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I have seen Maps that show predictions/results of sea level rise. I have also read about Lake Superior going down a little recently. How will Lake Michigan react (most likely)?

2007-10-14 22:08:52 · 5 answers · asked by anybody 3 in Environment Global Warming

5 answers

Lake Michigan is above sea level. An increase or decrease in the sea level will not directly affect the depth of Lake Michigan.

2007-10-15 02:15:25 · answer #1 · answered by CSW 3 · 2 0

Lake Michigan will not rise due to global warming because it has an outlet to the sea, so any extra water that might get in it will just flow out and help raise sea level. Anyway, there are no glaciers feeding that lake.

2007-10-15 02:44:54 · answer #2 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 2 0

Lake Michigan as all of the great lakes are not only above sea level, but are rising higher and higher above sea level. It is called retention, it is the earth slowly rebounding from the weight of the massive glaciers that were once sitting on top of the whole area.

2007-10-15 07:09:43 · answer #3 · answered by Tomcat 5 · 2 0

As others have pointed out, Lake Michigan is about 500 feet above sea level, and not fed by glaciers.

Any changes will be small, and we can't be certain which direction. Most likely, global warming will reduce precipitation some at that latitude, and it will fall a little.

2007-10-15 03:09:30 · answer #4 · answered by Bob 7 · 3 0

enable's say that graph is legitimate, what sea point fall are you speaking approximately? You mean that little bit on the top over some months era? You truthfully have self belief that has any magnitude on the generic upward thrust in sea point? i think of the priority this is your failure to comprehend what you're seeing. you won't be able to make an assumption like sea point is falling only because of the fact of an particularly short era the place it ought to have dropped some millimeters, while there is up and down variability the whole time via seasonal substitute, and look on the top of that graph... that's turning out to be returned! in common terms a bad argument.

2016-12-14 18:12:59 · answer #5 · answered by ciprian 4 · 0 0

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