Bathymetric map of Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Superior. The 2018 data are shown in gray hillshade, with the combined 2021 data superimposed in color. Index map at lower right shows the extent of each survey.
Great Lakes and Inland Seas
Large inland waterbodies are oceanic in many ways, facing many of the same issues as the ocean. The USGS conducts research and monitoring in the Great Lakes region and in other inland seas across the country to understand these large bodies of water and inform how we use and manage them.
Great Lakes Science Center

Great Lakes Science Center (GLSC) scientists work in the Great Lakes region and other parts of the country to meet the nation’s need for scientific information used by resource managers to restore, enhance, manage, and protect the living resources and habitats in the Great Lakes basin.
Salton Sea

Changes in regional water management practices have reduced freshwater inflow to the Salton Sea, changing what was once a popular vacation destination to a shrinking hypersaline lake. As the lake bed dries, managers will depend on careful monitoring and research to inform critical decisions affecting the future of the lake and surrounding communities.
The Great Lakes

The Great Lakes—Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario—form the largest surface of freshwater in the world, comprising more than 94,250 square miles (244,106 square kilometers) of east-central North America. The lakes are critical components of the regional economies in both the United States and Canada. They are important sources of drinking water, transportation, and irrigation, and provide recreational opportunities such as boating, fishing, hunting, and bird watching, as well as vital habitat to a myriad of wildlife species like the bald eagle. They also face threats such as invasive species, harmful algal blooms, and pressures from human activities related to mining and other resource use and extraction.
Inland Seas
In addition to studying the Great Lakes, USGS scientists are conducting similar research in other inland seas, such as Great Salt Lake and the Salton Sea. This research helps to provide resource managers with the information they need to restore, enhance, manage, and protect living resources and habitats.
Changes in regional water management practices have reduced freshwater inflow to the Salton Sea in Southern California, changing what was once a popular vacation destination to a shrinking hypersaline lake. As the lakebed dries, resource managers will depend on careful monitoring and research to inform critical decisions affecting the future of the lake and surrounding communities. Learn more
The Great Salt Lake is located on a playa, consequently small changes in the elevation of the water surface result in large changes in the surface area of the lake. The USGS has been collecting water-surface-elevation data from Great Salt Lake since 1875 and continuously since October 1902. The north part of the lake has been monitored since April 1966. Learn more
Publications
Microbial source tracking and evaluation of best management practices for restoring degraded beaches of Lake Michigan
Understanding sources and distribution of Escherichia coli at Lake St. Clair Metropark Beach, Macomb County, Michigan
Importance of nonindigenous harpacticoids (Crustacea: Copepoda) decrease with depth in Lake Ontario
Export of pelagic fish larvae from a large Great Lakes connecting channel
Genomics reveals identity, phenology and population demographics of larval ciscoes (Coregonus artedi, C. hoyi, and C. kiyi) in the Apostle Islands, Lake Superior
Science
Lake Michigan Basin groundwater system
Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project
Invasive Phragmites Science: Management Tools for the Control of Invasive Phragmites to Foster the Restoration of the Great Lakes
Harmful Algal Blooms in Pennsylvania
Understanding and Forecasting Potential Recruitment of Lake Michigan Fishes
Connect
National Climate Adaptation Science Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
MS 516
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Ohio - Columbus Office
6460 Busch Blvd.
Ste 100
Columbus, OH 43229-1737
United States
Florence Bascom Geoscience Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Pennsylvania Water Science Center
215 Limekiln Road
New Cumberland, PA 17070
United States
Multimedia

