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Title Banner: Gifts of the Glaciers



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The Great Lakes

Thousands of years ago, the melting mile-thick glaciers of the Wisconsin Ice Age left the North American continent a magnificent gift: five fantastic freshwater seas collectively known today as the Great Lakes -- Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake MichiganLake Erie and Lake Ontario.Map of the Great Lakes Basin

From the westernmost tip of Lake Superior at Duluth, Minnesota, to the easternmost tip of Lake Ontario at Watertown, New York, the five lakes stretch a thousand miles across the heartland of both the United States and Canada, creating nearly 9,500 miles of ocean-like shores. The lakes also contain an estimated 35,000 islands.

Officially dubbed "the nation's fourth seacoast," the U.S. Great Lakes shoreline alone totals more than 4,500 miles -- longer than the U.S. East and Gulf coasts combined. As seen from space, the Great Lakes constitute one of the most identifiable features of the North American continent as well as our planet Earth.

The North American Great Lakes are unique among the world's large lakes in that their basins are linked together and form one continuous drainage basin. Together, they constitute the greatest freshwater system on Earth, covering an area larger than Texas and about half the size of Alaska.  Starting in Lake Superior, the water flows out the lake's southeastern tip down the St. Marys River into Lakes Michigan and Huron, which actually are two halves of one lake. From there, the water flows southward from the southern tip of Lake Huron down the St. Clair River through "little" Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River to Lake Erie. Leaving Lake Erie, it flows north via the Niagara River and over Niagara Falls into Lake Ontario. It then flows northeast down the St. Lawrence River -- the last link in a 2,000-mile-long waterway that ultimately connects Minnesota to the Atlantic Ocean.

Great Lakes profile (from U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)

However, this stair-step arrangement of basins is relatively new and resulted from the slow rise of the land as it rebounded from the depressing weight of the mile-thick ice sheets.

Lake Erie and southern Lake Michigan (Lake Chicago) were first unveiled by the glacier about 10,000 years ago. Both originally drained to the southwest, out the Maumee-Wabash-Ohio and Des Plaines-Illinois rivers, respectively, to the Mississippi River. About 9,000 years ago, the early stage of Lake Superior, called Lake Duluth, drained southwest out the St. Croix and Mississippi rivers, along what is today the Minnesota-Wisconsin border.Picture: How it might have looked when the glaciers were here

About 7,000 years ago, as the last ice left Lake Michigan, the land to south of the lakes had risen high enough that the lakes no longer drained in that direction. Lake Ontario came into being, and the Niagara River became Lake Erie's outlet.

As the glacier retreated into Canada, it temporarily made Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron into one huge body of water called Lake Nipissing, which had the unusual quality of having three outlets -- via the Ottawa-St. Lawrence rivers, Detroit-St. Clair rivers and Illinois-Mississippi rivers.

Lake Huron continued to drain eastward out the Ottawa-St. Lawrence rivers until about 5,000-6,000 years ago. Lake Michigan continued to drain out the Illinois River where Chicago now stands until about only 3,000 years ago, when the Great Lakes finally assumed their present shapes.

Picture: Palisade Head area on Minnesota's Lake Superior shoreThe Great Lakes today hold an estimated six quadrillion gallons of water -- a fifth, or 20 percent, of all the drinkable water on the surface of Earth.

If all the water in the Great Lakes were spread evenly over the continental U.S., the 48 states would be flooded under more than nine feet of water!

The surfaces of the lakes total more than 94,000 square miles -- covering an area about the size of the entire state of Oregon.

The awesome sizes of the Great Lakes amaze just about everyone seeing them for the first time. These lakes not only look like oceans, they often seem to behave like oceans. They have coastal currents -- including dangerous rip currents -- and occasional large tide-like changes in coastal water levels called seiches (pronounced "say-shez") caused by prolonged strong winds and passing storms. Like the oceans, the lakes also moderate the temperature of the air and increase the amount of rain or snow that falls on the lands surrounding them.

