Push to map Great Lakes bottom gains momentum amid promises effort will
help fishing and shipping
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[October 02, 2024]
By TODD RICHMOND
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Jennifer Boehme grew up scouting beaches around her
home in St. Petersburg, Florida, for whatever she could find. Rocks,
sand dollars, coquina mollusks anything the ocean gave up.
Now, 40 years later, Boehme wants to launch another treasure hunt. As
executive director of the Great Lakes Observing System, she's leading a
campaign to map every meter of the lakes' bottom. The effort, the marine
scientist says, will pinpoint hundreds of underwater shipwrecks,
illuminate topographical features and locate infrastructure. The map,
she says, also will help ships avoid submerged hazards, identify
fisheries and inform erosion, storm surge and flooding models as climate
change intensifies.
One of the things that keeps me going is the idea of the discovery
aspect of it, Boehme said. There's a lot we don't know about the
lakes. We know more about the surface of the moon."
Only a fraction of the Great Lakes' bottom has been mapped, and those
low-resolution charts were completed decades ago, according to the Great
Lakes Observing System, a non-profit that manages data from a network of
lake observers and makes it easily accessible. The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration certified the Great Lakes Observing System in
2016 as meeting federal standards for data gathering and management,
allowing the federal government to use its data without further vetting.
The organization has been pushing since 2018 to create high-resolution
maps of all five Great Lakes bottoms, but that's a daunting task. The
lakes cover 94,250 square miles (244,106 square kilometers) an area
larger than the state of Kansas. Depths range from 210 feet (64 meters)
in Lake Erie to more than 1,300 feet (396 meters) in parts of Lake
Superior.
The idea is gaining traction since technology has improved and
scientists have completed high-resolution mapping of Florida coastlines
and the Gulf of Mexico over the last three years. Two congressional
representatives from Michigan Republican Lisa McClain and Democrat
Debbie Dingell introduced a bill this year that would allocate $200
million to map the Great Lakes bottoms by 2030.
I believe it's time to take exploration and discovery of the Great
Lakes into our own hands, McClain said during a House subcommittee
hearing in March.
The last effort to map the lakes came in the 1970s. Maps were largely
created using single-beam sonar technology similar to today's
commercially available depth- and fish-finders. The system produced maps
covering only about 15% of mostly coastal lake bottom, said Tim Kearns,
a spokesperson for the Great Lakes Observing System. With a single
sounding every 500 meters (547 yards), the maps were extremely
low-resolution and could have missed sink holes, canyons, sand dunes,
shipwrecks and infrastructure such as pipelines, cables and intake
pipes, Kearns said.
Fast forward nearly a half century. Now scientists and engineers have an
array of new mapping tools.
One is multibeam sonar. Rather than sending a single sound wave, these
systems bounce potentially hundreds off the bottom. The technology is so
sensitive it can detect air bubbles in the water, according to NOAA.
The only drawback is that systems need to be mounted on submersibles or
towed under ships to obtain high-resolution images in deep water.
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People are silhouetted as they look out over Lake Ontario in
Toronto, April 27, 2020. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP,
File)
Another tool is laser imaging, where scientists measure how long it
takes for a laser beam fired from a plane to reach an object and
bounce back, resulting in three-dimensional imaging of bottom
topography.
A high-resolution map of the lakebed would offer multiple benefits,
said Steven Murawski, a biological oceanographer at the University
of South Florida who has done extensive bottom mapping of Florida's
coast and in the Gulf of Mexico.
The Great Lakes map would provide fuller images of bottom features
that have changed in the last 50 years due to erosion and shifting
sands, giving navigators new depth findings that would improve
shipping safety, Murawski said. A map also would help predict how
bottom features affect storm surges and flooding as climate change
continues, which he said would be invaluable information for
insurance companies and municipal planners.
Improved bottom maps also would provide precise locations of
infrastructure such as pipelines that have shifted over time,
crucial information for dredging and construction projects, Murawski
said. He noted he has mapped some 50,000 miles (805 kilometers) of
pipelines in the western Gulf of Mexico and they're never where
they're supposed to be.
Additionally, high-resolution maps would identify underwater
outcroppings and ledges where fish tend to congregate, enabling
scientists to get better fishery population estimates, the
oceanographer added.
Fully mapping the lakes for the first time also could reveal the
location of hundreds of shipwrecks some estimates put the number
of Great Lakes wrecks at around 6,000 and relics from ancient
coastal civilizations, Boehme said.
Though momentum for mapping is building, Congress hasn't acted on
the financing bill since the March hearing before the House Natural
Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries. The
subcommittee's chair, Rep. Cliff Bentz of Oregon, suggested during
the hearing that proponents do a better job articulating the value
of a new map.
I know ranking members suggested finding the Edmund Fitzgerald
would be a valuable thing but there must be more to it than that,
Bentz said, referring to the freighter that sank in Lake Superior in
1975. The wreckage was actually located days after the ship went
down.
Bentz's spokesperson, Alexia Stenpzas, didn't respond to an email
from The Associated Press seeking comment on the bill's prospects.
Boehme said she doubts the bill will get traction in an election
year, but the Great Lakes Observing System is still working toward
its 2030 mapping goal. The group holds an annual conference in
Traverse City, Michigan, to discuss progress and test mapping
technology and has been reaching out to any boaters willing to take
mapping equipment out, providing a look at small chunks of lakebed.
This research is for a public good, Boehme said. "The key is
persistence and going back again and again and making the case (to
Congress). ... We need to understand the system so we can conserve
it.
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