Template:Short description Template:Infobox river

File:Navigation on St Clair River.jpg
Great Lakes freighters navigating on the lower St. Clair River. View is from the U.S. side, looking across to Canada.

The St. Clair River is a Template:Convert<ref name=NHD>U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed November 7, 2011</ref> river in central North America which flows from Lake Huron into Lake St. Clair, forming part of the international boundary between Canada and the United States and between the Canadian province of Ontario and the U.S. state of Michigan. The river is a significant component in the Great Lakes Waterway, whose shipping channels permit cargo vessels to travel between the upper and lower Great Lakes. The St. Clair Delta, also called the St. Clair Flats, is the largest freshwater delta in the world.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

LocationEdit

The river, which some consider a strait,<ref name=straitdefined>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=strait>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> flows in a southerly direction, connecting the southern end of Lake Huron to the northern end of Lake St. Clair. It branches into several channels near its mouth at Lake St. Clair, creating a broad delta region known as the St. Clair Flats.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Like a strait, the river serves as a narrow strip of water which connects two larger bodies of water.<ref name=straitdefined /><ref name=strait />

SizeEdit

The river is Template:Convert long<ref name=NHD/> and drops Template:Convert in elevation from Lake Huron to Lake St. Clair. The flow rate averages around Template:Convert, and the drainage area is Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This takes into account the combined drainage areas of Lakes Huron, Michigan, and Superior.

HistoryEdit

Generations of indigenous cultures traveled by canoe on the lakes and rivers in this area, carrying on trade across the region and continent.

In the 18th century, French voyageurs and coureurs des bois traveled on the river to trade with the Ojibwa and other regional Native Americans and transport furs in canoes to major posts of French and British traders, including Fort Detroit, built in 1701 downriver from Lake St. Clair on the Detroit River. European demand for American furs, especially beaver, was high until the 1830s.

During the mid-19th century and later, Port Huron and Marine City, Michigan, became major shipbuilding centers, especially the latter. Lumber harvested on The Thumb of Michigan was shipped downriver as log rafts to Detroit for processing and export both domestically and internationally. The wooden ships built along the river carried migrants and immigrants up the river and west through the upper Great Lakes on their way to new homes in the American West. Their farms later shipped out grain to eastern markets as part of the developing area.

Beginning in the late 19th century, iron ore mined in the Mesabi Range, copper and grain were carried east through the lakes by lake freighters, increasingly made of steel in the 20th century, traveled throughout the Great Lakes, transporting commodities such as iron ore from the Mesabi Range, copper, and grain, all products of settlers' labor. Iron was taken to Ashtabula, Ohio and other industrial cities for processing and steel manufacture, and grain was often shipped through to major eastern markets such as Cleveland and New York City.

From the late 19th century, lake steamers carried passengers and traveled among the small towns along the St. Clair and Detroit rivers, and around the Great Lakes. At one time 31 lines operated, but with the rise of automobile use in the 20th century, they gradually declined.

WatershedsEdit

File:Blue Water Bridge.jpg
Head of river looking into Lake Huron, showing the twin Blue Water Bridge

The St. Clair River and its Lambton County tributaries in Ontario contribute Template:Convert to the watershed. This figure does not include the Sydenham River watershed. In Michigan, the Black, Pine, and Belle rivers drain Template:Convert in Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair counties; the watersheds around Bunce Creek and Marine City are relatively small.

IslandsEdit

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Land usageEdit

Most of the watershed away from the river in Ontario and Michigan is used for agriculture. There were numerous sugar beet farms in the flatlands, and an annual beet market was held in Marine City, Michigan, for years at harvest time. Many of the 19th-century English immigrants to this area came from Lincolnshire, England, where sugar beets were a major commodity crop in the 19th and 20th centuries.

A few forest and wetland areas have survived. Their area has declined significantly since European-American settlement, clearing, and development of cultivated fields for various agricultural crops.

Much of the shoreline on both sides of the St. Clair River is urbanized and extensively industrialized. Intensive development has occurred in and near the adjacent cities of Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario, at the northern end of the river. The most dense concentration of industry, including a large petrochemical complex, lies along the Ontario shore south of Sarnia. Historically Sarnia was founded as a fur trading post.

Several communities along the St. Clair rely on the river as their primary source of drinking water. About one-third to one-half of the residents of Michigan receive their water from the St. Clair/Detroit River waterway.Template:Citation needed Industries including petroleum refineries, chemical manufacturers, paper mills, salt producers, and electric power plants also need high-quality water for their operations. Since the late 20th century and passage of environmental laws to protect air and water quality, there have been occasional incidents when some of these industries have illegally contaminated river waters after discharging pollutants. Major clean-up activities were required.

Land habitatEdit

Land areas of the St. Clair River shoreline and flats consist of two biological zones: upland and transitional, both of which are normally above the water table, but which may be flooded periodically.

The upland forests consist of deciduous species, many of which are near their northern climatic limit. Most pre-European settlement trees have been cleared for agriculture, industry, or urbanization. Remaining forest stands, such as oak savannas as well as lakeplain prairies, are found along the southern reaches of the river, particularly on the islands of the St. Clair River Delta and on the Michigan shore in Algonac State Park.

Transitional species are abundant in the low-lying regions, categorized as shrub ecotones, wet meadows, sedge marshes, and island shorelines and beaches. This habitat is home to water and land mammals, including humans, as well as songbirds, waterfowl, insects, pollinators, reptiles, and amphibians.

