Water Resources Engineering and Science Seminars

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Impact of Lake Michigan water level rise on complex bidirectional flow in the Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS)*

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Water Resource Engineering and Science
Location
1017 Civil and Environmental Engineering Building (Hydrosystems)
Date
Feb 16, 2024   12:00 pm  
Speaker
Marcelo Garcia - M.T. Geoffrey Yeh Endowed Chair in Civil Engineering - Director, Ven Te Chow Hydrosystems Laboratory - Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Contact
Jennifer Bishop
E-Mail
jbishop4@illinois.edu
Views
26

Abstract:
In the past decade, continuously rising water levels in Lake Michigan have been threatening lakefront areas, especially in metropolitan regions like the Greater Chicago area. This provides the motivation to analyze the impact that high lake levels have on the Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS). As the only primary free connection between the CAWS and Lake Michigan, the Calumet Area waterway subsystem plays a key and unique role. In this work, a numerical model covering the Calumet subsystem and having Lake Michigan as boundary condition, is set up, calibrated, and validated using limited field observations. It is found that the Calumet subsystem has become bidirectional, where both discharge and flow directions are controlled by lake levels. When lake levels are below -0.15m (-0.5ft, Chicago City Datum, CCD), the discharge in the Grand Calumet River is around zero, with water flowing along its east branch towards Indiana. When lake levels are above +0.46 m (+1.5ft, CCD), the flow reverses direction and drains west into Illinois. In 2020, the mean lake-level was at +1.07m (+3.5ft, CCD), and the base discharge in the Grand Calumet River was approximately 8.5m3/s (300ft3/s). The higher Lake Michigan’s level is, the larger the discharge would be into Illinois. Potential impact of this extra discharge on Lake Michigan Diversion Accounting (LMDA) of the State of Illinois and flood management in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC), is analyzed, while the nature of the bidirectional flows is characterized with the intent of shedding light on this complex phenomenon.

*Presentation based on D. Wang, Z. Li, A. F. Rojas-Aguirre and M.H. Garcia, (2021) Impact of Lake Michigan water level rise on complex bidirectional flow in the Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS), Journal of Great Lakes Research, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jglr.2021.10.008

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