Loading Page...

How does Lake Louise get its color?

Glacial-fed alpine lakes in the Rocky Mountains are among the clearest in the world. Fine rock dust, produced by massive glaciers rubbing against bedrock, stays suspended in the water, reflecting light and creating the turquoise colours that Moraine Lake and Lake Louise are known for.



People Also Ask

The colour of Lake Louise is due to glacial wash In reality, the colour is due to rock flour carried in the glacial melt that trickles down to the lake. The sun reflects off these particles, refracting blue and green wavelengths of light.

MORE DETAILS

To ensure warmer weather and an excellent chance to witness the most vivid turquoise water, the best time to visit Lake Louise is in July and August. That being said, the color never leaves, and you can witness the lake thawed until late October/early November when the lake freezes over.

MORE DETAILS

Where is the most turquoise water in the USA?
  • Blue Hole – Santa Rosa, New Mexico.
  • Chena Hot Springs – Fairbanks, Alaska.
  • Las Olas Beach – Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
  • Grand Lake – Grand Lake Colorado.
  • La Jolla Cove – San Diego, California.
  • Sail Bay – San Diego, California.
  • Lake Conway – Edgewood, Florida.


MORE DETAILS

Lake Louise has drawn visitors to the Canadian Rockies for over a century. The alpine lake in Banff National Park is a wild turquoise blue color fed by glacier melt and set by a backdrop of Mount Victoria and a hanging glacier. This pristine piece of wilderness draws in millions of visitors a year.

MORE DETAILS

Lake Louise and Moraine Lake usually melt by late May. Alpine hiking season begins in late June. Ski season begins in mid-November. Locals know that Lake Louise and Moraine Lake are only the beginning!

MORE DETAILS

Lake Louise is a glacial lake within Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada. Situated 11 km east of the border with British Columbia, Lake Louise is located 5 km west of the hamlet of Lake Louise and the Trans-Canada Highway.



MORE DETAILS

Glacier-Melt and Rock Flour The rock flour consists of finely ground rock sediments, primarily composed of minerals like silt, clay, and glacial till. These minuscule particles remain suspended in the water, scattering sunlight and giving it a unique turquoise or milky blue appearance.

MORE DETAILS

As an April Fools joke, Travel Alberta once sent out a press release, describing how the bottom of Lake Louise is painted each year to achieve the gorgeous shade, Lake Louise Turquoise Blue. Going so far as to release edited photos of a drained lake and painting underway, the internet went viral with the story.

MORE DETAILS

Lake Louise was named as a tourist trap in Banff.

MORE DETAILS

No, overnight parking is not allowed at Lake Louise. The parking lot is always open, so feel free to visit for stargazing, you just are not allowed to sleep in your vehicle.

MORE DETAILS

1. Blue Hole – Santa Rosa, New Mexico.

MORE DETAILS

The Weddell Sea has been claimed by scientists to have the clearest waters of any ocean in the world. Described by a historian as “the most wretched and dismal region on earth”, due to the flash freezes that caught Shackleton's ship, its clarity is only belied by the sheer depth of the ocean below.

MORE DETAILS