Great Lakes Seeing More Precipitation

Study Finds Shifts in Rain, Snow, Streamflow

While water levels in the Great Lakes are dropping, more precipitation is actually falling on the Great Lakes Basin now than in the past, according to a new study from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

The study, "Historical Changes in Precipitation and Streamflow in the U.S. Great Lakes Basin, 1915-2004," finds that the area is getting 4.5 inches more rain or snow per year now than it did 90 years ago. Most of that increase has occurred over the past 30 years, the study
Great Lakes Seeing More Precipitation
 added.

"This study is a key component in assessing water availability and use and in building a water census for the nation," said Robert Hirsch, USGS Associate Director for Water. "We now have a much clearer picture of the volume of water being added to the largest fresh-water system in the U.S. and how those volumes have been changing over the last few decades."

The state of the nation's water supply has received increasing attention lately, thanks to ongoing extreme drought in much of the Southeast, wildfires in the West and shrinking lake levels in the Great Lakes. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), levels in all five Great Lakes have been declining since the late 1990s.

This past September, both Lakes Michigan and Huron were about two feet below their long-term normal levels, while Lake Superior was about 20 inches below normal. Lakes Ontario and Erie were also lower than normal, by about seven and three inches, respectively.

Precipitation in the Great Lakes Basin accounts for a little over half (53 percent) of the freshwater entering the lakes, while streamflow into the basin adds 46 percent. Another 1 percent comes from water being diverted from outside the basin.

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