 

Some of the world's largest grain shipping ports are located on the Great Lakes, and oceangoing ships as well as 1,000-foot lake vessels ply their waters.Picture: A frosty freighter plows ice at the Port of Duluth

Sailors who have weathered storms on the Great Lakes give these inland seas the same healthy respect they give the other Seven Seas -- perhaps an extra measure of respect when the icy "Gales of November" blow early, because the freshwater of the lakes freezes more quickly than ocean saltwater, and a heavy coat of ice can easily capsize and sink a ship.

The lakes' water is usually cold to begin with, because the Great Lakes lie across the 45th Parallel -- halfway to the North Pole from the Equator and just 1,200 miles from the Arctic Circle, less than the distance between New York City and Miami.

Coupled with the vast forest, agricultural and mineral resources of the area, the abundant supply of water and cheap transportation afforded by the Great Lakes were major factors in the region becoming the population and industrial core of both the United States and Canada.

About 50 million U.S. and Canadian citizens live and work in the Great Lakes region today, and around half of them depend directly on the lakes for drinking water.  The United States' third largest city, Chicago, Illinois, is located on the shores of Lake Michigan, and the Great Lakes coastal cities of Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Detroit, Michigan; Cleveland, Ohio, and Buffalo, New York, have populations of more than a million people each. Ontario, the only Canadian province bordering the lakes, contains a third of Canada's population, while nearly 15 percent of the U.S. population lives in the region.  Five of the 10 largest U.S. states by population are Great Lakes states (#3-New York, #5-Pennsylvania, #6-Illinois, #7-Ohio and #8-Michigan).

 

Picture: Industry along Wisconsin's Fox RiverThe iron ranges around Lake Superior have been the principal source of ore for North America for more than a century, and the economy of shipping large quantities of ore on the Great Lakes -- plus the abundant supply of high quality water for processing it -- have made the region a center of iron and steel production.

Until recently, the shores and hinterlands of Lakes Ontario, Erie and Michigan held the world's largest concentration of iron and steel mills. Even today, about half of the steel made in the U.S. and and nearly two-thirds of Canada's steel is produced in the Great Lakes region.

The region's other major industries include automobile manufacturing, heavy machinery, paper mills, metalworking and shipbuilding. In addition, some 225 million tons of grain, iron ore and other commodities are shipped across the Great Lakes each year, and the sport and commercial fisheries of the Great Lakes currently contribute more than a billion dollars a year to the region's economy. Along with the Upper Midwest's multitude of lakes and forests, the Great Lakes help support a substantial regional tourism industry.

Together, the United States and Canada share responsibility for protecting and caring for one of the most valuable natural treasures in the world -- five magnificent gifts of the glaciers.


NEW!
  Learn all about the Great Lakes basin as well as the individual basins of each lake in a new set of six brochures available from Wisconsin Sea Grant. Published by Michigan Sea Grant, each brochure describes the shoreline use, economy, ecology, and natural resource and environmental issues of each basin as well as the physical measurements of each lake.


Go to Lake Superior | Lake Michigan | Lake Huron | Lake Erie | Lake Ontario | Map of the Great Lakes Basin

Text-only version of 'Gifts of the Glaciers' homepage

 

Images of the Great Lakes Region as Seen from Space
More images added in July 2005

Fishes of the Great Lakes

Great Lakes Shipwrecks

 

More information about the Great Lakes on the Great Lakes Information Network
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The Islands of the Great Lakes                Great Lakes Webcams      

Lighthouses of the Western Great Lakes
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We welcome your comments, questions and suggestions!

© University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute
created in April 1998 by Stephen Wittman,
last updated 3/10/05

map images from Great Lakes Atlas, Environment Canada and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1995
photos from "Visualizing the Great Lakes: Images of a Region," Minnesota Sea Grant and the USEPA Great Lakes National Program Office

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www.seagrant.wisc.edu/greatlakes/glacialgift/