Lake Winnipeg is a large, relatively shallow lake in Manitoba, Canada (Fig. 1). The western shoreline is primarily limestone, while the eastern shoreline consists of igneous bedrock from the Canadian Shield (Brunskill et al., 1980). Lake Winnipeg has a south and north basin that are separated...
The extensions of dikes, sills, volcanic rocks, and ultramafic intrusions shown under Phanerozoic cover or under water are based on geophysical anomalies. Cities/towns/hamlets: Y = Yellowknife, Northwest Territories; RI = Rankin Inlet, Nunavut; AB = Arctic Bay, Nunavut; C = Churchill, Manitoba...
Water clarity has been extensively assessed in Landsat-based remote sensing studies of inland waters, regularly relying on locally calibrated empirical algorithms, and close temporal matching between field data and satellite overpass. As more satellite data and faster data processing systems become readily...
Water clarity has been extensively assessed in Landsat-based remote sensing studies of inland waters, regularly relying on locally calibrated empirical algorithms, and close temporal matching between field data and satellite overpass. As more satellite data and faster data processing systems become readily...
Satellite laser altimetry has been widely used for monitoring surface height changes in inland waters. However, constructing time series of water levels is partially limited in temporal resolution only based on the individual orbit of altimeter observations. To densify and optimize the time series of ...
of Lake Manitoba (with a maximum depth of 7 m) is about 37% of the days in the warm season [36], and the lake breeze of Lake Taihu was about 12–30% [27]. However, for the Great Lakes, the lake breeze frequency in summer is basically around 90% [26]. It is not known if ...