A CDA     United States
^S8^C HF\     Environmental Protection
             Agency
                             Great Lakes
                             National Program Office
                             77 West Jackson Boulevard
                             Chicago, IL 60604
905-R97-004
March 1997
Don't Miss  the  Boat with  Environmental Education

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  What's Inside:

  History
    Where Did the Great Lakes Come From?	  1
    Great Lakes People	   2
    Shipwrecks	   3
    The Fate of the Christmas Tree Ship	   4

  Social Studies
    Where Would We Be Without the Great Lakes?	  6
    Who Governs the Great Lakes?	  8
    Acid Rain: A Shared Problem	   9
  Environmental Sciences
    I.      The Journey of Lake Guardian	  12
    II.     Lake Guardian Explores Lake  Superior	'.,  14
    III.     Investigating Lake Huron	  16
    IV.     The Journey Continues on Lake Michigan	  18
    V.     Lake Guardian Travels the Length of Lake Erie	  20
    VI.     The End of Lake Guardian's Journey, Lake Ontario!	  21
  Great Lakes Facts	  23
  Classroom Activity Map	  Back Cover
  Learning More About the Great Lakes	  Back Cover
                                      Acknowledgements
                                      This document was prepared
                                      under the direction of
                                      Margaret McCue, Region V Office
                                      of Public Affairs, and David
                                      Rockwell, Great Lakes National
                                      Program Office, United States
                                      Environmental Protection
                                      Agency. Under a contract with
                                      ICF Incorporated, support was
                                      provided by Helen Taylor,
                                      Timothy H. Brown, Danielle
                                      Gordon, Casey Cordes, William
                                      D. Ward, Georgia Zeedick, Gene
                                      Hallinan, and Sally Bullard.
                                      Design by WATCH! Graphic
                                      Design. Illustrations by Joseph
                                      G. Tayfor.
                                      Printed on recycled paper.
      Great Minds? Great Lakes!
  has been developed by the United
  States Environmental Protection
  Agency's Great Lakes National
  Program Office to introduce envi-
  ronmental curriculum for use in
  a variety of elementary subjects.
  Inspired by U.S. EPA's environ-
  mental research vessel named
  Lake Guardian by elementary
  schools in the Great Lakes Basin,
  this publication is dedicated to
  helping students learn more
  about the environment and about
  the Great Lakes.

     The  lesson plans in this book
  provide  an integrated approach
  to incorporating Great Lakes en-
  vironmental issues into the
  subjects of history, social studies,
  and science. These lessons are
just a sampling of the educational
material contained in Great
Lakes in My World—a more
comprehensive curriculum
developed by the Lake Michigan
Federation and the Great Lakes
National Program Office.

    Use the material in this book
to introduce your students to the
importance of environmental
issues and to see how all of us
are part of the Great Lakes Basin
ecosystem. Share the lore of the
Lakes with your students through
history lessons and stories about
famous shipwrecks.  Teach your
students about Canada and the
United States through social
studies lessons, and help them
learn how both countries are
responsible for protecting the
Lakes. For example, explore the
difficulties of solving interna-
tional problems such as acid rain.
Finally, follow the journey of the
Lake Guardian as it travels from
lake to lake introducing your stu-
dents to some of the more com-
pelling environmental problems
affecting the Great Lakes today.

    Once you have used Great
Minds? Great Lakes!, move on to
the expanded and more detailed
lessons offered in Great Lakes in
My World, available in the fall of
1990.  For more information
regarding Great Lakes in My
World, contact The Lake Michi-
gan Federation, 59 E. Van Buren,
Suite 2215, Chicago, Illinois
60605, (312) 939-0838.
Introduction

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    Great Minds? Great Lakes! is
divided into three subject areas:
History, Social Studies, and Envi-
ronmental Sciences.  Each
section contains background
information, discussion points,
and a variety of hands-on activi-
ties designed to illustrate the
major points of each lesson. In
the back of the book, a map of
the Great Lakes is provided for
photocopying, and use with dis-
cussion points and activities. A
bibliography and reference page
tells you where  you can find
more information on all the
topics presented throughout the
book.

    As the figure below indicates,
the lesson plans in each section
are designed to interrelate with
each other to demonstrate how
environmental issues can not be
isolated from other issues such as
population and industry. Infor-
mation in one lesson plan can be
used easily with another.  For
instance, use the lessons in the
history section to demonstrate
the link between the settlements
of the early explorers and the
growth of modern metropolitan
areas.  Use social studies lessons
to understand how these metro-
politan areas use and economi-
cally depend on the Great Lakes.
Finally, demonstrate the link
between the use of the Great
Lakes and environmental prob-
lems discussed in "The Journey
of Lake Guardian."


About the Lake Guardian
Research Boat

    The Lake Guardian was con-
verted to a research vessel from
an offshore supply vessel in  1990
    by the Great Lakes National
    Program Office and was
    named by the children of
    10,000 elementary schools in
the Great Lakes Basin. The
students voted on names contrib-
uted by environmental interest
groups in the Great Lakes area,
and the winning name was Lake
Guardian.
    Lake Guardian is used to
conduct in-depth studies of water
quality in the Great Lakes Basin
by collecting samples of water,
sediment, fish, and other biologi-
cal matter.  By monitoring toxic
chemicals and other pollutants in
this fragile freshwater world, sci-
entists study the effects of pollut-
ants and assess  various cleanup
programs underway in the Great
Lakes Basin using samples and
analysis from the Lake Guardian.

About the Great Lakes National
Program Office

    The Great Lakes National
Program Office  (GLNPO) was es-
tablished in 1977 as a special
arm of the U.S.  EPA dedicated to
Great Lakes environmental
issues.  GLNPO was started to
meet the obligations of the United
States under the Great Lakes
Water Quality Agreement with
Canada.  GLNPO is the first U.S.
EPA office that is solely devoted
to a distinct ecosystem such as
the Great Lakes Basin.  GLNPO
has an  extensive surveillance and
monitoring  program which
measures conditions in the Lakes
and traces the sources of pollut-
ants.
    To keep track of pollutants
entering the Lakes, GLNPO
operates the Great Lakes Atmos-
pheric Deposition Network to
measure pollutants from the
atmosphere, while states track
pollutants in tributaries entering
the Lakes. GLNPO works closely
with various federal agencies,
eight Great  Lakes states, and
comparable Canadian agencies to
share and interpret data.  In
addition, GLNPO coordinates U.S.
EPA's implementation of regula-
tory actions and activities  to
influence state programs in the
Great Lakes Basin.
                                                                                       How to Use this Book

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                              «'
  Where did the Great Lakes
  Come From?

      The story begins about three
  billion years ago. This lesson
  condenses and describes millions
  of years of geologic history to
  help students appreciate how
  long it took to form the Great
  Lakes and the origin of its many
  treasures, including rich mineral
  deposits.

      During the Precambrian Era,
  which started about 3 billion
  years ago and ended 600 million
  years ago, a great deal of vol-
  canic activity occurred.  This
  action and sedimentary deposits
  were the source  of the rich
  mineral deposits found in this
  region. During the  Precambrian
  Era, the only types of life existing
  on the Earth were algae, fungi,
  and bacteria.
                  T < Precambrian
                     3 billion-600 million years ago
                     (30 feet)
  Pleistocene Epoch (Ice Age) >
  2million-10.000yrs. ago
  (.25 inch)
  Great Lakes formed     >
  10-15,000 yrs. age (.016 inch)

  Recent History, the last   >
  10,000 years (.001 inch)
                   X Paleozoic
                     600-280 million yrs. ago
                     (6 feet)
                     Mesozoic
                     230-135 yrs. ago
                     (2.3 feet)
                     Cenozoic
                     70 million yrs. ago to present
                     (2.5 inches)
    After billions of years of
volcanic activity, central North
America was flooded several
times during the Paleozoic Era,
which lasted more than 350,000
million years.  The flooding
brought different soil materials,
such as mud, clay, and sand, as
well as various forms of sea life,
to the Great Lakes Basin area.
During the Paleozoic Era, the
first fish,  insects, reptiles, coni-
fers, and  tree ferns appeared on
Earth.  The Mesozoic Era fol-
lowed on the heels of the Paleo-
zoic Era.  It lasted over  167
million years and brought dino-
saurs, mastodons, birds, mam-
mals, gymnosperms, and flower-
ing plants to the Lakes area. The
decomposition and accumulation
of the remains of plants and
animals during this Era added
further to the mineral resources
of the Great  Lakes area.

    The Era  we are in now, the
Cenozoic  Era, started 70 million
years ago. Eras are divided into
     Discussion:

   1) Discuss what a glacier is, how
     it moves, how it can change
     the geography of the land.

  2) On a map, point out where the
     glaciers covered the Great
     Lakes area. Have the students
     ever seen ice that big? Explain
     that glaciers still exist today in
     many parts of the world, e.g..
     Glacier National Park in Mon-
     tana, Sierra Nevada Mountain
     Range in Nevada, and Colum-
     bia Ice Fields in the Canadian
     Rockies near Jasper, Canada.
epochs, and scientists now believe
that the Great Lakes got their
start prior to the Pleistocene
Epoch, also known as the Ice Age,
which occurred in North America
about 10,000 years to 15,000
years ago. The region where the
Lakes are now originally was
carved out before the Ice Age by
an ancient river system that
emptied into the Hudson Bay or
St. Lawrence River Valley.

    During the Ice Age, glaciers
covered central North America as
far south  as Kansas and Ne-
braska, as far east as New York
     Activities
  1)  Timeline:

     Materials: 30-foot piece of string or clothesline and at least six clothespins.
     Procedure: Have two students hold up the string as a time line across the front
     of the classroom. Depending on the grade level, either have the students write
     down the names and characteristics of each era, or have the students draw a
     picture of the activities that occurred.  Clip students' work to the appropriate
     time period on the string. (Use the timeline diagram for reference) Optional:
     research animals that lived during the time periods and cut out animal tracks of
     each type of animal, including human beings (they can trace their own feet),
     Lay the timeline on the floor and  lay the tracks down next to it so the footprints
     walk through time at the appropriate eras. As the Ice Age and recent history
     time periods converge, students will be able to visualize how plants, animals,
     and human beings are recent history relative to the evolution of the Earth.
  2)  Using boxes, create "scenes" from different periods of the Great Lakes'
     geologic history, showing formations and animals unique to each phase of their
     development.
History

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 and as far west as the northern
 West Coast. In some places, the
 glaciers were over 6,500 feet
 thick, almost a mile-and-a-
 quarter high.  Through the sheer
 weight of the ice, coupled with
 the varying hardness of the rocks
 beneath it, the glaciers tore up
 the river terrain, creating natural
 dams and dikes that obstructed
 the drainage of the ancient river
 system. As the glacier receded
 from North America, the Great
 Lakes began to form from the
 melting receding glacial water
 which had enlarged the original
 river basin. During the Ice Age,
 modern humans, saber tooth
 tigers, mammoths, and numerous
 other animals began to roam the
 Earth. In addition, the first
         grasslands, herbaceous
              plants,  and forests
                  developed.
Great Lakes People

    For a variety of reasons, the
Great Lakes have attracted many
different kinds of people from all
over the world. From Native
Americans to European immi-
grants, these people contribute to
its diversity and cultural rich-
ness. This lesson introduces
students to the people of the
Great Lakes Basin.
    About 10,000 years ago,
around the time that the glacier
receded, the first inhabitants of
the Great Lakes area appeared.
It is believed that these Native
Americans came from South
America or across the land
bridge once connecting the
continents of North America and
Asia in Alaska. Tribes of Native
Americans peopled the shores,
among them the Iroquois, Al-
lumettes, Chippewas, Hurons,
Ottawas, Senecas, Mohawks,
Fries, and Ojibways.  Many cities
take their names from the tribes
or great chiefs of these tribes,
including Ottawa, Canada;
Pontiac, Michigan; and Erie,
Pennsylvania.  Lake Huron was
named directly for the Huron
Indians.  Other present-day cities
were once Indian villages, includ-
ing Quebec, Canada, which was
once Stadacona; and Montreal,
Canada, which was Hochelaga.

