Lake Maumee

Lake Maumee was a proglacial lake and an ancestor of present-day Lake Erie. It formed about 17,500 calendar years, or 14,000 Radiocarbon Years Before Present (RCYBP) as the Huron-Erie Lobe of the Laurentide Ice Sheet retreated at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation. As water levels continued to rise the lake evolved into Lake Arkona and then Lake Whittlesey.

Lake Maumee
Stages of great lake development.
Lake Maumee
LocationNorth America
GroupGreat Lakes
Coordinates41.8133°N 82.4652°W / 41.8133; -82.4652
Lake typeformer lake
EtymologyWabash River
Sixmile Creek Channel, 780 ft (238 m)
Imlay Outlet, 849 ft (259 m)
Primary inflowsLaurentide Ice Sheet
Primary outflowsWabash River
Basin countriesCanada
United States
First floodedbefore 17,500 years before present
Max. length326 mi (525 km)
Max. width113 mi (182 km)
Residence time1300 years in existence
Surface elevation800 ft (244 m)
ReferencesThe Pleistocene of Indiana and Michigan, History of the Great Lakes; Chapter XIII, Glacial Lake Maumee; Frank B. Taylor; Monographs of the United States Geological Survey, Vol LIII; Frank Leverett and Frank B. Taylor; Washington, D.C,; Government Printing Office; 1915
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