Thursday, April 30, 2015

Lake Michigan is clear enough to spot shipwrecks from the air

The time between when Lake Michigan’s ice melts and the algae blooms in the summer makes the water clear enough to spot shipwrecks from the air.

For NPR.org, Bill Chappell reports that spotting wrecks from the air is “fairly common,” according to one of the pilots on the patrol, Lieutenant commander Charlie Wilson, “but not in the numbers we saw on that flight.” Chappell also notes that the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality writes, “An estimated 6,000 vessels were lost on the Great Lakes with approximately 1,500 of these ships located in Michigan waters.”

Other wrecks in the Manitou Passage include The Francisco Morazan, an ocean-going freighter driven aground during a snowstorm on November 29, 1960. The Morazan sank right on top of the remains of the Walter L. Frost, a wooden steamer lost on November 4, 1903. Both wrecks are in shallow water just a few hundred yards from shore, the preserve’s website reports.

[Full story]

Story: Marissa Fessenden, Smithsonian Magazine | Photo: U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Traverse City

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