Water habitatEdit

The aquatic habitat of the St. Clair River ranges from deep and fast near the Blue Water Bridge to shallow and slow in the lower river near its discharge point into Lake St. Clair.

Each area provides a unique habitat for aquatic life:

Area of concernEdit

File:Algorail in (St Clair River Mich).jpg
Canadian freighter Algorail downbound in the St. Clair River

The St. Clair River is a binational Area of Concern (AOC)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> that borders both the United States and Canada. An AOC is an area within the Great Lakes, that has suffered from environmental destruction. The St. Clair River has been considered an AOC because conventional pollutants such as bacteria, heavy metals, toxic organics, contaminated sediment, fish consumption advisories, impacted animal and plant life, and beach closings.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The United States found that 10 out of 14 of the beneficial use impairments (BUI) were impaired, which would lead to a $21 million investment from the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.<ref name=":0" /> After several habitat projects, only two impairments exists: the Restrictions on Fish and Wildlife Consumption and the Restrictions on Drinking Water Consumption or Taste and Odor Problems.

Beneficial use impairmentsEdit

A beneficial use impairment is a change within the physical, biological, and chemical consistency that causes significant environmental degradation.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The St. Clair River has undergone several projects and clean up to remove the BUIs that affected the area. There are currently only 2 BUIs left on the St. Clair River, and once those 2 are removed, the river might go through the delisting process.

List of beneficial use impairments that has impacted the St. Clair River<ref name=":0" />Edit

  • Restrictions on fish and wildlife consumption
  • Restrictions on drinking water consumption, or taste and odor
  • Tainting of fish and wildlife flavor – REMOVED 2010
  • Restriction on dredging activities – REMOVED 2011
  • Added costs to agriculture or industry – REMOVED 2012
  • Degradation of aesthetics – REMOVED 2012
  • Degradation of benthos – REMOVED 2015
  • Beach closings – REMOVED 2016
  • Bird or animal deformities or reproduction problems – REMOVED 2017
  • Loss of fish and wildlife habitat – REMOVED 2017

Remedial action planEdit

Remediation and restoration workEdit

The St. Clair River AOC includes the entire river, from the Blue Water Bridge at the north end, to the southern tip of Seaway Island, west to St. Johns Marsh and east to include the north shore of Mitchells Bay on Lake St. Clair. Anchor Bay is not included.

Through the Great Lakes Agreement, a Remedial Action Plan (RAP) was created to initiate cleanup measures. Its background report noted the adverse effects of pollution in the river and lakes:

  • Restrictions on fish consumption
  • Bird and animal deformities
  • Degradation of benthos
  • Restrictions on dredging activities
  • Restrictions on drinking water consumption
  • Beach closings
  • Degradation of aesthetics
  • Added cost to agriculture and industry
  • Loss of fish and wildlife habitat

According to the Stage 1 Remedial Action Plan (RAP), the reasons for the Loss of Fish and Wildlife Habitat beneficial use impairment (BUI) in the St. Clair River were general loss of the aquatic plant community due to industrial, agricultural, recreational, and urban developments. A large blob of perchloroethylene was found at the bottom of the St Clair River due to runoff from Dow Chemical Corp in 1985. It remains there, slowly mixing with the water.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The RAP for the St. Clair River AOC was initiated in 1985. A bi-national group called the RAP Team, which included representatives from federal, state, and provincial governments of both Canada and the United States was established in 1987 to develop the plan and to ensure adequate and appropriate public involvement.

Erosion and Great Lakes drainageEdit

Federal officials have long acknowledged that dredging and riverbed mining in the St. Clair dropped the long-term average of Great Lakes Huron and Michigan by about 16 inches. A bi-national Great Lakes water-level study concluded in 2013 that unexpected erosion since the last major St. Clair dredging project in the early 1960s has dropped the lakes' long-term average by an additional 3 to 5 inches. Today, these lakes are nearly 2 feet lower than before human modifications to the riverbed of the St. Clair River. This record low has raised concerns about the long-term health of the lakes. Activists urge remediation to slow the flow of waters through the St. Clair River and out of the lake system, to restore former water levels.<ref>Dan Egan, "Lakes Michigan, Huron hit record low water level", Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel Online, 3 February 2013</ref> However, as of October 2020, the Lake Huron water is averaging 581.5 feet above sea level,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> which is considerably above the Datum of 577.5 feet, and above the Mean Long-Term Water Level of 578.8 feet.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CrossingsEdit

This is a list of bridges and other crossings of the St. Clair River from Lake St. Clair upstream to Lake Huron.

Crossing Carries Location Coordinates
Walpole Island Bridge Template:Jcon Chatham-Kent Municipality and Walpole Island, Ontario (Crosses the Chenal Ecarte of the St. Clair) Template:Coord
Harsens Island Ferry Cars and passengers Algonac, Michigan and Harsens Island, Michigan (crosses the North Channel of the St. Clair) Template:Coord
Russell Island Ferry Passengers only Algonac, Michigan and Russell Island, Michigan Template:Coord
Walpole–Algonac Ferry Cars and passengers Algonac, Michigan and Walpole Island, Ontario Template:Coord
Sombra–Marine City (Bluewater) Ferry - Closed 2018 Cars and passengers Marine City, Michigan and Sombra, Ontario Template:Coord
St. Clair Tunnel Canadian National Railway Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario Template:Coord
Blue Water Bridge Template:Jct
Template:Jct
Template:Coord

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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