    In Europe, two events in-
creased curiosity about the so-
called New World: voyages by
Norsemen in the twelfth to four-
teenth centuries and the voyage
to America by  Christopher
Columbus in the fifteenth cen-
tury. Artifacts such as a Viking
sword, axe and shield found in
Ontario and southwestern Minne-
sota suggest that the Vikings and
Norsemen may have reached the
North American continent as far
inland  as Minnesota via the
Hudson Bay.

    In the 1500s and 1600s, the
French were the primary explor-
ers and settlers in and around
the Great Lakes. Less than 200
years after Norsemen reached
the Great Lakes, French explor-
ers and missionaries began to
arrive. Over a period of time,
they constructed forts along the
Great Lakes all the way to King-
ston, Ontario, where Fort Fron-
tenac was located.

    The British were active, too,
constructing Fort Oswego on
Lake Ontario's south shore in the
early 1700s. The British had
already colonized the New
England states and parts of
Pennsylvania.  Steady migration
by the British into French-
dominated territory around the
     Discussion:

   1) Ask the students to talk about
     where their families are from.
     Why did their families origi-
     nally move to the Great Lakes
     Basin?

  2) Locate interesting names of
     towns and cities on a map of
     the Great Lakes. Determine
     the origin of the name or have
     the class write to the city's
     Chamber of Commerce for
     further historical information.
Great Lakes led to war between
the two nations over the fur
trade.  The first African Ameri-
cans arrived in the Great Lakes
area in the late 1700s, when Jean
Baptiste Pointe DuSable, a trap-
per, built a cabin in the Chicago
area. African Americans came in
greater numbers in the late
1800s.

    During the 1800s, there was
a mass influx of other ethnic
groups from Europe. They came
to the New World in search of
freedom and prosperity.  In all,
more than 21 different nationali-
ties settled in the Great Lakes
area. Scandinavians again were
among the first to arrive. Norwe-
gians founded the first perma-
nent colony on the Fox River in
Illinois, and Swedes settled at
Pine Lake, Wisconsin, west of
Milwaukee.  Belgians also came,
and the largest population of
Belgians in the United States are
now in Door County, Wisconsin.
The Irish represented the largest
immigrant group in Canada.  The
first group of Finns settled on the
upper peninsula of Michigan and
worked in the copper mines
there.  They also peopled the
areas around Duluth, Minnesota,
working in the open-pit mines of
the Vermilion and Mesabi ranges.
Germans flocked to the Great
                                                                                                History

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  Lakes area, particularly in San-
  dusky, Ohio, on Lake Erie and in
  Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
      Also among the immigrants to
  the Great Lakes Basin were the
  Canadians, French-Canadians,
  Russians, Czechs, Greeks, Turks,
  Persians and Spaniards, Welsh-
  men, Scotsmen, and Dutch.
  Immigrants from Mexico,  Puerto
  Rico, and other Central American
  countries came at the turn of the
  century, with significant migra-
  tion occuring during World War I.





2)





3)





Activities
Have the students research the
Native American and European
people who first settled in the
Great Lake Region. Locate early
settlements on the map.
As a class, research and dress up
as early explorers of the Great
Lakes region and describe their
experiences. Have the students
write a make-believe journal entry
of an explorer's adventures.
Have the class research the
history of your town. Write to a
local historical group or invite a
long-time resident to share his or
her memories of the town's
history with the class.
  Shipwrecks
     A sailor's life journeying the
  five Great Lakes sounds romantic,
  but not all the journeys have been
  smooth sailing. The Great Lakes
  have seen their share of ship-
  wrecks over the years.
     Explorer Robert de LaSalle's
  ship, The Griffin, one of the first
  large ships ever to sail the Great
  Lakes, was launched in  1679 and
  carried a load of furs out of Green
  Bay on its maiden voyage. She
  was never seen again and no
History
 splinter ever washed ashore.
 The Griffin leads the long parade
 of ghost ships that provide us
 with the great mysteries of the
 Great Lakes.

    In 1871 alone, 1,167 disas-
 ters were recorded. In the two
 decades between 1878 and 1898,
 the United  States Commissioner
 of Navigation reported 5,999
 vessels wrecked on the Great
 Lakes and  1,093 of these were
 total losses. 1905 was a particu-
 larly bad year on the Lakes with
 271 vessels damaged, 54 of
 which were lost through the
 stress of weather.

    Whereas luck and intuition
 were the tools available to early
 skippers, today's captains have
 the finest and most sophisticated
 navigational aids available.
 Ships are equipped with weather
 warning systems, radios, direc-
 tion finders, and depthometers.
 Careful study of previous ship-
 wrecks has taught us how to
 improve ship construction and
 methods of navigation.

    Despite all that modern
 technology  can offer, surviving a
 Great Lakes storm is still a chal-
 lenge. The storms of the Great
 Lakes have been compared with
 a "witches brew,"
 and a "devil's
 harvest."
 Storms can
 explode
 across
 hun-
 dreds
 of
miles of
 open
water
with
little
 or no
warn-
ing.
Storms
on the
Great Lakes often can be more
difficult to navigate than ocean
storms. Waves on the Great
Lakes jump and strike quickly
compared to the lethargic rolling
and swelling of ocean waves.

   Just as there are  comparisons
to be made between ocean
storms and lake storms, there
are differences in the way each of
the Great Lakes reacts in a
storm. Most veteran  captains
and crews find Lake Erie the
least agreeable in either fair or
foul weather because of its
shallow depth  and muddy bot-
tom.

   Lake Superior is a favorite
among mariners because its
large size affords the  greatest
amount of room for maneuvering
during a storm. However, it too
poses a challenge  to navigate
with its rocky coastline, cold tem-
peratures (40 degrees in summer
or winter), and huge waves that
develop because of the Lakes'
depth. An ancient Chippewa
legend warns that Superior
"never gives up its dead."

   Lake Michigan commands the
greatest respect among seafarers
for several reasons. Prevailing
      winds sweep its length

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 and the currents caused by wind
 shifts around the Straits of
 Mackinac cause it to be the
 trickiest of the Lakes to keep on
 course. It also has a scarcity of
 natural harbors and human-
 made places of refuge.
    Activities:
 1)  Have students research a Great
    Lakes shipwreck and tell the story
    to the class (see back cover for re-
    sources).
 2)  Contact a maritime museum in your
    state and ask what underwater
    archeology is currently being done
    in the Great Lake nearest you.
The Fate of the
Christmas Tree Ship

         It was late November
         and the sights and
         sounds of the holiday
season were creeping into the
bustling city of Chicago.  Each
year, the arrival of the creaking
old three-masted schooner Rouse
Simmons served as a signal for
the beginning of the Christmas
season. The schooner always
ended her shipping season by
bringing to Chicago a large and
profitable cargo of Christmas
trees.

    Along with the annual tree
buyers, peg-legged and bearded
Claud Winters eagerly awaited
the arrival of the Rouse Simmons.
Claud and Captain Schunemann,
owner and master of the ship,
had an unusual bond. Although
their lives were quite different,
they seemed to understand and
sympathize with  each other.

    Claud was soft-hearted under
his rough outer appearance.  As
a child he had lost a leg under a
     Discussion:

  1)  Talk about the different na viga-
     tional challenges posed by each
     Great Lake. The information
     mentions that previous ship-
     wrecks lead to the development
     of further safety precautions.
     Discuss with the students what
     might be learned from ship-
     wrecks.  How can shipwrecks
     tell us about the way people
     lived long ago and about the
     history of shipping?

  2)  Discuss what inventions and
     advancements in weather pre-
     diction have made navigation
     on the Great Lakes safer.
boxcar, so he couldn't handle the
demands of being a seafarer.
Claud admired the Captain as a
fearless sailor and a smart ship
operator.  In the great storm of
1889 the Rouse Simmons was the
only sailing ship that was not
severely damaged or lost.

    The Captain was legendary
for his stinginess and stubborn-
ness in working with anyone who
might cut into his profit. Claud
would have enjoyed the thrill and
adventure of a sailor's life. The
Captain must have understood
this about Claud because he was
unusually generous to his stocky
peg-legged friend.  Once the
Captain gave Claud a silver dollar
saying, "Always keep this and
you'll never be broke." When-
ever they met, Claud would show
him the coin and say, "Here it is
Cap...still as good as new and still
a yearnin' to be spent."
    On the morning of November
27, 1912, Claud stomped onto the
Clark Street wharf to await the
early morning arrival of the
Rouse Simmons. Claud had hired
 a group of men to unload the
 fragrant pine and balsam trees.
 When the ship was nowhere to be
 seen, Claud was sure the Captain
 was floating offshore waiting for
 the fog to lift so he wouldn't have
 to pay charges for a  tug to bring
 him in. But by 4:00 PM many of
 Claud's hired companions had
 tired of waiting and left. Claud
 himself was feeling tired, dis-
 couraged and hungry. Many busy
 tugs had come upriver, but
 nowhere on the horizon could he
 see the sails or masthead lamps
 of the Rouse Simmons.

    The year 1912 had been a
 devastating one for Great Lakes
 shippers.  The worst snow storm
 in a century had blasted the lakes
 for four days in early November,
 destroying 10 large freighters
 and littering the shoreline with
 debris.  Four hundred seamen
 were lost in those four disastrous
 days.

    Meanwhile Captain Schune-
 mann was realizing he could turn
 a disaster into a fortune. Snow
 had buried tree farms in Michi-
 gan  and Wisconsin.  Chicago tree
 dealers were desperate for trees.
 Captain Schunemann was happy
 to deliver! At Thompson Harbor
just southwest of Manistique,
 Michigan trees were  being
 crammed into every available
 space on the Rouse Simmons.
 Well into the evening, the Captain
 had more bundles of trees tied on
 board the deck, row upon row.
 The  schooner sagged under the
 weight of her fragrant cargo. He
 expected this could be the most
 profitable run he had ever made.
    Despite stormy weather, the
Rouse Simmons set sail at noon
 on November 25, 1912.  The
 schooner Dutch Boy was seeking
 shelter when its captain spied the
Rouse Simmons off his bow.  He
 exclaimed above the  howling
wind, "Mother of God, look! That
                                                                                                History

-------
  crazy Dutchman's going out in
  this, and him with every inch of
  canvas up!"
      As the Rouse Simmons swung
  west southwest on course to-
  wards Chicago, she was caught in
  deadly winds of 60 miles per
  hour. Every part of the ship
  creaked, moaned, and shrieked
  in the howling gale. Some time
  during the night two sailors were
  sent to check the lashings.  A
  tremendous wave swept them,
  along with many of the bundled
  trees and a small boat, into the
  raging seas. With less weight on
  board, Captain Schunemann and
  his first  mate were able to ma-
  neuver the vessel toward shelter
  at Bailey's Harbor.