Bathymetric map of Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Superior. The 2018 data are shown in gray hillshade, with the combined 2021 data superimposed in color. Index map at lower right shows the extent of each survey.
Sediments swirl in Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair in this Landsat 9 image of both Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, from Oct. 31, 2021. The Great Lakes serve as sources of freshwater, recreational activity, transport, and habitat for the upper-midwestern US, and water quality remains a high priority.
Sediments swirl in Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair in this Landsat 9 image of both Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, from Oct. 31, 2021. The Great Lakes serve as sources of freshwater, recreational activity, transport, and habitat for the upper-midwestern US, and water quality remains a high priority.
Patrick Berube of WHCMSC prepares the SEABOSS for deployment in Lake Superior.
Patrick Berube of WHCMSC prepares the SEABOSS for deployment in Lake Superior.
The RV Desmid (foreground) alongside the RV Rafael during sampling operations on Lake Superior.
The RV Desmid (foreground) alongside the RV Rafael during sampling operations on Lake Superior.

Emily Wimmer (GLSC, Ann Arbor, Michigan) collects Cladophora growing at 6m depth in Lake Michigan.
Emily Wimmer (GLSC, Ann Arbor, Michigan) collects Cladophora growing at 6m depth in Lake Michigan.
A masked USGS Great Lakes Science Center technician deploys an acoustic receiver into the waters of Lake Superior near Isle Royale National Park; the receivers will track the movement of tagged native lake trout in the area.
A masked USGS Great Lakes Science Center technician deploys an acoustic receiver into the waters of Lake Superior near Isle Royale National Park; the receivers will track the movement of tagged native lake trout in the area.

Map showing the Salton Sea, CA earthquake swarm of August 2020 (as of August 11, 2020). Circles are earthquake locations, red indicates an earthquake in the past hour, orange the past 24 hours, and yellow the past 7 days.
Map showing the Salton Sea, CA earthquake swarm of August 2020 (as of August 11, 2020). Circles are earthquake locations, red indicates an earthquake in the past hour, orange the past 24 hours, and yellow the past 7 days.
Location of the Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project.
Location of the Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project.

Climate change is predicted to alter sport fish communities in Midwestern lakes, but managers currently have limited information on individual lakes that can be used to set local expectations or intervene with mitigation strategies.
Climate change is predicted to alter sport fish communities in Midwestern lakes, but managers currently have limited information on individual lakes that can be used to set local expectations or intervene with mitigation strategies.
News
Lodge, Lacey Visit GLSC For Research Vessel Demonstration Cruise With Partners
Stamp Sands Revisited: USGS Science Centers Team Up to Advance Mapping in Lake Superior
Searching for Evidence of Past Tsunamis in Sediment Cores
Lake Ontario Flood Monitoring and Mapping
Developing Adaptation Strategies for Recreational and Tribal Fisheries in the Upper Midwest
Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs)
Invasive Mussel Control Science: Management Tools for Assessing the Risks and Control of Invasive Dreissenid Species
Invasive Carp
“Hyperscale” Modeling to Understand and Predict Temperature Changes in Midwest Lakes
Projecting Changes in Snow, Lake Ice, and Winter Severity in the Great Lakes Region for Wildlife-Based Adaptation Planning
Data for multiple linear regression models for estimating Escherichia coli (E. coli) concentrations or the probability of exceeding the bathing-water standard at recreational sites in Ohio and Pennsylvania as part of the Great Lakes NowCast, 2019
Historical Ice Breakup Dates for Chequamegon Bay, Lake Superior (ver. 5.0, September 2022)
Great Lakes Coastal Wetland Restoration Assessment (GLCWRA) Lake Ontario, U.S.
Grass Carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) egg capture data from tributaries to western Lake Erie, 2015-2020
Genetic species identification of larval Coregonines from Chaumont Bay (New York), Lake Ontario
Beach topography and near-shore bathymetry of Lake Superior at Minnesota Point, Duluth, MN, August 2019
Mercury and selenium concentrations in bird eggs at Great Salt Lake, Utah
High-resolution geophysical data collected in the vicinity of Buffalo Reef, Michigan, within Lake Superior, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2018-043-FA
Microplastics in the surficial benthic sediment from Lake Michigan and Lake Erie, 2013 and 2014
Using turbidity measurements to estimate phosphorus and sediment flux in a Great Lakes Coastal Marsh, in Ohio
Continuous Monitoring and Synoptic Mapping of Nearshore Water Quality, Currents, and Bathymetry in Lake Michigan at Jeorse Park Beach near Gary, Indiana
Acoustic telemetry detection data for acoustic-tagged lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) in the Lake Huron-to-Lake Erie corridor

USGS scientist Robert Baskin deploys a side scan sonar in the Salton Sea, California.
USGS scientist Robert Baskin deploys a side scan sonar in the Salton Sea, California.

Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch Range from Antelope Island, Davis County, UT. Photograph taken April 26, 2007 by Alan M. Cressler.
Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch Range from Antelope Island, Davis County, UT. Photograph taken April 26, 2007 by Alan M. Cressler.

Landsat 4's first light image captured eastern Lake Erie, and the cities of Toledo, Detroit, and Windsor on July 25, 1982. Although the Landsat program had been collecting images of the Earth since 1972, this was the first time that the data could be depicted as a natural color image due to the new Thematic Mapper sensor onboard Landsat 4.
Landsat 4's first light image captured eastern Lake Erie, and the cities of Toledo, Detroit, and Windsor on July 25, 1982. Although the Landsat program had been collecting images of the Earth since 1972, this was the first time that the data could be depicted as a natural color image due to the new Thematic Mapper sensor onboard Landsat 4.
Sunset over Lake Michigan. Photo by Rafi Wilkerson, National Park Service (Public Domain).
Sunset over Lake Michigan. Photo by Rafi Wilkerson, National Park Service (Public Domain).
National Climate Adaptation Science Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
MS 516
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Ohio - Columbus Office
6460 Busch Blvd.
Ste 100
Columbus, OH 43229-1737
United States
Florence Bascom Geoscience Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Pennsylvania Water Science Center
215 Limekiln Road
New Cumberland, PA 17070
United States
Large inland waterbodies are oceanic in many ways, facing many of the same issues as the ocean. The USGS conducts research and monitoring in the Great Lakes region and in other inland seas across the country to understand these large bodies of water and inform how we use and manage them.
Great Lakes Science Center

Great Lakes Science Center (GLSC) scientists work in the Great Lakes region and other parts of the country to meet the nation’s need for scientific information used by resource managers to restore, enhance, manage, and protect the living resources and habitats in the Great Lakes basin.
Salton Sea

Changes in regional water management practices have reduced freshwater inflow to the Salton Sea, changing what was once a popular vacation destination to a shrinking hypersaline lake. As the lake bed dries, managers will depend on careful monitoring and research to inform critical decisions affecting the future of the lake and surrounding communities.
The Great Lakes

