
Lake Michigan
Lake
Michigan is the third largest Great Lake and the sixth largest lake in the world.
Bordered by Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan, it is the only Great Lake that lies
entirely within the boundaries of the United States. Its name comes from
the Algonkian Indian word for it, "Michigami" (or
"Misschiganin"), meaning "large body of water."
Like Lake Huron, Lake Michigan's surface is about 579 feet above sea level. It is slightly smaller than its twin, with a surface area of 22,300 square miles -- about half the size of Tennessee. Lake Michigan averages 279 feet deep and reaches 923 feet at its deepest.
This long, narrow lake -- 307 miles by 118 miles -- is a natural cul-de-sac. Only a relatively small amount of water flows out the bottleneck at the straits between Michigan and Huron, so Michigan holds its water a long time -- nearly 100 years.
Coupled with the large numbers of industries and people living along its 1,659 miles of shoreline -- particularly in the heavily urbanized Milwaukee, Wis.-Chicago-Gary, Ind., crescent along its southwestern shore -- Lake Michigan's long flushing time is why pollution of the lake is a special concern.
Lake Michigan has the largest sport fishery on the
Great Lakes, valued at more than $250 million annually. Besides its world-class
trout and salmon fisheries, the lake also supports substantial commercial whitefish and
yellow perch fisheries.
The largest lakeshore dunes in the world are also found along Lake Michigan, attracting millions of people annually to the lake's numerous beaches, coastal state parks and national lakeshores.
As in the days of the glaciers, some of the lake's water today empties into the Mississippi River via the Chicago Sanitary & Ship Canal and Illinois River. While this canal has facilitated shipping and helped reduce pollution of the lake, in recent years it has also helped unwelcome foreign species like the zebra mussel to spread beyond the Great Lakes basin.
The Fish of Lake Michigan | Lake Michigan Shipwrecks
Learn more about Lake Michigan in a new set of Great Lakes brochures available for just $3 from Wisconsin Sea Grant. Created by Michigan Sea Grant, the brochure describes the shoreline use, economy, ecology, and natural resource and environmental issues of the Lake Michigan basin as well as its physical measurements. |
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© 1998 University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute
created by Stephen Wittman
map from Great Lakes Atlas,
Environment Canada and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1995
photo from "Visualizing the Great Lakes:
Images of a Region"
last updated
10 March 2005
wittman
www.seagrant.wisc.edu/communications/greatlakes/glacialgift/lake_michigan.html