When you think IMAX, chances are your mind goes to those immersive documentaries that take you inside volcanoes, deep under oceans, atop mountains or to distant planets. Or to those widescreen films ...
The future of the fish responsible for Lake Erie’s claim to world-class supremacy is looking good as we begin the new year. Year-end headlines from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of ...
Temperatures in the 20s with snow and ice ordinarily aren’t ideal conditions for a trip to the beach. However, Shawn Coyne and a group of friends including his daughter’s fiance headed to Fairport ...
LUNA PIER, Mich (WTVG) - A seiche that hit Lake Erie this week revealed all kinds of buried treasures in Luna Pier. A seiche occurs when strong winds push the water away from the shore, dropping water ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) — The National Weather Service in Buffalo said Lake Erie experienced a seiche after this week’s storm, causing water levels to rise up to eight feet in some areas. “Lake Erie is ...
TOLEDO, Ohio — Powerful winds pushed water out of Lake Erie on Monday, creating a rare phenomenon known as a seiche and exposing parts of the lakebed usually hidden beneath the water. Even after water ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Winter Storm Ezra brought 60– to 80-mph wind gusts, blinding snow and subzero temperatures, but it also delivered something ...
LUNA PIER, Mich. (WXYZ) — Strong winds from a winter storm created a somewhat rare weather phenomenon on Lake Erie this week, pushing water eastward and exposing ...
Powerful winds over Lake Erie on Dec. 29 caused major shifts in water levels, with waves carrying water so high and far that they exposed some of the lake's floor beneath in a phenomenon known as a ...
The Dec. 29 bomb cyclone winter storm brought wind gusts over 50 mph to much of Michigan — and those winds pushed water out of western Lake Erie in a massive way. A group of friends in Luna Pier ...
Winter Storm Ezra brought 60– to 80-mph wind gusts, blinding snow and subzero temperatures, but it also delivered something especially fascinating along Lake Erie: a seiche (pronounced “saysh”).