Pandora's Locks: The Opening of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Seaway

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MSU Press, May 1, 2011 - History - 466 pages

The St. Lawrence Seaway was considered one of the world's greatest engineering achievements when it opened in 1959. The $1 billion project-a series of locks, canals, and dams that tamed the ferocious St. Lawrence River-opened the Great Lakes to the global shipping industry.
Linking ports on lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario to shipping hubs on the world's seven seas increased global trade in the Great Lakes region. But it came at an extraordinarily high price. Foreign species that immigrated into the lakes in ocean freighters' ballast water tanks unleashed a biological shift that reconfigured the world's largest freshwater ecosystems.
Pandora's Locks is the story of politicians and engineers who, driven by hubris and handicapped by ignorance, demanded that the Seaway be built at any cost. It is the tragic tale of government agencies that could have prevented ocean freighters from laying waste to the Great Lakes ecosystems, but failed to act until it was too late. Blending science with compelling personal accounts, this book is the first comprehensive account of how inviting transoceanic freighters into North America's freshwater seas transformed these wondrous lakes.

 

Contents

Acknowledgments
Timeline
02 yanipires of the Deep
04 Alewife Inyasion
06 Fatal Error
08 The Reckoning
09 Ruffe Seas
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Jeff Alexander has been an award-winning environmental journalist for over 25 years. Jeff was awarded the 2009 Historical Society of Michigan State History Award (Pandora's Locks). His book The Muskegon received a Michigan Notable Book award, Historical Society of Michigan State History Award, and ForeWord Book of the Year Award.