- Lake Maumee
Glacial Lake Maumee was a
proglacial lake that was an ancestor of present-dayLake Erie . It formed about 14,000 years ago. As theErie Lobe of theWisconsin Glacier retreated at the end of the lastice age , it left meltwater in a previously-existing depressional area that was the valley of an eastward-flowing river known as theErigan River that probably emptied into theAtlantic Ocean following the route of today'sSaint Lawrence River . Some geologists ("see M.C. Hansen, references below") think that the Erigan could have been adownstream segment of the preglacialTeays River system. The glaciers destroyed or disturbed most of the preglacial drainage patterns and enlarged and deepened the Erigan basin.As the Erie Lobe retreated to the northeast, it left large debris deposits called
moraine s running at right angles to its line of retreat. One of these, called theFort Wayne Moraine , was left at the site of present-dayFort Wayne, Indiana , where it acted as a dam that held back the waters of the lake. When the water was at its highest point, about 800 feet above sea level (ASL) (244 m), it leftbeach ridge s that later became the routes of trails and highways. During this stage, the waters of the lake, possibly in response to an advance of the ice front at the lake's eastern end, overtopped a "sag" in the Fort Wayne Moraine. This caused a catastrophic drainage of the lake known as theMaumee Torrent that scoured a one- to two-mile-wide outlet running southwest to theWabash River known as theWabash-Erie Channel .Two later stages of Lake Maumee, (called the "Lowest" and the "Middle," in that order) had lower water levels because the retreating ice exposed an outlet lower than the Wabash-Erie Channel. The Lowest Maumee (elevation: about Convert|760|ft|m|0|abbr=on ASL) drained westward through the Grand River in
Michigan and into Glacial Lake Chicago, an ancestor of present-dayLake Michigan . Another advance of the ice blocked that outlet, raising the lake level to about 780 feet (238 m) ASL, the stage known as the Middle Maumee. A new outlet called the "Imlay Outlet " formed that connected with an unobstructed segment of the Grand River farther west. There is enough uncertainty about this sequence that some authorities think that Middle Maumee might have preceded Lowest Maumee.Fluctuations in water level continued through more stages (Akrona, 695 feet (212 m); Whittlesey, 738 feet (225 m) ASL; Warren and Wayne, 660-685 feet (201-209 m) ASL; and Lundy, 590-640 feet (180-195 m) ASL. This see-saw pattern continued until an eastern outlet opened at Niagara, establishing the drainage pattern of modern Lake Erie (569 feet (173 m) ASL). This involved the reversal of drainage in what is now northeastern
Indiana and northwesternOhio as theMaumee River outlet developed by capturing streams that formerly drained into the Wabash. TheGreat Black Swamp that once occupied much of the land betweenSandusky, Ohio , andNew Haven, Indiana , was a remnant of the bed of Glacial Lake Maumee. Geologists call the former lake bottom the MaumeeLacustrine Plain .ee also
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Lake Agassiz References
* [http://www2.wcoil.com/~rfrobb/morphlp.html Geology and Geomorphology of Glacial Lake Maumee]
* [http://www.emporia.edu/earthsci/student/damery1/gl_form.html Formation of the Great Lakes]
* [http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/glacial.html Glacial Lakes in Michigan]
* [http://www.oberlin.edu/Geopage/projects/204projects/palmer/quaternary.html The Quaternary of Northern Ohio: An Outline]
* [http://www.abouthegreatlakes.com/formation.htm Geological Formation of the Great Lakes]
* [http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/geosurvey/geo_fact/geo_f10.htm Hansen, Michael C., The Teays River: Ohio Division of Geological Survey GeoFacts No. 10]
*Forsyth, Jane L., "The Beach Ridges of Northern Ohio", Columbus: Ohio Division of Geological Survey Information Circular 25, 1959, pp. 1-4 (of ten pages) (out of print).External links
* [http://MaumeeValleyHeritageCorridor.org Maumee Valley Heritage Corridor]
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