Posted on 04/13/2024 5:53:37 AM PDT by Libloather
Scientists have created an interactive map that shows how parts of Illinois may be swallowed up by Lake Michigan as climate change bites.
The Great Lakes in the Midwest comprise the largest unfrozen freshwater stores on Earth, but experts have forecast that rising water levels could have serious consequences.
More than 30 million people live along the lakes' roughly 4,500 miles of coastline, which stretches across the U.S. and Canada, and touches upon the cities of Chicago, Detroit and Buffalo, New York. That means millions of families could be hit hard by new, higher water levels, which could potentially wash away homes and jobs in the surrounding areas in the future.
"New research using the most advanced regional climate modeling systems finds that the baseline lake level for Lake Superior, Michigan-Huron and Erie are expected to rise by roughly 20 to 50 centimeters [up to half a meter, or 1.6 feet] by 2050 as a result of climate change," researchers at the American Geophysical Union (AGU) wrote in a report published in June 2022. "Like sea level rise, higher lake levels can increase coastal erosion, change navigation considerations and increase the risk of coastal flooding."
But others believe the rises in lake water levels could potentially be even more "dramatic."
Research by Michigan Technological University in 2022 revealed: "Over the past decades, the water levels of the Great Lakes have undergone dramatic fluctuations, exhibiting a range exceeding 2 meters [over 6 feet]. These changes are due to climate-induced alterations in the three primary components of the lakes' water budget: over-lake precipitation, lake evaporation, and basin runoff."
Now, curious Americans can use a tool created by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to conduct their own research. The government agency has created an interactive map showing how the lake's shorelines...
(Excerpt) Read more at newsweek.com ...
Wrong! Lake Baikal in Russia has more water than all the great lakes combined. What else in the article is wrong?
1) Establish the arbitrary lake level considered ideal.
2) Build spillways connected to a massive piping system.
3) Irrigate the dry parts of the US while preventing flooding around the lakes.
I almost commented earlier today but since you pinged me I will. Yes lots of steel slag. Even down deep under our vegetable garden. 111th and Avenue M on the East Side is where I grew up. Most everyone in the neighborhood worked in the mills. Dad always fished in Lake Calumet from shore. A few times we had so much rain all the sewers backed up and we had water in the basement.
Pathetic fear porn.
I remembered you saying that! When I lived in Chicago I had a friend who drove from Ravenswood down to USS in I think Sauganash? to work.
(Somewhere in the Cal-Sag canal area anyway!)
Dad worked at Republic Steel for 37 1/2 years.
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