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Mackinac Falls

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Lake Huron, viewed facing the site of Mackinac Falls, from Arch Rock on Mackinac Island.

Mackinac Falls is a submerged 100-foot-high (30-metre) waterfall formation under the waters of the Straits of Mackinac. The formation, which lies approximately one mile (1.6 km) east of Arch Rock on Mackinac Island, is believed to have been a former outflow point for water flowing eastward from Lake Chippewa (proto–Lake Michigan) into Lake Stanley (proto–Lake Huron). The formation was discovered on August 16, 2007.

Postglacial Straits of Mackinac[edit]

A map of the Mackinac Channel, an incised river gorge, now submerged beneath the Straits of Mackinac, that for two millennia conveyed the waters of Lake Chippewa (Michigan) downstream into Lake Stanley (Huron), passing over Mackinac Falls en route.

During the period that immediately followed the end of the Wisconsin glaciation, the geographic features that would become North America's Great Lakes significantly changed in shape and size. Glacial melt, catastrophic erosion events as dammed-up waters found new outlets, and the post-glacial rebound of this section of the Earth's crust, caused various freshwater lakes in this area to form, drain away, and re-form.

During one of these periods, dated 10,000 years before the present, what is now the upper Great Lakes drained towards the Atlantic Ocean through a deep channel that passed eastward through Georgian Bay and what is now the small city of North Bay, Ontario.[1] This channel was very efficient at draining water; the Great Lakes drainage basin was as big then as it is now, and collected a considerable amount of rainfall, but the upper Great Lakes were physically smaller. In particular, the overall level of present-day Lake Michigan was much lower than its current level of 581 feet (177 m) above sea level. This shallow lake, called Lake Chippewa, collected water from streams throughout its watershed and then discharged it through a gorge at its east end, towards a similarly small and shallow precursor to Lake Huron, called Lake Stanley.

The sole outflow for the water in Lake Chippewa was the Mackinac Channel, with a water depth of as much as 230 feet (70 m), which generally followed the pathway of the current Straits of Mackinac. However, just east of present-day Mackinaw City, the flowing water that carved the gorge encountered an impasse; the limestone breccia underneath what is now Mackinac Island and Round Island partially dammed the gorge. In response, the water formed a horseshoe curve detour to the north around the area.[2]

Just east of Mackinac Island were the shores of Lake Stanley. Lake Stanley's level was approximately 100 feet (30 m) lower than that of Lake Chippewa, and approximately 230 feet (70 m) meters below the current Lake Huron water surface.[3] When the Mackinac Channel gorge found its way around the obstruction, it discharged its water over Mackinac Falls.

Later, the North Bay channel was blocked by further post-glacial rebound, forcing both Lake Huron and Lake Michigan, along with Lake Superior, to drain southward into the Lake Erie Basin. The levels of both Lake Huron and Lake Michigan rose towards their current 581-foot (177 m) level, and the two lakes merged hydrologically with each other. Mackinac Falls was completely submerged.[4]

The formation today[edit]

Waterfalls are short-lived geological formations. Their successful operation causes them to erode themselves out of existence, and they degenerate into rapids. When Mackinac Falls was submerged, however, it ceased to erode. The formation "froze" underwater in the form that it had been when it disappeared under the water of Lake Huron.

The lip of what was once Mackinac Falls today lies under 110 feet (33 m) of water. The base of the waterfall formation lies approximately 210 feet (63 m) down. The waterfall was discovered on August 16, 2007 by the Great Lakes research vessel Pride of Michigan as it took careful soundings of the lakebed east of Mackinac Island.[4]

Under current geological conditions, the waters of four North American Great Lakes drain through Niagara Falls, which is 167 feet (51 m) tall. By contrast, Mackinac Falls drained one Great Lake and was 100 feet (30 m) tall. Further research should develop a precise outline of the formation's geomorphology.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Larsen, Curtis E. (1987). "Geological History of Glacial Lake Algonquin and the Upper Great Lakes [U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin No. 1801]" (PDF). pubs.usgs.gov. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved December 23, 2019. At the Mackinac Straits, where a fluvially eroded channel joins the lake basins.(page 14)
  2. "Bathymetry of Lake Michigan". National Geophysical Data Center. NOAA. 1996. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  3. Lewis, C.F.M.; Heil Jr., C.W. (13 January 2007). "The Stanley unconformity in Lake Huron basin: evidence for a climate-driven closed lowstand about 7900 BP". Journal of Paleolimnology. 37: 435–452. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Gould, Karen (August 25, 2007). "Ancient Waterfall Discovered Off Mackinac Island's Shoreline". Mackinac Island Town Crier. Archived from the original on June 10, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2019.

External links[edit]

Coordinates: 45°51′22″N 84°35′10″W / 45.85611°N 84.58611°W / 45.85611; -84.58611

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