Loading Page...

Does lake water get colder the deeper you go?

In summer, the top of the lake becomes warmer than the lower layers. You've probably noticed this when swimming in a lake in summer - your shoulders feel like they're in a warm bath while your feet are chilled. Since warm water is less dense that colder water, it stays on top of the lake surface.



People Also Ask

Lakes have layers Water temperatures also play a role in water density. Warm water is less dense meaning it is lighter and stays toward the top of the lake. The colder, heavier water is found at the bottom.

MORE DETAILS

In summer, the top of the lake becomes warmer than the lower layers. You've probably noticed this when swimming in a lake in summer - your shoulders feel like they're in a warm bath while your feet are chilled. Since warm water is less dense that colder water, it stays on top of the lake surface.

MORE DETAILS

In summer, the top of the lake becomes warmer than the lower layers. You've probably noticed this when swimming in a lake in summer - your shoulders feel like they're in a warm bath while your feet are chilled. Since warm water is less dense that colder water, it stays on top of the lake surface.

MORE DETAILS

When water cools down to 0 degrees Celsius (0°C), ice begins to form and floats on top of warmer water; water at the bottom of a lake or river is typically 4°C (if it is not frozen). During the summer, the opposite occurs as warmer water floats on top of colder water. Many factors can affect water temperature.

MORE DETAILS

The hypolimnion is the bottom layer and is colder and denser than either the epilimnion or metalimnion. When a lake or reservoir is thermally stratified, the hypolimnion becomes largely isolated from atmospheric conditions and is often referred to as being stagnant.

MORE DETAILS

If you are getting 50-55 degrees Fahrenheit, turnover may be nearing or just starting. By 45-50 degrees Fahrenheit the lake is making the change rapidly, and fall turnover is complete at around 40.

MORE DETAILS

Most lakes and ponds don't completely freeze because the ice (and eventually snow) on the surface acts to insulate the water below. Our winters aren't long or cold enough to completely freeze most local water bodies. This process of lakes turning over is crtically important to the life in the lake.

MORE DETAILS

Thus, the ice layer at lower temperature floats over the water below it. Due to this, the freezing of water into ice occurs continuously from the top towards the bottom.

MORE DETAILS

We now have a micro (small) scale circulation — the lake breeze. This lake breeze that develops in the spring can cause a 30 degree difference in temperature over a few miles. It can oscillate back and forth, where you a warm one minute, but cold the next. We see this on a grand scale as well around the globe.

MORE DETAILS

Deep lakes only mix in spring and fall, and the bottom of deep lakes stays cold and dark because light cannot reach the bottom. Shallow lakes, in contrast, mix all summer because light reaches the bottom of the lake and warms the whole water column.

MORE DETAILS