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Together, Great Lakes ice coverage was measured at 2.7 % on February 11, 2024. Lakes Erie and Ontario are basically at or tied with their individual historic lows for the date, making both essentially ice-free.
When was ice cover the highest (or lowest) for each of the Great Lakes? Highest Annual Maximum Ice Cover (%)Lowest Annual Maximum Ice Cover (%) Michigan 93.1 12.4 Huron 98.2 22.8 Erie 100 5.4 Ontario 86.2 1.92 more rows Feb 27, 2024
On average, the seasonal maximum ice extent on the Great Lakes is around 53 percent of the lake area, and it occurs in mid-February to early March.
Since satellite-based measurements began in 1973, ice coverage at its maximum winter extent exceeds, on average, 40 percent. In late February 2024, it stood at only about one-tenth of the average maximum.
As of February 15, 2024, Lake Erie is completely ice free and Lake Ontario has less than 1 percent ice coverage. Read more about these historic low ice levels here. On average, the seasonal maximum ice extent on the Great Lakes is around 53 percent of the lake area, and it occurs in mid-February to early March.
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Maximum ice cover for the year usually peaks in late February or early March and, on average, the Great Lakes experience a basin-wide maximum in annual ice coverage of about 53%.
In records dating from the middle 1800s, even in the coldest winters, Lake Michigan has never completely frozen over. It has been as much as 90 percent or more ice-covered in 1903-04, 1976-77, 1978-79, 1998-99 and 2013-14, but the lake is a massive reservoir of heat that is released only slowly into the air.

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