Lake Kankakee

Lake Kankakee
Lake Kankakee based on Barrett, Edward, 1916
Lake Kankakee is located in the United States
Lake Kankakee
Lake Kankakee
LocationNorth America
GroupGreat Lakes
Coordinates41°13′N 86°58′W / 41.22°N 86.96°W / 41.22; -86.96
Primary inflowsWisconsin Glacier[1]
Primary outflowsKankakee River[1]
Catchment areal
Basin countriesCanada
United States
Max. length50 mi (80 km)
Max. width50 mi (80 km)
Average depth40 ft (12 m)[1]
Max. depth45 ft (14 m)[1]
Surface elevation560 ft (171 m)[1]
References[1]

Lake Kankakee formed 14,000 years before present (YBP) in the valley of the Kankakee River. It developed from the outwash of the Michigan Lobe, Saginaw Lobe, and the Huron-Erie Lobe of the Wisconsin glaciation. These three ice sheets formed a basin across Northwestern Indiana. It was a time when the glaciers were receding, but had stopped for a thousand years in these locations.[2] The lake drained about 13,000 YBP, until reaching the level of the Momence Ledge. The outcropping of limestone created an artificial base level, holding water throughout the upper basin, creating the Grand Kankakee Marsh.

Lake Kankakee was a prehistoric lake during the Wisconsin glacial epoch of the Pleistocene Era. The lake formed during the period, when the Michigan and Saginaw lobes of the Laurentian glacier had receded back to the Valparaiso and Kalamazoo moraines. While the glacial advance became stagnant, the summer runoff formed a large lake covered parts of 13 counties in two states.

Around 1840, Mr. F. H. Bradley applied the name Lake Kankakee to the lake which he thought formerly occupied the Kankakee basin.[1][3] The sand deposits outside the marsh were the first clue that the lake existed. These sands were the result of Aeolian or wind processes, not lacustrine, or fluvial processes. He predicted that the lake would have been at an elevation of 685 feet (209 m) above sea level.[1]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h The Illinois Ice Lobe, Section 3, Lake Kankakee; Frank Leverett; U.S. Geological Survey, Monograph, #38; Government Printing Office; Washington, D.C.; 1899, pg 328-338
  2. ^ Dunes of Northwestern Indiana; Edward Barrett; Forty First Annual Report of Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Indiana; pg 11-22; Fort Wayne Printing Company; 1916
  3. ^ Geology of Illinois, Vol. IV, 1870, pp. 226-229.

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