Unusual sea smoke engulfs ships approaching Duluth port

posted in: All news | 0

The CSL Laurentien, a 740-foot Canadian laker, approached the Duluth Aerial Lift Bridge on Thursday engulfed in sea smoke.

Ready to load iron ore pellets, the laker arrived in subzero temperatures, which didn’t stop visitors from bracing the cold to photograph the ship’s arrival.

Sea smoke, also known as steam fog, frost smoke, water smoke, sea mist and steam mist, according to the American Meteorological Society, is “fog formed when water vapor is added to air that is much colder than the vapor’s source.”

This smoke happens most often when very cold air drifts across very warm water.

Related Articles

News |


Duluth man, 78, dies while skating on thin ice on St. Louis River in Superior

News |


Community mourns victims of West Duluth murder-suicide

News |


Duluth unveils reconfigured Brighton Beach, gateway to the North Shore

News |


Iron Range woman charged with voting twice

News |


NTSB unable to pinpoint cause of 2023 plane crash that killed Cirrus engineer in Duluth

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.