     As fate would have it, the
  violent wind changed suddenly,
  producing a furious snowstorm
  and an incredible drop in tem-
  perature. A thick blanket of ice
  quickly thickened as the unre-
  lenting waves pounded the ship.
  The situation  of the Rouse Sim-
  mons was becoming more des-
  perate each moment. Battered
  hatch covers could no longer
  prevent  water from entering the
  hold where it quickly turned into
  ice on the trees.
     From the station tower at
  Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, men of
  the old United States Lifesaving
  Service sighted the Rouse Sim-
  mons flying distress signals as
  she continued to move low in the
  water, driven along by the force
  of the gale. A  rescue team 25
  miles to  the south launched a
  surfboat in an attempt to inter-
  cept the  suffering schooner.
  Visibility was difficult and a two
  hour search was unsuccessful.
  But suddenly there was a break
  in the snowstorm  and the pitiful
  ship was sighted.  She was barely
  afloat and resembled a mass of
  ice.  Rescuers desperately moved
full steam ahead as blinding
snow again made it impossible to
see the schooner. The Rouse
Simmons vanished from sight and
was never seen again.

    Meanwhile, Claud Winters
continued to believe that the
Rouse Simmons would arrive
even after a note was found in a
bottle on the beach in Sheboygan,
Wisconsin. It said, "Friday...
everybody goodbye.  I guess we
are all through. During the night
the small boat was washed
overboard. Leaking bad. Ingvald
and Steve lost too. God help us.
Herman Schunemann."  Chicago
suffered from a shortage of
Christmas trees that year.

    That Christmas Eve, Claud
made his daily trip to the dock.
He stood in the falling snow
waiting for the Rouse Simmons to
arrive. The next morning a
policeman found him blanketed
with snow. Believing to the end
that the Captain would come
     Discussion:

   1) Discuss Claud Winters and
     Captain Herman Schune-
     mann's personalities, inter-
     ests, and appearance.

   2) Talk about what kind of
     person would choose the life
     of a seaman in the early part
     of the century.
through, Claud's sad life was
ended. As the policeman picked
up his lifeless body, a silver
dollar fell from his frozen fingers
and rolled into a crack in the
dock, landing in the icy black
water below.

   It was another 10 years
before evidence of the Rouse
Simmons was discovered.  Cap-
tain Herman Schunemann's
wallet was found among the fish
caught in the nets of a Wisconsin
fisherman.
    Activities:
 1)  Have the students trace the route oftheflouseS/mmonsonthe Great Lakes
    map.

 2)  Have the students write a diary entry that Claud Winters might have written
    after one of the evenings he spent at the dock waiting for the Rouse Simmons
    to arrive, or have them write a message one of the crew of the Rouse Simmons
    might have written and put into a bottle in hopes that it would eventually reach
    his family.

 3)  Assuming that the Rouse Simmons had made it safely to Chicago, use the infor-
    mation below to make up math problems appropriate to the level of your class:

    Number of trees loaded onto the ship:                 1,000
    Number of trees washed overboard in the storm:        300

    Price Captain Schunemann paid for the trees:           $.25/each
    Price of trees when sold in Chicago:                  $.75/each


    For older students, discuss gross and net profits, taking into consideration the
    cost of shipping the trees and the cost of the lost trees.
History

-------
Where Would We Be
Without the Great Lakes?

    The Great Lakes are part of
our daily lives. They provide us
with fresh drinking water; indus-
tries and jobs including agricul-
ture, fisheries, manufacturing,
shipping, and tourism; and
beautiful shorelines and parks.
This section explores how we
depend on the Lakes and the
many ways we use them.

    The Great Lakes provide us
with fresh water for just about
any kind of activity you can
imagine. Today, there are ap-
proximately 37 million people
living in the Great Lakes Basin
and more than 26 million of these
people rely on the Great Lakes for
their drinking water.  Most of the
original settlements which grew
into cities were established near
tributaries that provided a supply
of fresh water for domestic and
industrial use.
    How much water do these 26
million people use in a day,  a
year, their lifetime?  The Great
Lakes contain about 5,500 cubic
miles of water.  If a person took 3
baths a day, it would take over
110 billion years to use all the
water in the Great Lakes! If all
26 million people took  3 baths a
day, it still would take 4,254
years to use all the water in the
Lakes.
    Many people don't  realize it,
but resources in the Great Lakes
Basin are responsible for the
quality of our lives. So much of
our lives depend on the Great
Lakes' rich farmland, abundant
fish, water power, transportation,
 How Much Water Is Used...?


 In the average residence per year:

 By an average person daily:
 To flush a toilet:

 To take a shower:

 To take a bath:

 To brush your teeth (with water running):

 To wash dishes by hand:

 To run a dishwasher:

 To wash clothes in a washing machine:
 To water your lawn:
    107,000 gallons

    168 gallons

    5-7 gallons

    25-50 gallons

    50 gallons

    2 gallons

    20 gallons

    15-25 gallons per cycle

    35 gallons per cycle

    35 gallons per half acre
   Discussion:

1) Discuss how students and
   their families use water in
   their daily lives and explore
   how important water is as a
   natural resource.

2) Discuss what would happen if
   fresh water was not readily
   available. Talk about ways
   drinking water is wasted and
   how it can be conserved.

3) Using the information on
   water use, calculate how
   much water the students and
   their families use each day.
   Have students measure the
   amount of water they use to
   brush their teeth once, then
   calculate how much water
   they use a week or a month.
and natural beauty.
    Within the 201,000 square
miles of the Great Lakes Basin,
67,000 square miles are devoted
to agriculture—an area larger
than each of the bordering states
except Minnesota. The main
agricultural products produced in
the region today are wheat, corn,
soybeans, barley, and oats.
Grapes are grown in the Lake
Ontario region for wine-making
in New York. The Lake Michigan
area contains the most farmland
of all the Great Lakes and is a
leading grower of fruits and
vegetables.  The State of Wiscon-
sin is known for its cheeses and
other milk-products. The Lake
Erie region leads the Great Lakes
in the raising of pigs, sheep,
soybeans, wheat, and chicken
corn.  The Lake Huron Basin is
the world's biggest producer of
navy beans, and the Lake  Supe-
                                                                                              Social Studies

-------
  rior region is an active forest
  products producer.

      Great Lakes fish are an
  important source of food for
  people and hundreds of species
  of animals and birds.  The aver-
  age annual commercial fishing
  catch is approximately 110
  million pounds. Major species
  caught in the Great Lakes include
  whitefish, yellow perch, lake
  trout, salmon, walleye, lake
  herring, rainbow smelt, chubs,
  white bass, brown bullhead, and
  carp.  One of the most prosper-
  ous fishing areas is Lake Erie,
  where the walleye pike fishery is
  widely considered the best in the
  world. In Canada, the Lake Erie
  fishery represents nearly two-
  thirds of the country's total Great
  Lakes harvest.
      Shipping has been respon-
  sible for the development of the
  entire Great Lakes Region.  The
  Great Lakes and their intercon-
  necting channels have provided a
  natural transportation system for
  exploration and settlers, and
  trade and transport of goods—
  particularly mineral resources
  and agricultural products.  Boom
  towns have come and gone as
  shipping enabled natural re-
  sources to be reached and
  transported, and today shipping
  continues to be a major industry
  on the Lakes. Iron ore from the
  Lake Superior area is shipped to
  mills in Chicago, Cleveland, and
  Gary to be made into steel.  This
  steel is then shipped to Detroit
  automakers. Among the other
  products transported on the
  Lakes are coal, limestone, grain,
  newsprint, and cement. In 1959,
  completion  of the St. Lawrence
  Seaway drastically changed the
  Great Lakes shipping industry by
  expanding it to include interna-
  tional transport.
    Many manufacturing indus-
tries are attracted to the Great
Lakes area because of the advan-
tages of being near a water
source which provides cheap
electricity and convenient trans-
portation routes.  Major manu-
facturing industries in the Great
Lakes region include steel, paper,
chemicals, and automobiles.
Thirty-six percent of United
States automobiles and 38% of
Canadian  automobiles are pro-
duced in the Basin.  The steel
industry is concentrated at the
southern end of Lake Michigan,
and in Detroit, Cleveland, and
Lorain, Ohio. Paper mills are
located primarily in the upper
Lakes, with a large concentration
of mills along the Fox River that
feeds into Green Bay on Lake
Michigan. Chemical manufactur-
ers are on the Niagara River, the
Saginaw Bay in Lake Huron, and
in Sarnia, Ontario.
    Tourism and recreation also
are major industries in the Great
Lakes Basin.  For example, in
Ottawa County, Ohio, the regular
population of 40,000 increases to
about 250,000 on weekends as
tourists come to enjoy the sights.
In many areas of the Basin, small
unprofitable marinas have been
turned into multimillion dollar
complexes with stores, restau-
rants, and swimming pools. Sport
fishing also is a major component
of the recreation industry. The
sale of licenses, equipment, and
boat rentals generates hundreds
of millions of dollars every year.
Charter fleets and a large fish
stocking program have been
developed to fuel the industry.
Over 60 million people each year
visit the 98 state parks, 39 provin-
cial parks, and 12 national parks
on the United States and Canadian
Great Lakes shores.
    When we consider the benefits
we gain from all of these indus-
tries in the Great Lakes Basin, it
is important to remember that
each of these industries have
environmental consequences.
     Activities:

 1)  On a map, fill in the major cities
     mentioned and trace the chan-
     nels between Lakes which allow
     ships to travel between Lakes.
     Draw in symbols or figures rep-
     resenting different types of
     industries located around the
     Lakes.
 2))  Have each student draw a
     picture of his or her favorite
     Great Lakes recreational
     activity. Make a collage of all
     the pictures.
Social Studies

-------
Who Governs the
Great Lakes?

    The Great Lakes are so big
that their shores span the
boundaries of eight states and
two Canadian provinces.  With so
many government bodies in-
volved, preservation of the Great
Lakes requires cooperation and
  Discussion:

  1) Imagine what it would have
     been like living in the Great
     Lakes area before trains, cars,
     and airplanes were invented.
     Why were the Great Lakes
     important to the settlers?

  2) Discuss the types and func-
     tions of ships used on the
     Great Lakes such as freighters,
     commercial fishing ships, and
     pleasure crafts. Ask students
     what types of ships they have
     seen on the Lakes.

  3) Discuss why the Great Lakes
     are important to farming. How
     does the water get from the
     Lakes to the farms? What
     would happen if the water in
     the Lakes were so polluted it
     could not be used for farming?

  4) Talk about what would happen
     if there were no fish in the
     Great Lakes. With no fish to eat
     insects, what would happen to
     the number of insects?

  5) Ask the students what kind of
     fun activities they can do
     around the Great Lakes. Have
     they visited any state  or
     national parks in the Great
     Lakes Basin? Why is  it
     important to have parks along
     the border of the Great Lakes?
     {minimizes shoreline develop-
     ment)
 team work. This section
 will explore the necessity
 for governments and
 people to work together to
 solve the environmental
 problems facing the Great
 Lakes region.

