Chippewa Moraine State Recreation Area
Geography
How did glaciers form the Chippewa Moraine? Glaciers form when snow piles up, gets pressed into ice, and begins to flow. It only takes 100 feet of ice to begin the flowing process, yet in Canada during the last cold phase of the Earth’s climate cycle, the ice built up to over two miles thick. The ice sheet came to a mile south of the Chippewa Moraine Interpretive Center but no further. By then, the warm phase of the climate cycle had arrived and the glacier was melting as fast as it was flowing.
Hike to vistas of glacial kettle lakes, hummocks, and ice-walled lake
plains.
DNR Photo
One after another, bands of ice at the glacial front slowed. From behind the faster-flowing ice, still being pushed from Canada, slid up break lines, pushing sand, gravel and rocks (debris) to the surface of stagnant ice. A 10-mile wide moraine – irregular and dotted with several hundred lakes, formed when the glacial debris pushed atop the stagnant ice rearranged as the ice melted.
Glacial features of the Chippewa Moraine include ice-walled-lake-plains, kettles, and hummocks. The Interpretive Center has many displays and activities for more information about the geography of the Chippewa Moraine.
For more information, ask Chippewa
Moraine, (715) 967-2800.
Last Revised: Thursday August 13 2009
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