Transcript ppt
Glacial Lake Chicago
Early Lake Michigan
Ancient Shorelines
This section refers to the phases of Glacial Lake
Chicago.
The title “Lake Michigan” refers to stages that
occurred after ice had completely left the basin.
3 Ancient Shorelines
Glenwood
Calumet
Tolleston
Other events
Two-Creeks Stage
Chippewa Stage
Nipissing Stage
Glenwood Phase
14.5 – 12.2 kya
Lake Michigan began as a pro-glacial lake dammed
between the ice front and the moraines that circle the
southern end of the Lake Michigan Basin.
The lake overtopped the moraine in what is now
southwestern Cook County and rapidly eroded an
outlet (the Sag Valley) nearly a mile wide.
Glenwood Phase was 55-60 feet above the present
level of the lake.
Total elevation = 640 feet above sea level
Shoreline was uneven with several inlets, peninsulas
and offshore islands
Glenwood Phase
Some beaches with dunes
One of these beach-dune complexes was still present
near Dyer, IN in 1939
Sand ridges on the moraines mark the early shoreline.
Best preserved beaches are along Glenwood-Dyer
Road, just east of Glenwood, IL
Largest islands were:
Blue Island
Mt. Forest Island
Cook County
Glenwood Island
Hobart Island in Lake County, IN
Glenwood Phase
Blue Island
6 miles long
East side was steep wave-cut cliff
West side had Chicago area’s largest sand deposit
City of Blue Island is at Southern tip
North of Blue Island are Beverly, Morgan Park, Mount
Greenwood
Glenwood Phase
During Glenwood Phase, glacier continued to advance
and retreat
At one point ice retreated past Straits of Mackinac
Happened about 13-13.5 kya; caused lake level to drop
Straits were lower than the Chicago Outlet and lake water
flowed out of Mackinac Outlet.
Ice advanced again and blocked the Straits so water level
returned and outlet was south again
Lake level began to drop slowly as Chicago River eroded its
valley where lake overtopped the moraine
12.2 kya lake level dropped as ice retreated past Straits of
Mackinac again
End of Glenwood Phase
Two-Creeks Phase
12.2-11.8 kya
Lake level was low
Determined in 1905 when submerged spruce forest just west
of the L. Michigan shore near Two Creeks, WI.
Radiocarbon dating showed that the wood was older than
the Calumet shoreline
Water level was lower than Calumet Stage
1982 – another submerged forest was discovered near the
town of Pines (sw of Michigan City, IN)
Partially decayed spruce trees; many still upright
After 200 years, glacier readvanced and blocked the Straits
allowing the water level to rise and flood the forest.
Calumet Phase
11.8 – 11.2 kya
Calumet Phase was 35 feet above the present level
of the lake. 20 feet lower than Glenwood level.
Total elevation = 620 feet above sea level
Much smoother coastline
Large number of sand dunes but not as many as
before settlement
In some places Calumet Dunes bury part of all of some
Glenwood dunes.
Mount Forest Island and Blue Island combined
Washington Heights and Stewart Ridge sand spits
formed from the sand that eroded from these islands
Calumet Phase
Ridge Road in Lansing, Munster, and
Highland IN is part of Calumet Shoreline
Was an offshore peninsula or spit
Calumet and Glenwood beaches were used
as high, flat, dry travel routes by
Native Americans
stagecoaches
Now U.S. Highway 6
Calumet Phase
Calumet Phase lasted 600 years
11.2 kya when glacier retreated past the
Straits of Mackinac for the last time
Lake level dropped about 28 feet to elevation
of 592 feet above sea level
Calumet phase was over
Algonquin Phase
11.2-10.9 kya
Beaches can be found farther north along
Lake Michigan few beach deposits of this age
at the south end of the lake
2 possible causes
Short period - only 300 years
Little sand was being transported to southern
shores of the lake
Algonquin Phase
Lake level rose
Earth’s crust was rebounding after removal of
ice
Lake then eroided the shoreline creating the
steep slope north of Ridge Road in County
Algonquin Shoreline is erosional scarp rather
than a beach
Algonquin Phase ended by about 10 kya
Chippewa Phase
10.0 – 5.5 kya
Extreme drop in lake level
Retreating glacier uncovered a very low outlet for the upper
Great Lakes to the Atlantic at North Bay, Ontario
Lake level as low as 381 feet above sea level
Chippewa Phase
Much of the lake plain dried up
Maybe 200-350? feet below today’s level
Two deepest parts still had water
Area begins about 30 miles north of today’s southern
shore
Also a larger basin farther north had water
Chippewa Phase lasted 4000 years, longest of any of
the lake phases
Throughout this phase, earth’s crust kept rebounding
Rebounding slowly raised the level of the North Bay
Outlet, and with it the level of Lakes Huron and
Michigan
Forests grew in what is now deep water.