    Because the United
 States and Canada share
 the Great Lakes as a
 border, many govern-
 ments are involved with
 environmental problems
 in the Great Lakes Basin:
 on a federal level, the U.S.
 Environmental Protection
 Agency and Environment
 Canada; eight state  gov-
 ernments (Illinois, Indi-
 ana, Michigan, Minnesota,
 New York, Ohio, Pennsyl-
 vania, and Wisconsin);
 and two Canadian prov-
 inces (Ontario and Que-
 bec). Having both Canada and
 the United States involved pres-
 ents the unique situation of two
 nations responsible for managing
 and protecting a natural re-
 source.

    To officially agree on how to
 protect the Great Lakes, the
 United States and  Canada signed
 a treaty in 1909 called the
 Boundary Water Treaty. The
 treaty declared that neither
 Canada nor the United States has
 the right to pollute the resources
 of its neighbor. It  also said that
 both countries have equal rights
 to the use of waterways that
 cross the international border of
the Lakes. Despite the agree-
 ments made in the treaty,  pollu-
 tion problems began to mount,
 and by the early 1970s,  the two
 countries had to reconsider the
 Boundary Water Treaty.

    The two countries decided to
make a more specific commit-
ment to restoring and maintain-
ing the environmental health of
the Great Lakes Basin. The
agreement, called
the Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement, was signed in 1972
and created a bi-national com-
mission that would be respon-
sible for reducing pollution in the
Great Lakes and developing
specific plans for cleaning up
many of the pollution problems in
the Basin.  The commission is re-
ferred to as the International
Joint Commission.

    Making progress on the
problems that affect the Great
Lakes is not easy. This is because
the problems are not simple ones
and because every proposal has
ramifications that are both good
and bad. For example, an
environmental protection pro-
posal that limits industrial
growth may help prevent further
pollution of the Great Lakes, but
it may have negative effects on
the economy and the availability
of jobs.
                                                                                             Social Studies

-------
        Discussion:

      1) Talk about other natural
        resources we share with
        Canada and other countries
        such as air, oceans, and
        wildlife.

      2) Ask students if they know who
        is in charge of making
        decisions about how to clean
        up pollution on the Great
        Lakes. Discuss how we can
        influence our governments to
        work hard on ways to protect
        the Lakes.

      3) Talk about jobs students could
        have in the future that will
        contribute to protecting the
        Lakes (engineer, teacher, sci-
        entist, zoologist, biologist,
        politician).

      4) Brainstorm ways that working
        cooperatively with a partner
        or group can be beneficial in
        solving problems.
Acid Rain: A Shared
Problem

    When talking about acid rain,
the old adage applies—what goes
up must come down.  This
section explores acid rain, an
example of a difficult environ-
mental issue facing the United
States and Canada. By focusing
on this complex environmental
concern, the lesson reveals why it
is so important for governments
to work together and be aware of
how their actions affect the
quality of life of others.
    Acid rain is rain, snow, hail,
fog, dust, or soot containing high
levels of acid.  Pollutants that are
transferred from the air into the
Lakes are responsible for harm-
ing the quality of the water in the
Lakes, as well as the health  of the
plants and animals that call the
Great Lakes home. But acid rain
isn't just a regional problem; it is
      Activities:

  1)   On the Great Lakes map provided, have students identify and color in the United
      States, Canada, the Great Lakes, and states and provinces that border the
      Great Lakes. Using a different color, trace the United States and Canadian
      border. Have the students ever crossed any borders? Could they tell they were
      entering another country?

  2)   Conflict Resolution

      Divide the class into groups representing each state and province. Have each
      group make a plan for protecting the Great Lakes. All state groups should meet
      to share their ideas and develop one overall plan for the United States. Do the
      same with the Canadian provinces. Finally, one representative is chosen from
      each country to work out an international agreement for protecting the Great
      Lakes. The agreement has to be acceptable to both countries. If there are
      disagreements, ask the students to explore creative ways of solving conflicts.
      This activity is easily adapted to different grade levels.  For lower grades, stu-
      dents could explore plans for keeping the school yard clean. Higher grade
      levels could expand the students roles to represent various interests and
      industries affected by such agreements.
 a global problem and there is
 little worldwide agreement on
 how to tackle it. Neither the
 United States nor Canada can
 combat acid rain alone. It is
 carried across national frontiers
 and often affects distant places
 more strongly than where it is
 produced.  Solving the acid rain
 problem requires an understand-
 ing of the consequences of our
 actions in the United States and
 Canada, and the necessity of
 cooperating in the search for a
 solution.

    With the issue of acid  rain,
 attention is drawn to the Great
 Lakes Basin.  This is because
 many "smokestack" industries
 are located in and near the
 Basin, and many people believe
 that the pollution from these
 industries contributes to the acid
 rain problem in Ontario, eastern
 Canada and northeastern United
 States. Many Canadians get
 upset with the United States
 because so much of the pollution
 coming from industry in the
 United States blows with the
 wind, sometimes ending up in
 Canada.

    There are no simple solutions
 to this problem. Cost, economics,
 and  available technologies are all
 issues at stake.  Most leaders an-
 ticipate that stopping acid rain
 will be costly. Many dollars will
 have to be spent to change the
 way fuels are burned and  how
 other industrial processes are
 used to make the goods and
 services on which our society
 depends.  Because so much of the
 industry is located on the United
 States side of the Lakes, some
 Great Lakes states are nervous
 that they will be responsible for
 much of the cost.

   Long term solutions to the
 acid rain problem include  insti-
tuting strict air  quality legisla-
tion, developing technologies to
Social Studies

-------
help fuels burn more cleanly, and
filtering gases before they enter
the atmosphere. Individuals can
contribute to solving the acid rain
problem by instituting recycling
programs, using public transpor-
tation, and turning off appliances
to cut down on energy consump-
tion.
About Acid Rain

The majority of acid rain results
from fossil fuels such as coal, oil,
and natural gases burned in
industry, electrical power plants,
and motor vehicles. Once in the
atmosphere, these pollutants
combine with moisture and inter-
act with sunlight to form sulfuric
acid and nitric acid. Tall factory
smoke stacks discharge pollut-
ants high into the atmosphere
where winds carry the acids for
hundreds of miles. Eventually the
acids fall back to the earth in the
form of rain, snow, or dust. Fac-
tors influencing how far acid rain
travels include wind speed, wind
direction, and cloud chemistry.


The effects of acid rain include:

•  Damage to buildings, monu
   ments, and statues.
•  Destruction of lake and river
   ecosystems. Fish cannot
   reproduce and soon die out
   when acid levels become too
   high in rivers and lakes. If a
   lake or river loses its fish
   population, animals and birds
   in the area may starve or be
   forced to move away from the
   area to look elsewhere for
   food.
 High acid levels dissolve
metals, such as aluminum, that
are present in river and lake
beds, and soil  and rock aqui-
fers.  The metals enter the
water and possibly contaminate
fish, making them harmful for
wildlife and human consump-
tion.

Damage to plant life. Acid rain
can affect trees and crops by
directly attacking their leaves
and needles or by soaking into
soil,  and changing its chemical
balance.
Contamination of drinking
water. By gradually eating
away at metal pipes, acid rain
causes metal to enter the drink-
ing water supplies.  Some
studies have linked acid rain to
increased infant mortality rates
and lung dysfunctions.
                                                                                            Social Studies

-------
       Discussion:
     1) Introduce air pollution by
       asking the students what their
       senses tell them about the air.
       Explore how we can use our
       sense of sight, taste, and smell
       to be "air detectives."
     2) Brainstorm sources of air
       pollution such as cars, facto-
       ries, fires, and cigarette
       smoking. Discuss what
       common activities in their own
       lives indirectly contribute to
       acid rain (e.g., electricity
       demand causes power plants
       to create more air pollution).
       What can we do to reduce air
       pollution? Discuss ways to
       save energy.
     3) Explore how difficult it is for
       the United States and Canada
       to decide how to eliminate
       acid rain problems and
       compromise.  Discuss
       solutions to the acid rain
       problem and how some of the
       solutions may affect other im-
       portant areas such  as the
       economy, jobs, and industry.
       Ask if either the United States
       or Canada could solve the
       acid rain problem alone and
       discuss the advantages of
       working together. Ask
       students to think of other
       situations where they have
       found it was best to
       cooperate.
    Activities:
1)  To illustrate how acid rain occurs, have the students draw a picture of
    industry emissions entering the sky and coming back down as rain.
    The hydrological cycle graphic on page 15 may be useful.
2)  Seeing Air Pollution
    Materials: Cardboard, scissors, clear sticky tape or vaseline, string,
    magnifying glass.
    Procedure: Cut out strips of cardboard about 10 inches long and two
    inches wide, cut a number of holes in the strips, and tape across the
    holes with the sticky tape (vaseline on the cardboard strip will also
    work). Tie a piece of string to one end of each strip, and hang outdoors
    and in the classroom for one week. Collect strips and examine tape
    under a magnifying glass. Where do they think the dirt on the tape
    comes from? Which strips showed more dirt and why?
3)  The Effects of Acid
    Materials:  Two copper pennies, two non-metal disposable cups,
    marker pen, lemon juice or lemons, tap water.
    Procedures: Place one penny in each cup. Mark the cups A and  B.
    Squeeze lemon juice over one of the pennies  so that it is well covered.
    Add the same amount of water to the other cup (warning: liquid could
    be harmful if swallowed).  Hypothesize what may occur if you set aside
    the cups for a few days. After 4-5 days, check your hypotheses. The
    liquid in cup A will be bluish green in color, the water in cup B remains
    clear. Discuss results. What do the students think made the lemon
    juice change color? What happens when they get lemon juice on  a
    cut?  What acids are safe to drink? What acids are not?
4)  The Incredible Terrific Cleanup Machine
    Materials: Paper, pencils, markers, or crayons, construction paper or
    magazines which can be cut up, scissors, glue.
    Procedures: Brainstorm what a machine to clean air pollution would
    look like and how it would operate. Allow the students to express  their
    ideas freely. Divide the class into groups and have them use the mate-
    rials to create a machine of their own. When  each group has com-
    pleted their machine, let members of each group explain their creation
    to the entire class. Ask students what they could create if they com-
    bined all their ideas to make one Incredible Terrific Cleanup Machine.
    Relate this to the  idea of two countries combining their resources to
    clean up pollution in the Great Lakes.
Social Studies

-------
 Research is very important to the
 progress of cleaning up the Great
 Lakes.  It is essential if we are to
 fully understand the effect of
 human activity on the environ-
 mental quality of the Lakes.
 Research vessels  like Lake
 Guardian provide us with more
 information about the Lakes so
 we can make better decisions
 about how to clean them up.
    This lesson, The Journey of
Lake Guardian, is a read-aloud
story. The ideas and problems
can be adapted for all levels of
K-5 students. Each lake is
explored and the many environ-
mental concerns facing the  Great
Lakes are revealed and dis-
cussed.  Discussion topics and
hands-on activities follow each
story segment.
Part 1: The Journey of Lake Guardian
Story Highlights

Hot Spots:

The 42 "Areas of Concern" in the Great
Lakes Basin identified by the
International Joint Commission (see
Social Studies lesson) where pollution
problems are of concern and
environmental quality standards are not
being achieved.