The Great Lakes—Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario—form the largest surface of freshwater in the world, comprising more than 94,250 square miles (244,106 square kilometers) of east-central North America. The lakes are critical components of the regional economies in both the United States and Canada. They are important sources of drinking water, transportation, and irrigation, and provide recreational opportunities such as boating, fishing, hunting, and bird watching, as well as vital habitat to a myriad of wildlife species like the bald eagle. They also face threats such as invasive species, harmful algal blooms, and pressures from human activities related to mining and other resource use and extraction.
Inland Seas
In addition to studying the Great Lakes, USGS scientists are conducting similar research in other inland seas, such as Great Salt Lake and the Salton Sea. This research helps to provide resource managers with the information they need to restore, enhance, manage, and protect living resources and habitats.
Changes in regional water management practices have reduced freshwater inflow to the Salton Sea in Southern California, changing what was once a popular vacation destination to a shrinking hypersaline lake. As the lakebed dries, resource managers will depend on careful monitoring and research to inform critical decisions affecting the future of the lake and surrounding communities. Learn more
The Great Salt Lake is located on a playa, consequently small changes in the elevation of the water surface result in large changes in the surface area of the lake. The USGS has been collecting water-surface-elevation data from Great Salt Lake since 1875 and continuously since October 1902. The north part of the lake has been monitored since April 1966. Learn more
Publications
Microbial source tracking and evaluation of best management practices for restoring degraded beaches of Lake Michigan
Understanding sources and distribution of Escherichia coli at Lake St. Clair Metropark Beach, Macomb County, Michigan
Importance of nonindigenous harpacticoids (Crustacea: Copepoda) decrease with depth in Lake Ontario
Export of pelagic fish larvae from a large Great Lakes connecting channel
Genomics reveals identity, phenology and population demographics of larval ciscoes (Coregonus artedi, C. hoyi, and C. kiyi) in the Apostle Islands, Lake Superior
Science
Lake Michigan Basin groundwater system
Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project
Invasive Phragmites Science: Management Tools for the Control of Invasive Phragmites to Foster the Restoration of the Great Lakes
Harmful Algal Blooms in Pennsylvania
Understanding and Forecasting Potential Recruitment of Lake Michigan Fishes
Connect
National Climate Adaptation Science Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
MS 516
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Ohio - Columbus Office
6460 Busch Blvd.
Ste 100
Columbus, OH 43229-1737
United States
Florence Bascom Geoscience Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Pennsylvania Water Science Center
215 Limekiln Road
New Cumberland, PA 17070
United States
Multimedia

Bathymetric map of Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Superior. The 2018 data are shown in gray hillshade, with the combined 2021 data superimposed in color. Index map at lower right shows the extent of each survey.
Bathymetric map of Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Superior. The 2018 data are shown in gray hillshade, with the combined 2021 data superimposed in color. Index map at lower right shows the extent of each survey.
Sediments swirl in Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair in this Landsat 9 image of both Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, from Oct. 31, 2021. The Great Lakes serve as sources of freshwater, recreational activity, transport, and habitat for the upper-midwestern US, and water quality remains a high priority.
Sediments swirl in Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair in this Landsat 9 image of both Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, from Oct. 31, 2021. The Great Lakes serve as sources of freshwater, recreational activity, transport, and habitat for the upper-midwestern US, and water quality remains a high priority.
Patrick Berube of WHCMSC prepares the SEABOSS for deployment in Lake Superior.
Patrick Berube of WHCMSC prepares the SEABOSS for deployment in Lake Superior.
The RV Desmid (foreground) alongside the RV Rafael during sampling operations on Lake Superior.
The RV Desmid (foreground) alongside the RV Rafael during sampling operations on Lake Superior.

Emily Wimmer (GLSC, Ann Arbor, Michigan) collects Cladophora growing at 6m depth in Lake Michigan.
Emily Wimmer (GLSC, Ann Arbor, Michigan) collects Cladophora growing at 6m depth in Lake Michigan.
A masked USGS Great Lakes Science Center technician deploys an acoustic receiver into the waters of Lake Superior near Isle Royale National Park; the receivers will track the movement of tagged native lake trout in the area.
A masked USGS Great Lakes Science Center technician deploys an acoustic receiver into the waters of Lake Superior near Isle Royale National Park; the receivers will track the movement of tagged native lake trout in the area.

Map showing the Salton Sea, CA earthquake swarm of August 2020 (as of August 11, 2020). Circles are earthquake locations, red indicates an earthquake in the past hour, orange the past 24 hours, and yellow the past 7 days.
Map showing the Salton Sea, CA earthquake swarm of August 2020 (as of August 11, 2020). Circles are earthquake locations, red indicates an earthquake in the past hour, orange the past 24 hours, and yellow the past 7 days.
Location of the Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project.
Location of the Great Lakes Geologic Mapping Project.

