Kite Festival on Lake Michigan.
Microbeads in Great Lakes Get Into Food Chains
The Great Lakes are 20% of the fresh surface water on this planet and offer lots of sports. But there is danger lurking below their waters in the form of tiny plastic beads. Click the link for more info.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Monday, May 12, 2014
The Dynamic Great Lakes non fiction book and photos
The Dynamic Great Lakes click the link
A book to throw in your travel bag if you are fishing, diving, swimming, boating or sailing on any of the five Great Lakes: Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario as well as Lake St. Clair and all of the connecting waters.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
Beacon Grand Haven, MI
http://www.amazon.com/Barbara-Spring/e/B002PI5IQQ click the link More info and books about the Great Lakes
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Great Lakes Water Diversions
IJC
The waters of the Great Lakes are, for the most part, a nonrenewable resource. They are composed of numerous aquifers (groundwater) that have filled with water over the centuries, waters that flow in the tributaries of the Great Lakes, and waters that fill the lakes themselves. Although the total volume in the lakes is vast, on average less than 1 percent of the waters of the Great Lakes is renewed annually by precipitation, surface water runoff, and inflow from groundwater sources.
A diversion is any transfer of water across watershed boundaries through a man-made pipeline or canal. Diversions may transfer water in or out of the Great Lakes basin, or between the watersheds of different lakes or rivers within the basin. While the impacts of existing diversions on lake levels are minor, they alter the natural flow of the Great Lakes and water returned from diversions may be of a different quality than when it was withdrawn.
The Dynamic Great Lakes click the link for more information about interconnected Great Lakes system.
The waters of the Great Lakes are, for the most part, a nonrenewable resource. They are composed of numerous aquifers (groundwater) that have filled with water over the centuries, waters that flow in the tributaries of the Great Lakes, and waters that fill the lakes themselves. Although the total volume in the lakes is vast, on average less than 1 percent of the waters of the Great Lakes is renewed annually by precipitation, surface water runoff, and inflow from groundwater sources.
A diversion is any transfer of water across watershed boundaries through a man-made pipeline or canal. Diversions may transfer water in or out of the Great Lakes basin, or between the watersheds of different lakes or rivers within the basin. While the impacts of existing diversions on lake levels are minor, they alter the natural flow of the Great Lakes and water returned from diversions may be of a different quality than when it was withdrawn.
The Dynamic Great Lakes click the link for more information about interconnected Great Lakes system.
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