See the inside cover introduction for
more information regarding Lake
Guardian.
                                   Vocabulary:

                                   adventuresome
                                   chemicals
                                   contamination
                                   distilled
                                   guardian
                                   hots pots
                                   laboratory
              microscope
              pollution
              reagent
              research
              scientific
              toxic
              winches
          Lake Guardian, a very
          curious and adven-
          turesome research
boat, is setting out to explore and
learn about the Great Lakes.
Lake Guardian loves to travel,
and the Great Lakes are her
favorite place to go because of
their large size, beauty, and
exciting history.

   Lake Guardian will cruise
from shore to shore  visiting all
five of the Great Lakes. She will
stop to study  the air, water, land,
plants, and animals, along with
other creatures that you can only
see under microscopes.  Learning
about all the kinds of pollution in
the Lakes is important because it
will help make them clean and
keep them beautiful. There are
some kinds of pollution you can't
even see and smell! Where does
it come from? How much is
there in each Lake?  How does it
hurt animals, plants, and people
that live in the Great Lakes?
Lake Guardian wants to under-
stand it all because she is a
guardian of the Great Lakes, and
she wants to take care of and
protect them.  Many people
depend on Lake Guardian and
the things she learns about the
Great Lakes, because they too
are working hard to make the
Lakes cleaner and healthier for
everyone.

    Lake Guardian carries 11
crew members and 31 scientists
along with all their special
scientific machines. Weighing
182 tons in the water, she is 180
feet long and 40 feet wide, so she
has plenty of room to carry all
the necessary equipment. Lake
Guardian's laboratory contains
scientific instruments to measure
very low levels of contamination;
refrigerators and freezers to
store and preserve samples; pure
distilled water to make up chemi-
cal reagents; and computers to
help with the analysis of samples.
She even has several winches
capable of lifting 5,000 pounds,
                                                                                      Environmental Sciences

-------
  and has cranes capable of lifting
  heavier loads up to 30,000
  pounds. Storms worry her
  though, for she is afraid of
  rocking too much and breaking
  all the special equipment.
      Lake Guardian has a very
  busy schedule because there are
  42 places she is worried about
  and must visit. These places are
  called "hot spots" because many
  of them are so polluted or toxic
  that some plants, animals, and
  fish that live there are sick.  You
  can't swim or fish in these areas
  because you could get sick too. It
  is sad to think about the hot
  spots, and Lake Guardian is very
proud to be such an important
part of helping to clean them up.

    Sometimes Lake Guardian's
work seems like play because
each Lake is so special. Nature
provided each Lake with many
different trees, flowers, birds,
fish, animals, people and other
creatures in and around the
shorelines. Lake Guardian hopes
you begin to love the Lakes as
much as she does as you journey
with her.  She hopes that after
hearing her story, you'll learn
many ways that you can be
friends of the Great Lakes, and
help to make them cleaner and
healthier.
   Discussion:

1) Discuss how the students think
   the research boat can help the
   Great Lakes.  Why might it be
   hard for Lake Guardian to study
   all the different kinds of
   pollution?

2) Have the students ever been in
   a boat? Was it as big as Lake
   Guardian ? How big is Lake
   Guardian compared to the
   classroom?

3) Brainstorm types of pollution
   we expect to find in the Lakes.
   List different kinds of pollution.
   Do they know of types of pollu-
   tion that can't be seen?  What
   happens to pollution? What can
   they do to help stop pollution?
  Pollution Pathways Map
Environmental Sciences

-------
    Activities:
 1)  On a bulletin board, display a
    large map of the Great Lakes,
    or make a copy of the Great
    Lakes map for each student.
    As a class or individually, have
    the students trace the path-
    way of Lake Guardian as it
    travels through the Great
    Lakes as each part of the story
    is read. As Lake Guardian
    arrives at each Lake, have the
    students fill in the name of the
    Lake, the names of the
    bordering states and prov-
    inces, the names of towns and
    cities mentioned in the story,
    and any places familiar to the
    students.

2)  On a bulletin board or large
    piece of paper taped on the
    wall, draw a picture of  a
    cross-section of a lake and
    surrounding shoreline similar
    to the Pollution  Pathways Map
    on page 13 but without the
    figures and arrows. As the
    story progresses, students will
    discover pathways in which
    pollution enters the Great
    Lakes. Have the students
    draw in figures and arrows
    representing pathways of
    pollution learned from each
    story segment.  By the final
    story segment, students will
    have learned about the many
    activities occurring around the
    Great Lakes that cause
    pollution problems, and will be
    able to see these pathways
    represented in their
    illustration.

3)  Using a string on the school
    play yard, measure the  size of
    the research vessel. Are the
    ships they have seen bigger or
    smaller than the new research
    vessel?
                                  Part 2: Lake Guardian Explores Lake Superior
 Story Highlights

 Hydrologic Cycle:

 Evaporation, transpiration, condensa-
 tion, precipitation, infiltration, and
 runoff.

 Recreational Activity is a Source of
 Pollution:

 Environmental damage can be caused
 by many recreational activities.
 Campers, hikers, and boaters create
 problems by littering, dumping sewage
 and other wastes into the lakes, or let-
 ting gas from boats leak into the waters.
 Soil erosion problems result from
 removal of trees and grasses for devel-
 opment of marinas and summer homes.

 Hot Spots: 8
 Peninsula Harbour, Jackfish Bay,
 Nipigon Bay, Thunder Bay, St. Louis
 River, Torch Lake, Deer Lake/Carp
 Creek/Carp River, St. Marys River.
Vocabulary:
anchor
coastline
condensation
creek
evaporation
expanse
ferocious
hydrologic cycle
infiltration
ocean
precipitation
recreation
runoff
serene
stream
transpiration
trout
Wayzhigwanaad
          Lake Guardian was
          excited to start her
          journey in Lake Supe-
rior, the largest of all the Great
Lakes and the one with the least
amount of pollution. Lake Supe-
rior is so large and deep that all
the other Great Lakes plus three
more lakes the size of Lake Erie
could fit in it. It is well-known
for its lovely beaches and clear
blue water. The water is so clear
you can see fish swimming way
down deep. Lake Guardian knew
she needed to be careful, for
 Lake Superior's mood can be so
 peaceful and serene one minute,
 and the next minute a ferocious
 and lashing storm will rise out of
 its depths.
    Lake Guardian started in the
 town of Duluth, Minnesota, and
 headed northeast towards Thun-
 der Bay, Canada.  As she cruised,
 Lake Guardian learned that very
 few people live around this Lake
 area compared to the rest of the
 Great Lakes, and she knew that
 this was a large part of why Lake
 Superior is so beautiful and
 clean. The more people there
 are in an  area, the more pollu-
 tion problems Lake Guardian
 knew she'd find. How did she
 know this?
    The vast expanse of water
 and many pretty hills around
 Lake Superior would make it
 hard for Lake Guardian to leave.
 As Lake Guardian cruised to-
 wards Thunder Bay, she saw
 people hiking, swimming, fishing,
 skiing and boating. Then she
 looked over and was so shocked
 she almost dropped her anchor!
 As a motor boat passed her bow
 she watched a family toss a six-
 ring plastic can holder overboard
 with a plastic grocery bag. Lake
 Guardian was very upset because
 beautiful birds can get their
 beaks or heads caught in the
 rings, and then they can't eat.
 She was concerned that the fuel
 from  the motor boats was pollut-
 ing the water too.  People often
 forget that when they have fun,
 they need to  be careful that they
 don't harm nature. Lake Guard-
 ian wished all people had respect
 for the Great Lakes like the Chip-
 pewa culture does.  In the  Chip-
 pewa language the word
 "Wayzhigwanaad" means "water
spirit," and they emphasize that
the health of our water is directly
                                                                                        Environmental Sciences

-------
related to the quality of life for all
living things on this planet. Lake
Guardian looked forward to
sharing the Chippewa spirit of
caring for the Great Lakes with
everyone she met on her trip.
    Lake Guardian collected
some samples of water to study
how much fuel spills from the
motorboats and freighters into
the water. As she passed by
Thunder Bay she saw  big paper
mills and large fishing boats.
Crossing over to Marquette,
Michigan, she followed the
coastline towards Sault Ste.
Marie, where she would travel to
get to Lake Huron.  The Lake is
so big that sometimes  Lake
Guardian thought she  was in an
ocean.  "Where did all this water
come from?" Lake Guardian
asked the scientists on board.
Dave the environmental scientist
told her about the pathways of
water on Earth, called the hydro-
logic cycle.  Dave told her that
rain helps keep the Great Lakes
full. The rain that falls on the
    Discussion:

  1) Explain the hydrologic cycle to
    students (see diagram}. Have
    they seen evidence of the cycle
    in their daily lives? When they
    wash the dishes or take a bath
    or shower, what happens to the
    steam?  Relate this to conden-
    sation, precipitation and runoff
    in the hydrologic cycle.

  2) Explore why areas of higher
    population result in more pollu-
    tion in the Great Lakes.  Discuss
    which of the Great Lakes they
    would prefer to live beside and
    why. Discuss how recreation
    and tourism may result in harm
    to the Lakes. What should they
    do if they see someone litter at
    a beach or picnic?
                                • /'/•/precipitation   ;;;
land either runs off the surface
back into the Lakes through
streams and creeks, or soaks into
the ground. As she was talking
to Dave, a speckled trout swam
by. Lake Guardian asked the
trout if he knew how water in the
ground finds its way back to the
Lakes.  The trout explained that
the water travels underground
and enters creeks and streams
which drain into the Lakes, and
sometimes enters the Lakes
directly below the surface. Dave
then added that when  it is hot,
water evaporates up into the air.
When the water gets high enough
in the air, it cools off and comes
back down as rain  and the cycle
starts all over again.

    "Lake Guardian, it will be
important for you to understand
how water finds its way to the
Great Lakes, because pollution
sometimes follows the  same
paths to enter the lakes and hurts
them," Dave explained. Lake
Guardian thought a lot about
what Dave said, and quickly
began collecting samples of
water and fish to study. She
wanted to see what kinds of
pollution were already using
some of those pathways into Lake
Superior.
    Activities:

1)   Have the students do the
    Great Lakes map activities.
    On the Pollution Pathways
    Map draw in figures repre-
    senting recreational activi-
    ties.

2)   Fun Without Pollution

    Have the students create a
    "Fun Without Pollution"
    booklet for their family or
    school's next outing. Asa
    class or individually, have
    the students decide on
    pollution prevention rules
    for their family or school to
    follow during recreational
    activities. Include topics
    such as using garbage cans
    and preventing fires. On
    each page write out the
    rules with drawings illus-
    trating the rules.  Magazines
    can be used for cut-outs,
    and younger children can
    illustrate their ideas rather
    than writing them out.
    Staple or tie the pages
    together to make a booklet

-------
 Part 3: Investigating Lake Huron
 Story Highlights

 Airborne Pollution:

 Atmospheric toxic pollution is a major
 source of contaminants for the Great
 Lakes ecosystem. At least 40,000
 chemicals are used by U.S. industry. As
 an example, Lake Superior currently
 receives 840  kilograms per year of
 Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) - a
 carcinogenic chemical compound -
 from the atmosphere, and account for
 93% of the current total load of PCBs in
 the Lake. Pesticides are thought to
 come from as far away as Central
 America are found in the Great Lakes.

 Biomagnification:
 The process of increasing concentra-
 tions of contaminants through the food
 chain. Persistent chemicals which do
 not break down readily in the environ-
 ment accumulate in organisms and
 become concentrated at levels much
 higher than in the open water. The top
 predators atthe end of the food chain
 may accumulate concentrations of
 chemicals toxic enough to result in seri-
 ous deformities or death.

