Openai/6931de57-27f0-800d-a7ec-5c38e9be2084
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This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-1[edit | edit source]
User: Why does the frozen lake have large circles on the ice[edit | edit source]
Why does the frozen lake have large circles on the ice
Assistant: Large circles on a frozen lake are surprisingly common, and they can come from a few natural causes.[edit | edit source]
Large circles on a frozen lake are surprisingly common, and they can come from a few natural causes. Here are the most likely reasons:
1. Springs or Warm Water Upwellings[edit | edit source]
- If there’s a spring or a spot where slightly warmer water rises from below, it melts the underside of the ice in a round shape.
- This creates perfect or near-perfect circles that look darker than the surrounding ice.
2. Rotting Vegetation or Gas Bubbles[edit | edit source]
- Decomposing plants at the bottom of a shallow lake release methane.
- The rising warm gas can thin the ice in circular patterns.
- Sometimes the circles look white, sometimes dark, depending on snow coverage and how the gas froze beneath the ice.
3. Ice Stress Patterns[edit | edit source]
- As a lake freezes and expands, circular cracks or “pressure rings” can form.
- These look like faint white or gray circles and can be quite large.
4. Wind and Snow Patterns[edit | edit source]
- Wind can blow snow off in circular patches.
- Or snow can melt and refreeze unevenly, leading to oddly perfect circles.
5. Man-made causes[edit | edit source]
Less common, but possible:
- Aerators (used to keep parts of a pond from freezing) create round openings.
- Ice fishing huts sometimes leave round melt areas afterward.
If you want, you can send a picture of the circles you saw—I can identify the exact cause.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Frozen lake circles causes". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-04.