Climate change is predicted to alter sport fish communities in Midwestern lakes, but managers currently have limited information on individual lakes that can be used to set local expectations or intervene with mitigation strategies.
Climate change is predicted to alter sport fish communities in Midwestern lakes, but managers currently have limited information on individual lakes that can be used to set local expectations or intervene with mitigation strategies.
News
Lodge, Lacey Visit GLSC For Research Vessel Demonstration Cruise With Partners
Stamp Sands Revisited: USGS Science Centers Team Up to Advance Mapping in Lake Superior
Searching for Evidence of Past Tsunamis in Sediment Cores
Lake Ontario Flood Monitoring and Mapping
Developing Adaptation Strategies for Recreational and Tribal Fisheries in the Upper Midwest
Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs)
Invasive Mussel Control Science: Management Tools for Assessing the Risks and Control of Invasive Dreissenid Species
Invasive Carp
“Hyperscale” Modeling to Understand and Predict Temperature Changes in Midwest Lakes
Projecting Changes in Snow, Lake Ice, and Winter Severity in the Great Lakes Region for Wildlife-Based Adaptation Planning
Data for multiple linear regression models for estimating Escherichia coli (E. coli) concentrations or the probability of exceeding the bathing-water standard at recreational sites in Ohio and Pennsylvania as part of the Great Lakes NowCast, 2019
Historical Ice Breakup Dates for Chequamegon Bay, Lake Superior (ver. 5.0, September 2022)
Great Lakes Coastal Wetland Restoration Assessment (GLCWRA) Lake Ontario, U.S.
Grass Carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) egg capture data from tributaries to western Lake Erie, 2015-2020
Genetic species identification of larval Coregonines from Chaumont Bay (New York), Lake Ontario
Beach topography and near-shore bathymetry of Lake Superior at Minnesota Point, Duluth, MN, August 2019
Mercury and selenium concentrations in bird eggs at Great Salt Lake, Utah
High-resolution geophysical data collected in the vicinity of Buffalo Reef, Michigan, within Lake Superior, U.S. Geological Survey Field Activity 2018-043-FA
Microplastics in the surficial benthic sediment from Lake Michigan and Lake Erie, 2013 and 2014
Using turbidity measurements to estimate phosphorus and sediment flux in a Great Lakes Coastal Marsh, in Ohio
Continuous Monitoring and Synoptic Mapping of Nearshore Water Quality, Currents, and Bathymetry in Lake Michigan at Jeorse Park Beach near Gary, Indiana
Acoustic telemetry detection data for acoustic-tagged lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) in the Lake Huron-to-Lake Erie corridor

USGS scientist Robert Baskin deploys a side scan sonar in the Salton Sea, California.
USGS scientist Robert Baskin deploys a side scan sonar in the Salton Sea, California.

Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch Range from Antelope Island, Davis County, UT. Photograph taken April 26, 2007 by Alan M. Cressler.
Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch Range from Antelope Island, Davis County, UT. Photograph taken April 26, 2007 by Alan M. Cressler.

Landsat 4's first light image captured eastern Lake Erie, and the cities of Toledo, Detroit, and Windsor on July 25, 1982. Although the Landsat program had been collecting images of the Earth since 1972, this was the first time that the data could be depicted as a natural color image due to the new Thematic Mapper sensor onboard Landsat 4.
Landsat 4's first light image captured eastern Lake Erie, and the cities of Toledo, Detroit, and Windsor on July 25, 1982. Although the Landsat program had been collecting images of the Earth since 1972, this was the first time that the data could be depicted as a natural color image due to the new Thematic Mapper sensor onboard Landsat 4.
Sunset over Lake Michigan. Photo by Rafi Wilkerson, National Park Service (Public Domain).
Sunset over Lake Michigan. Photo by Rafi Wilkerson, National Park Service (Public Domain).
National Climate Adaptation Science Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
MS 516
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Ohio - Columbus Office
6460 Busch Blvd.
Ste 100
Columbus, OH 43229-1737
United States
Florence Bascom Geoscience Center
12201 Sunrise Valley Drive
Reston, VA 20192
United States
Pennsylvania Water Science Center
215 Limekiln Road
New Cumberland, PA 17070
United States