Wetlands:
 Natural water-holding shallow areas
such as bogs, marshes, or swamps
provide food, shelter, and water for
 plants and animals that need a watery
 home. Wetlands provide shelter for
 young fish, provide flood control and
 sources of recreation, and help clean
 water as it travels slowly through.
 Common animals and plants found in
 wetlands include the great blue heron,
 frogs, raccoons, cattails, dragonflies,
 crayfish, willow trees, red-winged
 blackbirds, northern pike, turtles,
 muskrats, and water lilies.

 Hot Spots:  5
 Saginaw River/Saginaw Bay, Colling-
 wood Harbour, Penetang Bay to
 Sturgeon Bay, Spanish River Mouth, St.
 Clair River.
Vocabulary:

airborne pollution
biomagnification
cormorant
critters
endangered species
herring gull
phytoplankton
predator
restore
scavenger
sediment
Sweetwater Seas
persistent
wetlands
zooplankton
          Part of Lake Guard-
          ian's job is to collect
          samples of air to make
sure it is clean enough for ani-
mals and people to breath. She
had to make sure she was persis-
tent in her work, enduring, and
never giving up until she got all
the necessary information. Lake
Guardian thought that birds
around the Great Lakes also
 could help her find out how clean
 the air is.  She decided to cruise
 up through the Georgian Bay to
 the Parry Sound and ask a
 herring gull.  Herring gulls are
 common around the Great Lakes.
 "Herring Gull, does the smoke
 and dirt from big factories and
 machines around the Great Lakes
 bother you? Do you think it
 makes  the Great Lakes un-
 healthy?"

    "Oh my yes.  After it rains, do
 you know why the air smells so
 fresh and clear? That's because
 the water is cleaning the air
 when it falls, and takes the
 pollution right out of the sky. It
 is wonderful for flying after-
 wards, but you must understand
 that the smoke and pollution falls
 with the rain into lakes and on
 the land.  When the pollution
 falls to  the bottom of a lake,
 small creatures eat it in the mud
 called sediment. Fish eat these
 small creatures in great num-
 bers, and the fish may get very
 sick from the pollution inside the
 small creatures,  I am a scaven-
 ger and I love to eat the remains
 of fish and food that fishermen
 toss overboard, and my friends
 the cormorants like to eat fish
where they live by the shores.
We end up eating the polluted
fish, but there is nothing else for
                                                                                          Environmental Sciences

-------
me to eat, and I can't tell the
difference between a good fish
and a poisoned fish. Some of my
eggs don't hatch and my babies
have been very sick because they
have been affected by the pollu-
tion I eat in the fish. It makes me
very sad."
    Herring Gull's story helped
Lake Guardian understand how
animals depend on each other for
food. She also learned  how
pollution eaten by one animal
can eventually affect many other
animals. Lake Guardian col-
lected many samples of small
creatures, fish, and microscopic
plants and animals such as
phytoplankton and zooplankton
from the bottom of Lake Huron to
study how much pollution these
critters ate.

    Lake Guardians conversation
with Herring Gull made her want
to know more about how air pol-
lution affects other animals, so
she decided to head west to Che-
boygan, Michigan. Just south of
Cheboygan was a marshy and
swampy area called a wetland,
where Lake  Guardian would find
many of Herring Gull's friends,
the Cormorants. Cormorants are
very good divers and swimmers,
and eat a lot of fish.  The cormo-
     Discussion:

   1) Relate the story's discussion of
     pollution eaten by small
     creatures to the food chain,
     reaching through the food chain
     to the fish that humans eat.
     Follow the pollution from a
     paper mill smokestack all the
     way to their own dinner plate.

  2) Talk about wetlands. Have the
     students ever seen one?  Why
     are wetlands important?
     Discuss what an endangered
     species is.
      Activities:

   1)  Have the students do the Great Lakes map activities. On the Pollution
      Pathways Map draw in figures representing sources of air pollution.
   2)  Biomagnification and the Foodchain

      Materials: Depending on the size of the class, make the equivalent of six
      circles per student out of blue paper, marking 1/3 of them on one side
      with an "X."

      Procedure: This activity can be acted out or if desired, conducted as a
      discussion through diagrams on the board. Identify one student as the
      herring gull who likes to eat fish and have him or her stand at one end of
      the classroom. Divide the remaining students into increasingly larger
      groups representing the links of the food chain: large lake trout, smaller
      rainbow smelt, zooplankton, and microscopic phytoplankton. The
      majority of students should be phytoplankton. Place the blue disks on the
      floor with those marked with an "X" face down. The blue disks represent
      water which phytoplankton take in to obtain nutrients to live. Those disks
      marked with an "X" contain pollution which has entered the water
      through the air. Have the phytoplankton "feed" by having them pick up
      the disks.  Once all  the disks are gone, have the phytoplankton reveal
      who has consumed pollution. Have the zooplankton "feed" on phyto-
      plankton by dividing the phytoplankton up evenly among the zooplankton.
      Repeat these steps with rainbow smelt and lake trout. When it comes to
      the herring gull eating his or her dinner, how much pollution has accumu-
      lated  through the foodchain?
rants confirmed what Herring
Gull had told her, and explained
that their babies often don't live
because of the pollution.  The
cormorants said that many other
animals get sick from the pollu-
tion too. Lake Guardian learned
that wetlands are too soggy for
people to live in, but they are just
right for many animals.  Wet-
lands provide homes for many
endangered species, but pollution
was affecting these animals too.
Although the stories made Lake
Guardian very sad, she was glad
to take samples of water, plants,
and sediment to learn about how
pollution from the air affects
them. The information she
collected would help people find
ways to protect and restore the
wetlands, and all the other
creatures living in the Great
Lakes Basin.
    As she cruised along, she
couldn't help thinking about how
beautiful Lake Huron was, and
she could understand why the
first English name the Great
Lakes were given was "Sweetwa-
ter Seas."  Before leaving Lake
Huron for Lake Michigan, Lake
Guardian made sure she picked
up a good supply of navy beans
for making delicious soup
throughout the voyage.  Did you
know that the Lake Huron area
produces more dry beans than
anywhere else in the United
States?

-------
 Part 4: The Journey Continues on
 Lake Michigan
 Story Highlights

 Surface Runoff:
 Surface runoff is a significant source of
 pollution in the Great Lakes. It is a
 pathway for a wide variety of pollutants
 to enter lakes. Agricultural runoff
 includes pesticides and nutrients; urban
 surface runoff includes oils, greases,
 salt (from winter road clearing), and
 litter.

 Ground water:
 Ground water is water below the sur-
 face of the earth. Ground water is our
 storage of drinking water.  It replen-
 ishes the Great Lakes, which is why it is
 so important to the Great Lakes ecosys-
 tem. As water passes through subsur-
 face areas, some substances are fil-
 tered out, but others dissolve in the wa-
 ter or are carried by the water. This
 can include human-made materials that
 have infiltrated into the ground or have
 been buried in dumps or landfill sites.
 The movement of ground water is a ma-
 jor pathway for pollution to reach the
 Great Lakes.

 Hot Spots: 10
 Manistique River, Menominee River,
 Fox River/Southern Green Bay, She-
 boygan, Milwaukee Estuary, Waukegan
 Harbor, Grand Calumet River/Indiana
 Harbor Canal, Kalamazoo River,
 Muskegon Lake, White Lake.

Vocabulary:

 agriculture     runoff
 cargo          sewers
 chemicals      smelt
 ground water    treatment plant
noise pollution   urban
 pesticides      wastewater

          Lake Guardian  was  so
          happy to reach  Lake
          Michigan, the third
largest lake in the Great Lakes.
This area had the most farmland
of all the other Lakes, and Lake
Guardian had heard many stories
about the tasty cherries of Michi-
gan and dairy products of Wis-
consin. Lake Guardian loves
cherries, and since three-quar-
ters of our nation's tart cherries
are grown in Michigan, she
headed straight down the Michi-
gan coastline, passing Ludington,
Muskegon and Benton  Harbor.
Dave  the environmental scientist
had made Lake Guardian prom-
ise that she'd stop so he could
have a piece of cherry pie, and
then head over to Wisconsin's
dairy farms to get a slice of
cheddar cheese and a glass of
milk to go with it.

    All the news that Lake Guard-
ian learned about the Lake
Michigan area was not good,
though. She learned how hard
farmers work to grow good
food for all of us to eat.
Their job was
chemicals off the land and
carried them into the Lake.  She
was worried that these chemicals
may hurt her friends in the
wetlands, so she stopped to
collect many samples of water
and sediment to find out how
much pollution was coming from
the farms and if it was harming
plants and animals.  Lake Guard-
ian also watched how the wind
carried off some of the chemicals
that a farmer was spraying on his
fruit trees.

    Cruising to the south end of
Lake Michigan, Lake Guardian
came to the big city areas. It was
exciting to ride by Gary, Indiana
where the mills were busy
making steel, but she worried
about where the wind would take
all the smoke rising out of the
smokestacks.  When Lake Guard-
ian arrived at Chicago, she
couldn't believe how many boats
there were everywhere! Big
   boats carrying cargo, small
           boats carrying fisher-
                   men, and
harder than hers!
Many farmers use chemicals
to fight off insects and weeds and
to help their crops grow better,
but some chemicals can later
become pollution problems for
the Great Lakes. Lake Guardian
cruised along the shore and
watched how the rain washed the
                       people
         having fun in fast boats
      that were so loud that
    they hurt her ears. It made
 her think about noise pollution
too, and how the noise must
scare the birds and animals that
live around the Lakes.  Lake
Guardian thought about all the
fuel that must  be going into the
water from these boats, and she
decided that her favorite boats
18
                                                                                       Environmental Sciences

-------
   were the clean and beautiful
   sailboats that relied only on the
   wind to make them move.

       So far, Lake Guardian had
   not been to an area with cities.
   as big as Chicago. One of the
   first things that she noticed was
   the big difference in the color of
   the water. She remembered
   how clear and blue Lake Supe-
   rior was, and when she looked
   at the water at the edge of Chi-
   cago, she couldn't see through
   it at all.  She talked to some
   local fish and asked them what
   they knew about pollution near
   the big city.  Rainbow Smelt told
   her stories similar to Herring
   Gull.  "Most people love how the
   rain clears the air and washes
   the streets, but we fish sure
   don't.  Living next to a large city
   means that a lot of litter and
   dirt washes or blows off the
   streets and into the Lake. Most
   people don't realize where that
   gum wrapper or cigarette is
   going to go if they just throw it
   on the ground. It makes me
   very sad.  Rainwater also
   washes down the city sewers,
   and that is good because it goes
   to a special machine, called a
   wastewater treatment plant,
   that cleans it up first. But
   sometimes if it rains really
   hard, the sewers overflow,
   causing the dirty water to
   overflow straight into the Lake."
   After listening to Rainbow
   Smelt, Lake Guardian carefully
   gathered samples of water, fish,
   plants, and mud from the
   shorelines of Chicago, Wau-
   kegan, Sheboygan, and other
   cities on Lake Michigan. She
   had to travel quickly, for it was
   a long way to Lake Erie.  She
   had to travel back through Lake
   Huron to get there.
    Activities:

1}  Have the students do the Great Lakes map activities.  On the Pollution
    Pathways Map draw in figures representing sources of agricultural and
    urban pollution runoff and infiltration to groundwater.

