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“All
the water that will ever be is, right now.”
—National Geographic, 1993
Few
Fresh Waters
Just 3 percent
of the world’s water exists as fresh water—2 percent is locked in
the polar ice caps; less than 1 percent resides in freshwater lakes
and streams.
The Great
Lakes contain an estimated 5,500 cubic miles (22,700 cubic kilometers)
of water—a fifth of all the liquid surface fresh water on Earth.
The United
States draws more than 40 billion gallons (151 million liters) of
water from the Great Lakes every day—half of which is used for electrical
power production.
Wisconsin
Waters
About 6.4
million acres (2.6 million hectares) of Lakes Michigan and Superior
and 95,000 cres (38,445 hectares) of the Upper Mississippi River
lie within Wisconsin’s borders.
Wisconsin
has more than 15,000 lakes and 13,500 miles (21,700 kilometers)
of navigable streams and rivers.
Almost 3
percent of Wisconsin’s area—nearly a million acres (405,000 hectares)—is
lakes.
Wisconsin
has about 1.2 million billion gallons (4.5 million billion liters)
of water underground—if it were above ground, it would submerge
the state in 100 feet (30 meters) of water.
Nearly one-third
of prehistoric, postglacial Wisconsin was wetlands. Nearly half
of the estimated 10 million acres of presettlement wetlands have
been lost.
Wisconsin’s
11 coastal counties contain more than 1.2 million acres of wetlands
(486,000 hectares)—nearly a fourth of all of the state’s remaining
wetlands. The wettest is Marinette County with nearly 228,000 acres
(92,000 hectares).
"If
you gave me several million years, there would be nothing that
did not grow in beauty if it were surrounded by water."
—Jan
Erik Vold, What All The World Knows, 1970
Waterways
and Byways
Wisconsin
has more than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) of Great Lakes coastline
and nearly 200 miles (325 kilometers) of Mississippi River shoreline.
There are
2,444 trout streams in Wisconsin—put end to end, they would stretch
more than 956 miles (1,540 kilometers).
With 28 lakes,
the Eagle River chain of lakes is the largest in the world.
More than
a third of Wisconsin’s population lives in the 11 counties forming
its Lake Michigan coast; 24 percent live in the three southeast
coastal counties of Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha.
Wisconsin
has more than 500,000 registered motorboats—about one for every
10 residents.
Anglers net
about 67 million fish a year from Wisconsin waters, including more
than 500,000 Great Lakes trout and salmon.
At least
160 nonindigenous aquatic species have colonized Great Lakes waters—over
half of them since the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959.
Wisconsin’s
power and water utilities spend about $5 million annually trying
to protect water intakes from zebra mussels.
“When
the well’s dry, we know the worth of water.”
—Benjamin
Franklin
Highly
Valued Assets
The assessed
value of Lake Michigan lakeshore property in just one Wisconsin
county— Door County—is almost $2 billion.
Each year,
Wisconsin’s 12 active harbors on Lakes Michigan and Superior handle
a total of more than 40 million tons (40 billion kilograms) of commodities
valued at more than $7 billion.
Wetlands and abundant
high-quality water make Wisconsin the nation’s top producer of cranberries
and 10th-largest producer of trout.
The Wisconsin
Department of Natural Resources sells more than 1,000,000 resident
and 500,000 nonresident recreational fishing licenses annually,
collecting over $1.1 billion in fees. DNR estimates that those anglers
spend another $2.1 billion in Wisconsin communities each year.
Thirsty
People—and Cows
Wisconsin
uses an average of 56 gallons (212 liters) of water per day per
person from public water supplies and private wells. The national
per capita average is 90 gallons (341 liters) a day.
Wisconsin
has 1.4 million dairy cows, each of which needs to drink 45 gallons
(170 liters) of water a day to produce 100 pounds (45 kg), or 12
gallons (45 liters), of milk.
Wisconsin
public water utilities draw about 600 million gallons (2.3 billion
liters) of water per day. The state’s 642 wastewater facilities
release about the same amount of treated water daily.
Water
Power
Wisconsin
uses a total of more than 7 billion gallons (26.5 billion liters)
of water per day—about 80 percent of it for thermoelectric power
production.
Wisconsin’s
50 fossil fuel power plants use nearly 4 billion gallons (15 billion
liters) of water per day. The state’s two nuclear power plants use
about 2 billion gallons (7.5 billion liters) daily.
Almost all
of the water used for thermoelectric power production in Wisconsin
comes from surface sources.
Wisconsin
has more than 200 hydroelectric generator units, which produce a
total of 1.6 million kilowatt-hours of electricity.
“Water
is the best of all things.”
—PINDAR
(c. 522-438 B.C.), Olympian Odes
Water
Underground
Groundwater
use in Wisconsin totals about 760 million gallons (2.9 billion liters)
per day.
Wisconsin
has about 800,000 private wells, most of which tap groundwater less
than 50 feet (15 meters) below the surface.
Seven in
10 Wisconsinites and 97 percent of the state’s inland communities
depend on groundwater for their water supply.
Rainfall
over Wisconsin averages 32 inches annually (82 centimeters); only
6-10 inches (15-25 centimeters) of it soaks in to become groundwater.
Common
Contaminants
More than
800 toxic contaminants have been identified in Great Lakes water
and sediment.
Nitrate—most
of it from fertilizers—is by far the most common chemical contaminant
found in Wisconsin groundwater.
More than
2 billion pounds (900 million kilograms) of nitrogen is added to
Wisconsin soil annually, 80 percent of it from commercial fertilizers,
manure and legumes.
Statewide,
nitrate levels exceed state and federal standards in 10 percent
of the private wells sampled.
Fifteen Wisconsin
municipalities must treat their water to reduce nitrate levels.
Arsenic occurs
naturally in Wisconsin groundwater, but unnaturally high concentrations
have been found in 23 of the state’s 72 counties.
In 2002,
Wisconsin issued a statewide advisory for mercury in all of its
inland waters.
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