Figure 2. (A) Photo of a
submerged spruce stump at the
Sanilac site from which the crosssection of sample #1 was cut in
July 1999. Approximate diameter
of this stump at its base is 60 cm.
(B) View across an area of dense
forest remains located near the
study grid. The larger logs to left
of center are c. 3.7 m in length.
Depth for both photos = 13 m.
Photos by Luke Clyburn.
Chippewa Stage
Great Lakes Huron and
Michigan, as they probably
looked during the "Stanley
Low" period some 8,000 years
ago.
The drowned forest site is now
about two miles offshore in 4050 feet of water.
High Tolleston Shoreline
The Nipissing Phases
Began 6- kya
Lake Michigan water rose slowly past today’s level
About 4.7 kya (603 feet) third major shoreline began
forming at Southern tip of Lake.
Shoreline runs through Chicago, calumet City,
Hammond, Gary, Ogden Dunes, Dune Acres, Beverly
Shores, and Michigan City
Beach began as a long spt/barrier beach that
separated Calumet lagoon from the lake.
3.8 kya lake level began to drop and Calumet Lagoon
drained and became the floodplain of what is now the
Little Calumet River
High Tolleston Shoreline
Tolleston Shoreline Dunes were generally taller than the
older and higher shorelines.
Most were removed years ago and the sand was used to
raise ground levels elsewhere
High Tolleston Shoreline at 605 feet above sea level
15 feet lower than the Calumet Shoreline
25 feet higher than today’s level
Can be seen today east of Michigan Avenue near Roseland
in Chicago (between 100th and 127th Streets).
Much of the area is now protected as part of the National
Lakeshore or State Park
Cowles Bog, Great Marsh and Dunes Creek
This phase left several prominent landmarks, including the
beach ridge that provided the route for Clark Street in
Chicago.
Lower Tolleston Shorelines
Outlets of the Great Lakes
When the Tolleston Shoreline first formed, the Upper
Great Lakes had three outlets
North Bay Outlet near Georgian Bay
Port Huron Outlet past Detroit
Chicago Outlet
Crustal rebound continued up north, so northernmost
North Bay Outlet was raised higher than the two
southern outlets – couldn’t carry water out of lakes
Erosion lowered Port Huron Outlet slightly – levels of
Lakes Huron and Michigan go down also
Chicago Outlet dried up
Lower Tolleston Shorelines
3.8 kya – Algoma Phase
Lake level dropped to current level
This happened in a pulsating manner
Lowered water levels resulted from a combination of
erosion at Port Huron and dry weather conditions
Higher water levels were caused by periods of greater
rainfall
Pulsating pattern produced a series of more than 150
small beach ridges all roughly parallel to the lake and
all located north or east of the High Tolleston beach.
Between the ridges were long, low swales that often
contained standing water.
These ridges are called the Lower Tolleston Beaches
Lower Tolleston Shorelines
Lower Tolleston Beaches
Originally ranged in height from 5 -12 feet and
150 feet in width
Most were leveled as SE Chicago, Gary,
Hammond, and East Chicago were developed
Can see some in Miller and
Tolleston/Brunswick areas of Gary
Gibson Woods has the longest ridges still
remaining
Current Conditions
Current level of Lake Michigan was reached 1500
years ago
Currents of the lake bring sand soutward and deposit it
at the southern end of the lake
1500 years ago a sand spit grew south of Stony Island
(a bedrock island in the lakde)
Sand spit enclosed a bay creating Lake Calumet
400 years later Wolf Lake formed in a similar manner
Weather patterns cause lake level to fluctuate
seasonally
May rise more than a foot from late winter low level to
a summer high and then back down again
Concerns about global warming and lake levels
The Future
Lake level will most likely drop again
Level of Lakes Michigan and Huron is determined by
the level of Lake Eried iinto which they flow
Depends on the erosion of Niagara Falls, Lake Erie’s
elevation will remain the same, but as the falls erode
away, Lake Erie will drop and so will Lakes Michigan
and Huron.
Largest southern sand dunes are in Porter County
Indiana
Mt. Tom,
Mt. Holden
Mt. Jackson
Mt. Baldy is a migrating dune moves se about 4-6 feet
per year
Reversing the Chicago River
Chicago River flowed into Lake Michigan
Carried sewage into the lake which was the
source of Chicago’s drinking water
Reversed when canal was dug 1900
Reversing the Chicago River
A solution proposed in 1889 recommended that the
Chicago River be reversed.
Instead of flowing into Lake Michigan it would, in
effect, flow into the Gulf of Mexico.
The project involved the construction of a 28-mile
channel through a glacial moraine and bedrock ridge.
The Sanitary and Ship Canal would connect Lake
Michigan at Chicago with the Des Plaines River at
Lockport.
It would also be connected to the Chicago River and
would be deep enough to permanently reverse the
flow of the river.