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The World's most crooked River Raisin EarthCache

Hidden : 8/2/2007
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:

Thank you to the Monroe Historical Society for granting permission for this earthcache. To learn more about the River Raisin Institute restoration activities, please visit the web site link located aboved "USER Web Page"

The River Raisin is located in the Lake Plain (SE Michigan and NW Ohio) of the Central Lowlands (Michigan, Wisconsin, N. Ohio, N. Indiana, N. Illinois, E. Iowa and E. Minnesota) which is comprised of former lake bottom. It flows into the Lake Erie Basin, which lies in the Central Lowlands Physiographic Province between the Appalachian Plateau and Laurentian Upland or Canadian Shield. The River Raisin watershed is the product of geologic processes of the Wisconsin ice sheet known as the Pleistocene glacier, formed a series of glacial lakes before modern Lake Erie was born.

The former lakes, Maumee, Arkona, Whittlesey, Warren, Wayne, Grassmere and Lundy are all ancestors of Lake Erie. Each had a different outline and elevation above sea level. Lake Maumee was 800 feet above sea level. Drainage was westward through Fort Wayne, Indiana into the Wabash River. Eastward drainage. It was during this time that the River Raisin was born. Gradually, the Niagaran escarpment rebounded from the weight of the glaciers creating a dam at the eastern end of Lake Erie and the water rose from 470 feet above sea level to its present elevation of about 570 feet above sea level.

This process resulted in the most crooked river in the world – the River Raisin. The headwaters of the River Raisin are 1,200 feet above sea level on the steeper, forested slopes of the Irish Hills and winds southeast through glacial moraine topography to a lake plain dominated largely by agriculture.

The River is 135 miles long and it covers 1,072 square miles roughly the size of Rhode Island. 80% of the watershed is zoned for farmland. There are 50 dams or impoundments in the watershed. The River has many tributaries such as Macon Creek and the Saline River along with a south branch at Adrian and the Little River Raisin at Britton in Lenawee County. There are 5 counties, 6 cities, 10 villages and 40 townships in the watershed.

The Frenchman, Louis Jolliet, was the first to record seeing Lake Erie in 1669. By that time water levels were the same as they are today. In 1670, on a trip across the Lake, the famous explorer LaSalle passed by the River Raisin on his way to Detroit. He marveled at the beauty and richness of the country that reached away on each side of the passage. Groves of black walnut and wild plum trees and oaks festooned with grapevines stood like islands on the fine prairies. The native people called the River, “Nummasepee” or River of Sturgeon, however French settlers impressed with the grapevines that covered its banks called it “Riviere Aux Raisin” or River of Grapes. France controlled the area until 1763 when it was ceded to Great Britain. The first settler was fur trader, Joseph Pulier Benac, followed by Colonel Francis Navarre and the Jerome brothers, Charles and John Baptiste. The first American settlement was established at Frenchtown in 1793 and in 1796 Captain Porter raised the first American flag on Michigan soil. Monroe County was established on July 14, 1817 and included all of Lenawee County and a portion of the present Wayne and Washtenaw counties.

On June 1, 1819, John Anderson, Oliver Johnson and twelve others were authorized to build a toll bridge across the River Raisin. This followed the famous battles on the River Raisin in 1813 during the War of 1812 when American forces from Kentucky under the command of General James Winchester were defeated at Frenchtown setting the stage for a British retreat and American takeover.

This cache will take you to the historic Navarre Anderson Trading Post parking lot.
These are the three requirements to log this earthcache:

1) Post a picture of you or your GPSr with the bridge in the background.

2) Email your estimate of the distance from the bottom of the bridge to the water surface of the river. Do not post your answer in your log.
The water level flucuates over 8ft during the year!

3) Travel along the river and mark another waypoint, and determine in feet or miles how the river is 'crooked' from the parking lot. Post your answer in your log for others to view your waypoint.
The river is 135 miles long so don't worry about running out of waypoints.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Unir Sha!

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)