2)  Mingle Mingle

    Materials: A clear bottle with a top, water, oil, food coloring.

    Procedure: Put quantities of water and oil in the bottle and close it. Use
    motor oil or vegetable oil with a drop of food coloring added if you prefer.
    The separation of oil and water should be easily observed. Shake the
    bottle to try to get the oil and water to mix and then let it sit and see what
    happens.  Relate the oil in the experiment to urban surface runoff dis-
    cussed in the story. Talk about what this oil would do to animals, and
    what effects it may have on  plants or creatures living  below the surface of
    the oil, which blocks sunlight.

3)  Pollution Underground

    Materials: Large flat plastic planting tray; gravel; sand; water
    pitcher; cooking oil; food coloring; pancake syrup; onion slices; and liquid
    soap.

    Procedure: Ahead of time,  cover a corner of the tray with a layer of
    gravel. Place drops of food coloring, onion slices, and a few tablespoons
    of pancake syrup, cooking oil, and liquid soap on top of the gravel. Cover
    these materials with a thick  layer of sand. In front of the students, pour
    water into the mound of sand, gravel, and other materials, and let water
    run into empty portion of the tray.  Collect water and have students
    determine what materials are present in the water; how they entered the
    water; and what substance moved these materials from the soil to the
    water. Relate this activity to how agricultural and urban litter and
    pollution on and in the ground can contaminate ground water and
    ultimately affect the quality of the Great Lakes.
Environmental Sciences
    Discussion:

 1)  Talk about the new pollution
    pathways discussed in the
    story. Explore experiences the
    students have had related to the
    pathways. Rural: Have they
    ever seen a farmer fertilize or
    spray pesticides on crops?
    Could they smell it?  How do
    they respond to the farmer's
    dilemma of using fertilizers and
    pesticides? Urban: Ask the
    students for examples of trash
    or abandoned things they see
    every day on the street.  What
   activities at home result in
   pouring or dumping things on the
   ground outside, and how might
   these materials reach the Great
   Lakes? (see Activity/3) Does
   the story make them think twice
   about what they throw on the
   ground?

2) Askif any of the students have
   ever had fruits or vegetables
   they think may have come from
   the Lake Michigan area. Have
   them ask the grocer where they
   get fruits and vegetables to see
   if any come from these areas.

-------
 Part 5:  Lake Guardian travels the Length
 of Lake Erie
 Story Highlights

 Mayflies:
     Mayflies are excellent indicators
 of water quality because they are not
 tolerant of pollution. Monitoring
 programs in some Great Lakes states
 use mayflies as one of several  indica-
 tors of pollution-free water.

    Mayflies are aquatic insects with
 six legs and three body parts typical of
 insects, as well as two short antennae.
 Females deposit their eggs into clear
 running streams and lakes singly or in
 strings, depending upon the species.

    Nymphs hatch from the eggs and
 remain in shallow water or burrow
 beneath the mud and gravel, feeding
 upon aquatic plants. When ready to
 leave the water, they swim to the
 surface and molt, emerging in adult
 form. At this point, they are called
 "duns" and are not yet sexually mature.
 They crawl  onto nearby vegetation and
 wait from several hours to a few days
 for a final shedding of the exoskeleton
 and emerge as full-fledged adults. On a
 still sunny day, males wing upward and
 float down over and over again.
 Females join the swarm and find a mate
 and lay  eggs in the water, beginning the
 cycle anew.

 Hot Spots: 11
 Clinton River, Rouge River, River Raisin,
 Maumee River, Black River, Cuyahoga
 River, Ashtabula River, Wheatley River,
 Buffalo River, Detroit River, Niagara
 River.
Vocabulary:
exoskeleton
factory
hot water emissions
industry
mayfly
monitor
nymph
oxygen
steel
walleye pike
                        Lake Guardian made
                        her way back past
                        Mackinac City and
              turned south. She travelled on
              Lake Huron past Alpena and on
              through the St. Clair River to-
              wards Lake Erie. Her studies
              had shown that the dirtiest areas
              of the Great Lakes were the riv-
              erways that lead into the Great
              Lakes. The
              St. Clair and
              Detroit
              Rivers were
              two of them, so
              Lake Guardian
              stopped to take
              samples of water,
              sediment, and fish.  There
              were other people working
              on cleaning up these two rivers
              too, and Lake Guardian stopped
              to watch them. Nearby she
              saw the big smokestacks of
              car makers in Detroit.
    As Lake Guardian
cruised along, she started
talking with a walleye
pike named Wally.
Wally thought it was
great that Lake Guard-
ian was working so hard
to gather information to help
keep the Great Lakes clean.  He
asked Lake Guardian if she was
going to talk with the mayflies.
Lake Guardian didn't know what
a mayfly was. "You have to meet
the mayflies," exclaimed Wally,
"They're famous! Mayflies are
insects that live in the water, and
they do not like water pollution at
all. If you find mayflies, you know
the water must be clean and
healthy because mayflies just
can't live there unless it is. Their
homes must be cool with lots of
oxygen." Wally told her how
scientists keep track of how many
 mayflies there are because it
 helps them know whether the
 water is clean or not. Many
 schools and their students volun-
 teer to count mayflies in streams,
 creeks, and lakes near their
 homes to help. When the num-
 ber of mayflies gets too low, it
 tells the scientists that there may
 be a problem with too much pol-
 lution in the water. Wally ex-
 plained, "Mayflies are famous in
 Lake Erie because they let every-
 one know that Lake Erie was
                   very sick in
                    the 1970s.
                    Boy, was
                  that a bad
                 time for all of
              us. I lost a lot of
            my family back
          then. Someone noticed
        that there weren't very
      many mayflies left, and
    that was when all the human
    beings realized that they had
    to start taking care of Lake
    Erie if they wanted it to
     provide them with good
      water, fish, and everything
      else." Lake Guardian was
      glad to hear that people
      were working to keep
      Lake Erie clean, but she
      knew her job was to
      investigate more.

   Lake Guardian decided to
continue her journey around
Lake Erie on the southern shore,
starting with Toledo, Ohio.
Toledo was famous for the
beautiful glass that was made
there.  Even though the glass was
beautiful, it still was a concern of
Lake Guardian's. She stopped to
count the mayflies and study how
much pollution was being given
off by the big glass factories.  She
continued on to Cleveland, where
there are lots of factories making
steel and cars. Lake Guardian
wanted to look for mayflies here
too. Wally explained that indus-
tries like the ones making steel,
                                                                                       Environmental Sciences

-------
21
 cars, and
 glass get
 very hot
 when they
 melt the
 glass and
 steel to
 make
 cars and
 windows. They
 use the water to cool
 off the steel and glass,
 which means that they
 let off lots of warm wa-
 ter into the lake.  This is
 bad for the mayflies
 because they need
 cool water to live, as
 do many other plants
 and animals.

    Lake Guardian crossed the
 Lake to look at the beautiful
 northern shore  of Lake Erie and
 its farmlands.  Lots of sheep and
 lambs are raised in Canada near
 Lake Erie, and Lake Guardian
wanted to visit them before she
made her way to Lake Ontario.
             Discussion:

           1) Have the students do the Great
             Lakes map activities. On the
             Pollution Pathways Map draw
             in figures representing sources
             of industrial hot water emis-
             sions.

          2) Review with students why the
             mayfly is important. Can they
             think of other indicators of
             pollution? (Waterdiscoloration,
             smelly air, lack offish and birds)

          3) Discuss how industrial or
             municipal warm water dis-
             charge can be bad for lakes.
             Emphasize how human activity
             can harm the Great Lakes and
             not necessarily involve pollut-
             ants. Can the class think of
             other examples? (erosion from
             shoreline development)
                                                               Activities:
                                                           1)  Draw and discuss the life cycle of the mayfly on the board. Have
                                                               the students conduct research of other aquatic insects and report
                                                               to the class why they think they are important.
                                                           2)  Plan  a field trip to nearby streams or creeks to conduct water
                                                               quality monitoring activities including mayfly counting and trash
                                                               collection. Discuss topics such as the difference between ground
                                                               water and surface water.
                                                           3)  To highlight the  importance of monitoring our environment, have
                                                               the students monitor and chart your school or their family's
                                                               generation of waste. Have a custodian of the school give the
                                                               class a tour of how all the different kinds of waste are handled at
                                                               the school, such as waste paper and cafeteria garbage. Does the
                                                               school recycle? Choose "monitors" from the class and for two
                                                               weeks, have a monitor visit the custodial office each day and
                                                               report back to the class on how much waste was generated  each
                                                               day.  Keep track of the reports and have the students discuss
                                                               ways the school or their families can minimize waste.
 Part 6: The End of the Journey,  Lake  Ontario!
 Story Highlights                     Hot Spots:  8
 Industrial Runoff:

 Many chemical substances entering
 the Great Lakes from industrial use do
 not dissolve easily in water. These in-
 clude heavy metals and organic
 compounds like PCBs. Since they do
 not dissolve well in the water, they
 settle on the bottom of the lakes in
 sediments.

 Sediment Pollution:

 When polluted sediments are stirred up,
 the pollutants are eaten by bottom feed-
 ing organisms and become part of the
 food chain, concentrating through the
 food chain through biomagnification,
 discussed in Part III of the story. Sedi-
 ment is stirred up three ways: when the
 lake  bottom is removed to make a lake
 deeper for large boats (called dredg-
 ing); by waves from storms or human '
 activities like boating; or when animals
 living on or near the bottom stir it up
 looking for food or to use the sediment
for shelter. Contaminated sediments
 cause the most problems when they are
stirred up because the pollution
spreads.
                                                                                   Eighteen Mile Creek, Rochester
                                                                                   Embayment, Oswego River, Bay of
                                                                                   Quinte, Port Hope, Toronto Waterfront,
                                                                                   Hamilton Harbour, St. Lawrence River.
                                                                          Vocabulary:

                                                                          algae
                                                                          algae bloom
                                                                          bacteria
                                                                          carp
                                                                          dissolve
                                                                          dredging
                                                                          ecosystem
                                                                          industrial runoff
nitrogen
potassium
sediment pollution
sludge worms
solution
species
tolerate
                                                                                    Lake Guardian was
                                                                                    nervous as she left
                                                                                    Lake Erie, for she
                                                                          thought that she might take a
                                                                          wrong turn  and go over Niagara
                                                                          Falls! She was big and strong,
                                                                          but no boat  could survive a ride
                                                                          like that. She was relieved to find
                                                                          the Welland Canal and make her
                                                                          way to beautiful Lake Ontario.
                                                                          She had heard so much about the
                                                                          falls, and the breath-taking
                                                                          Thousand Islands on the

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 east end.

    Lake Guardian got out her
 map to trace her journey. She
 was very interested in looking at
 how all the water in the Lakes
 eventually comes through Lake
 Ontario because it is the last
 Lake before the water heads out
 the St. Lawrence River and into
 the ocean. This means that a lot
 of the dissolved substances and
 pollution she studied in the other
 Great Lakes also has journeyed
 to Lake Ontario, which is one of
 the reasons why Lake Ontario is
 the most polluted of all the Great
 Lakes. Lake Guardian knew that
 another reason was its small size.
 It doesn't have as much water to
 spread out the pollution.

