 Fluffy
6 Crusted
7 Drifted

Table 4. Ice Condition Codes
Code Description
1 Thaw Holes
2 Windrowed
3 Puddled
4 Flooded
5 Cracked
6 Dry
7 Solid
8 Melting
9 Candled
10 Piled on Shore
11 Broken
Table 5. Event Codes
Code Description
1 Skim ice at measurement site
2 Freeze over at measurement site
3 Shore moat
4 Breakup
5 Ice free
6 Unnatural breakup (ice breaker, etc.)
7 Measurement site moved to new location

Table 6. Visual Observation Codes
Code Description
1 Open water
2 Solid ice
3 Honeycombed ice
4 Windrowed ice
5 Slush ice
6 Drifting ice
7 Ice gorge

Table 7 lists data files as well as files with FORTRAN code designed to access the database. Note that this code was developed on an SGI running IRIX 4.0.1 and is intended to be updated by the user for the appropriate operating environment. The two FORTRAN routines, once compiled, allow the user to select a subset of the database based upon station number. The station number can be read from the coordinate index listing.

Table 7. Data File Descriptions
File Description
data1.dat Ice thickness data file for English units (inches)
data2.dat Ice thickness data file for metric units (centimeters)
display_ice1.f FORTRAN routine to access English units data
display_ice2.f FORTRAN routine to access metric units
ice.loc Coordinate index for the observation stations
thickness.tar Contains all the data files and FORTRAN routines for this data set compressed into one tar file. The file is 1.2 MB.
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File Size

The total size of the data set is 1.2 MB.

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Spatial and Temporal Coverage and Resolution

The data cover 30 bays and harbors in the Great Lakes. Station locations are fairly evenly spread along the U.S. shores of Lake Superior with eleven stations concentrated in the Whitefish Bay area, are mostly north of the Kewaunee-Manistee line around Lake Michigan, are mostly near the Straits of Mackinaw on Lake Huron, include only seven stations on Lake Erie/Lake St. Clair, and are along the southeastern and eastern shores of Lake Ontario. The latitude and longitude of the stations is located in the file ice.loc in the format Nxx-xx/Wxxx-xx. The data span 1966 to 1979.

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Sample Data Record
1000680113E01 01 00                                                            
1000680120                                             4                       
1000680127E01 01 00                         5                                  
1000680203 07 07 00              07 01           40802                         
1000680210E02 02 00              02              10902 
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Errors

The metric unit data for station 127 on December 23, 1970 contain an invalid data type. This appears to have resulted from an error in digitizing the data for the additional layers. The English data for this day appears to be unreliable as well.

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References and Related Publications

Assel, R. A. 2005. Great Lakes weekly ice cover statistics. NOAA Technical Memorandum GLERL-133. NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, Ann Arbor, MI, 27 pp. https://www.glerl.noaa.gov//pubs/tech_reports/glerl-133/tm-133.pdf.

Assel, R. A. 2004. Computerized National Weather Service Great Lakes ice reports for winter seasons 1899-1970. NOAA Technical Memorandum GLERL-130. NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, Ann Arbor, MI, 31 pp. https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/tech_reports/glerl-130/tm-130.pdf.

Assel, R. A. 2004. A Laurentian Great Lakes ice cover climatology. Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Eastern Snow Conference, Portland, Maine, June 9-11, 2004. 2 pp. http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2004/20040027.pdf.

Assel, R. A., F. H. Quinn, and C. E. Sellinger. 2004. Hydro-climatic factors of the recent drop in Laurentian Great Lakes water levels. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 85(8):1143-1151. http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2004/20040017.pdf.

Assel, R. A., S. Drobot, and T. E. Croley, II. 2004. Improving 30-day Great Lakes ice cover outlooks. Journal of Hydrometeorology 5(4): 713-717. http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2004/20040016.pdf.

Assel, R. A., S. Drobot, and T. E. CROLEY, II. 2004. Improving monthly Great Lakes ice cover outlooks. NOAA Technical Memorandum GLERL-129. NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, Ann Arbor, MI, 22 pp. https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/tech_reports/glerl-129/tm-129.pdf.

Assel, R. A. 2004. Lake Erie ice cover climatology -- basin averaged ice cover: winters 1898-2002. NOAA Technical Memorandum GLERL-128. NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, Ann Arbor, MI, 15 pp. https://www.glerl.noaa.gov//pubs/tech_reports/glerl-128/tm-128.pdf.

Sleator, F. E. 1978. Ice Thickness and Stratigraphy at Nearshore Locations on the Great Lakes. NOAA data report ERL GLERL-1-2, July 1978, NTIS number: PB297121 for metric units report, PB295671 for English units report.

Related NSIDC Data Collections

  • GLERL Great Lakes Air Temperature/Degree Day Climatology
  • GLERL Radiation Transfer Through Freshwater Ice
  • GLERL Great Lakes Ice Concentration Data Base, 1960-1979
  • Great Lakes Surface Ice Reports from U.S. Coast Guard

Contacts and Acknowledgments

Contributor(s) / Investigator(s): 

Dr. Frederick E. Sleator
NOAA/GLERL
2205 Commonwealth Boulevard
Ann Arbor, MI 48105-1561

Acknowledgments: 

This data set is maintained at NSIDC with support from the NOAA National Geophysical Data Center.

Document Information

Document Authors

NSIDC Technical Writers

Document Creation Date

1995

Document Revision Date

July 2017: A. Windnagel fixed broken links in the References section.
July 2006: This document was reformatted. F. Fetterer reviewed this document.

See Also

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