Abraham Lake is an artificial lake on North Saskatchewan River in western Alberta, Canada. The lake was created in 1972, with the construction of the Bighorn Dam, and named after Silas Abraham, an inhabitant of the Saskatchewan River valley in the nineteenth century.
Abraham Lake is home to a rare phenomenon where bubbles get frozen right underneath its surface. They're often referred to as ice bubbles or frozen bubbles. This has made the lake famous among photographers.
Photographer Fikret Onal explains the phenomenon: "The plants on the lake bed release methane gas and methane gets frozen once coming close enough to much colder lake surface and they keep stacking up below once the weather gets colder and colder during [the] winter season."
“Even though I've walked on a frozen lake before on every occasion, the frozen Abraham Lake made me feel completely uneasy since the lake was not covered with snow (it was too cold to snow, below -30 Celsius with wind chill). Even though the icy surface was around 8-9 inches thick, it still scared the hell out of me not only because of the fact that I can see all the cracks in all directions everywhere and to see the darkness of the lake bottom through the glassy surface, also the deep boomy, underwater and cracking sounds coming from the underneath of the lake surface…”
wow! your website is amazing. You have so much stuff I've never seen before and the photographs are excellent. I lived in Alberta for 20 years and I never heard of this. How do you find so many different and interesting things in the world to report on?
ReplyDeleteBTW your filter wouldnt take my URL for some reason. I didn't intend to be anonymous www.westcoastpost.wordpress.com
I am with Alberta JK and a convoy of jeeps will be heading that way in the next month to check out this amazing phenomenon.... (we wheel responsibly and environmentally friendly)
ReplyDeleteStunning photos! I finally got to Abraham Lake recently and posted this photo: http://500px.com/photo/24800283
ReplyDeleteThese photo are amazing and I'm really glad that you showed them to the world!!!!
ReplyDeleteDo you y any chance have any audio recordings of the sounds you said the lake makes?
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