    Lake Guardian traveled first
 by Hamilton and Toronto, Can-
 ada, passing lots of big industrial
 factories and buildings. She
 remembered all the factories and
 big machines she had seen along
 the shores of all the other Great
 Lakes. Lake Guardian was
 concerned about more than the
 smokestacks and air pollution
 she had learned about. She was
 worried  about chemicals dumped
 by the factories and businesses
 into the water. Lake Guardian
 thought about Herring Gull's
 friends the cormorants, and what
 she learned in Lake Michigan
 about the chemicals from farms
 running  off into the water and
 settling to the bottom for small
 creatures to eat. She knew that
 this was happening with the
 chemicals from factories and
 businesses too.

    She asked Dave the environ-
 mental scientist if there were
 other effects from these chemi-
 cals on the Great Lakes besides
polluting sediments and entering
 the food chain. Dave described
how some chemicals, such  as
nitrogen and potassium, from
industry, farms, and city areas
are like food to green plants in
the water, including algae. "The
algae grow very big very fast,
and we call it an algae bloom. It
eventually dies," Dave ex-
plained," but when it does, the
bacteria that feeds on the dead
algae takes a lot of the water's
oxygen.  The more algae that
blooms and dies, the more
bacteria there is taking oxygen
from the water." Lake Guardian
knew that without oxygen, many
species of fish could not live.
Dave explained that when a
lake's oxygen levels are lowered,
some species die out—mayflies
included—and others like sludge
worms and carp, that can toler-
ate low levels of oxygen, move in.
That's why scientists look for
changes in the kinds of animals
living in the Great Lakes. It tells
them if too many chemicals are
changing oxygen levels and
upsetting the balance of animals
and nature, called the ecosystem.
    Lake Guardian got to work
and collected samples and looked
for algae blooms all along the
shoreline of Lake Ontario.  She
examined the different species to
see if she could tell if chemicals
were changing the water's
oxygen levels too much.

    By the end of the journey,
Lake Guardian had learned a lot
about the beautiful Great Lakes.
She wanted to tell  everyone
about all that she had learned.
What could people do to help the
Great Lakes?  She  was concerned
about the many pollution prob-
lems that she saw, but she knew
that things could get better. Lake
Guardian knew that by helping to
collect samples and learning
more about the Lakes, she was
part of the solution. That made
her feel proud as she journeyed
up the St. Lawrence River to peek
at the ocean before heading
back home.
   Discussion:

 1) Research the kinds of animals
   that live in the sediment at the
   bottom of a lake. Have the
   students ever seen a crawfish
   or a fresh water mussel? Have
   they ever eaten one?

 2) Ask the students what they
   think happens to sediment that
   is polluted? Where does the
   pollution go from there?

 3) Discuss how the students can
   be a good friend of the Great
   Lakes. How can they or their
   families be part of the solution?
    Activities:
1)   Have the students do the Great
    Lakes map activities. On the
    Pollution Pathways Map draw in
    figures representing sources of
    industrial waste discharge.
2)   Sediment Experiment
    Materials:  Deep plastic con-
    tainer (rectangular—at least 12" x
    12" x 4" deep), fine sand, coarse
    sand, tiny colored plastic beads,
    plastic spoon.
    Procedure: Ahead of time, put a
    one-inch layer of fine sand into
    the plastic container. Provide
    every group of students with a
    container. Mix the beads with the
    sand, representing pollutants.
    Cover with water until the water
    level rises one inch above the
    sand layer. Allow this to sit until
    the water is clear. Carefully drag
    the end of a pencil once across
    the top of the fine sand. This
    represents how the sediment
    might be stirred up by organisms
    living on or near the bottom, or by
    wave action from storms or
    boats.  Use the plastic spoon,
    scoop up some of the sand off the
    bottom of the container. This is
    similar to the dredging of sedi-
    ment.  What happened to the
    sediment and the colored plastic
    bead "pollutants?"
                                                                                        Environmental Sciences

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  General Information:

  How to remember the Great Lakes'
  names: Remember the word "HOMES"
  H      = Huron
  0      = Ontario
  M      = Michigan
  E      = Erie
  S      = Superior

  Size: Largest supply of freshwater on
  earth; 20% of earth's total freshwater
  9,402 miles of shoreline
  94,710 total square miles of surface
  area (about the size of Texas)
  Basin:  The 295,200 square mile area
  within which all surface water drains
  into the Great Lakes. Includes parts of
  Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,
  New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wiscon-
  sin, Ontario, and Quebec
  Lake Superior
  Largest of the Great Lakes by surface
  area and volume, rich in natural
  resources, supplying the United States
  with 97% of its iron ore.
  Surface Area: 31,700 square miles
  Volume: 2,934 cubic miles
  Shoreline Length: 2,726 miles (including
  islands)
  Population: 474,150 (United States)
  155,675 (Canada)
  Land Use:
          91% Forest
          3 % Agricultural
          1% Residential/Industrial
          5% Other
Lake Huron

Second largest Great Lake with the
longest shoreline, counting 30,000
islands.
Surface Area: 22,973 square miles
Volume: 850 cubic miles
Shoreline Length: 3,827 miles, including
islands
Population: 1,606,518 (United States)
941,300 (Canada)
Land Use:
        68% Forest
        27% Agriculture
        2% Residential/Industrial
        3% Other

Lake Michigan

Third largest Great Lake.  Sparsely
populated and covered with forests in
the northern part, and heavily populated
with intensive industrial and agricul-
tural activity in the southern part.
Surface Area: 22,278 square miles
Volume: 1,180 cubic miles
Shoreline Length: 1,659 miles, including
islands
Population: 8,709,907*
*Does not include approximately 5 mil-
lion residents of Chicago  area who de-
pend on Lake Michigan for water but do
not live in the Lake Michigan drainage
basin.
Land Use:
        41% Forest
        44% Agriculture
        9%  Residential/Industrial
        6%  Other
 Lake Erie

 Fourth largest Great Lake, shallowest  ,
 and warmest, with extensive industrial
 development along its shores.  Ninety-
 five percent of Lake Erie's total inflow of
 water comes from all the "Upper
 Lakes" through the Detroit River.
 Surface Area: 9,906 square miles
 Volume: 116 cubic miles
 Shoreline Length: 871 miles, including
 islands
 Population: 9,183,347 (United States)
 1,742,805 (Canada)
 Land Use:
        21% Forest
        67% Agriculture
        10% Residential/Industrial
        2% Other

 Lake Ontario

The smallest of the Great Lakes in
surface area, largely rural with scenic
resort areas, yet contains Canada's
leading commercial, industrial, and
population center.
Surface Area: 7,340 square miles
Volume: 393 cubic miles
Shoreline Length: 726 miles, including
islands
Population: 2,657,432 (United States)
4,616,070 (Canada)
Land Use:
        49% Forest
        39% Agriculture
        7% Residential/Industrial
        5% Other
Great Lakes Facts

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                             Learning More About the Great Lakes
                     Resources Used in Creating Great Minds? Great Lakes!:
Acid Rain: A Sourcebook for Young People. Christina G.
Miller and Louise A. Berry, Julian Messner, 1986.
Five Year Program Strategy for the Great Lakes National
Program Office (FY 1989-1993). U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Great Lakes National Program Office,
1989.
Ghost Ships of the Great Lakes. Dwight Boyer, Dodd,
Mead and Company, 1968.
The Great Lakes. Harlan Hatcher, Oxford University Press,
1944.
The Great Lakes: An Environmental Atlas and Resource
Book. Environment Canada  and United States Environ-
mental Protection Agency, 1988.
 The Great Lakes in My World. Lake Michigan Federation,
 K-8, (312) 939-0838.
 Great Lakes: Shipwrecks and Survivals. William Ratigan,
 WM. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1977.
 Michigan Sea Grant College Program brochures,
 Extension Bulletins E-1866 through E-1870,1990,1517)353-
 9568.
 A Pictorial History of the Great Lakes. Harlan Hatcher
 and Erich A. Walter, Crown Publishers, Inc., 1963.
 Shipwrecks of the Lakes. Dana Thomas Bowen, Freshwa-
 ter Press, Inc., 1974.
 View of the Earth. An Introduction to Geology. John J.
 Fagan, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1965.
                           Books, Instructional Materials and Directories:
Co-operative Games for People Who Love to Play, Public
Focus, guide book, all ages, (416) 967-5211.
Our Great Lakes Connection:  A Curriculum Guide of
Grades Kindergarten Through Eight. University of
Wisconsin Extension, Environmental Research Center,
lessons and activities, (608) 262-2106.
Directory of Acid Rain and Air Quality Materials. National
Park Service, Midwest Regional Office, all ages, (402) 221-
3431.
Directory of  Great Lakes Educational Materials. Great
Lakes Science Advisory Board, International Joint
Commission, (313)226-2170.
The Enduring Great  Lakes: A  Natural History Book, John
Rousmaniere, ed., W. W. Norton & Company, 1979.
The Great Lakes. Harbor House Publishing, coloring book,
pre-school - grade 4, (616) 582-2814.
Great Lakes Agreement Information  Kit. International
Joint Commission, Great Lakes Regional Office, pamphlets
and activities, all ages, (313) 226-2170.
 Great Lakes Education Speakers Bureau Directory. Great
 Lakes Commission, experts available to visit classrooms,
 (313)665-9135.
 The Great Lakes Region in Children's Books: A Selected
 Annotated Bibliography. Green Oaks Press Publishers,
 1980.
 Great Lakes Ships and Shipping: Current Sources of
 Information. John Greenwood, 1958.
 Great Lakes Toxic Hotspots, Pollution  Probe Foundation,
 posters, all ages, (416) 926-1907.
 Oceanic Education Activities for Great Lakes. Ohio Sea
 Grant Education Program, activities and teachers guide,
 kindergarten - grade 4, (614) 292-1078.
 Paddle-to-the-Sea. Holling Clancy  Holling, Houghton
 Mifflin Company, 1969. (Free rental  of VHS video available
 from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  (612) 725-3582.)
 Wetlands Are Wonderful. Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant
 Program, teacher resource, all ages, (217) 333-9448.
                                              Places to Write:
Center for Environmental Information
46 Prince Street, Rochester, NY 14607 (716) 271 -3550
Center for the Great Lakes
35 E. Wacker Drive, Suite 1870, Chicago, IL 60601
(312)263-0785
Environment Canada
Great Lakes Environment Program, 25 St. Clair Avenue E.
Toronto, ON M4T1M2  (416)  973-6467
Great Lakes Historical Society
480 Main Street, Vermilion, OH 44089  (216) 967-3467
International Joint Commission
Great Lakes Regional Office, P.O. Box 32869, Detroit, Ml 48232
(313)226-2170
Lake Michigan Federation
559 E. Van Buren Street, Suite 2215, Chicago, IL 60605
(312)939-0838

National Wildlife Federation
Great Lakes Natural Resource Center
506 E. Liberty, Second Floor, Ann Arbor, Ml 448104
(313)769-3351

United States Environmental Protection Agency
Great Lakes National Program Office
77 W. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60604
1-800-621-8431 (from IN, Ml, MN, OH, Wl, IL)
312-353-2072 (Chicago and other parts of U.S.)
                                              Places to Visit:
                              To find out more about the maritime museum in your area,
                       contact the Manitowoc Maritime Museum in Wisconsin at (414) 684-0218.
  printed on recycled paper

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