Two later stages of Lake Maumee, (called the "Lowest" and the "Middle," in that order) had lower water levels because the retreating ice exposed an outlet lower than the Wabash-Erie Channel. The Lowest Maumee (elevation: about ASL) drained westward through the
Grand River in
Michigan and into
Glacial Lake Chicago, an ancestor of present-day
Lake Michigan. Another advance of the ice blocked that outlet, raising the lake level to about ASL, the stage known as the Middle Maumee. A new outlet, the Imlay Outlet, formed that connected with an unobstructed segment of the Grand River farther west. There is enough uncertainty about this sequence that some authorities think that Middle Maumee might have preceded Lowest Maumee. Fluctuations in water level continued through more stages (Arkona, ; Whittlesey, ASL; Warren and Wayne, ASL; and Lundy, ASL. This see-saw pattern continued until an eastern outlet opened at
Niagara, establishing the drainage pattern of modern Lake Erie ( ASL). This involved the reversal of drainage in what is now northeastern
Indiana and northwestern
Ohio as the
Maumee River outlet developed by
capturing streams that formerly drained into the Wabash. The
Great Black Swamp that once occupied much of the land between
Sandusky, Ohio, and
New Haven, Indiana, was a remnant of the bed of Glacial Lake Maumee. Geologists call the former lake bottom the Maumee
Lacustrine Plain.
Highest beach The altitude of the highest Maumee beach is at the head of the outlet in the vicinity of Fort Wayne and New Haven, Ind. To the northeast, , along the Ohio and Michigan state line, it is higher. In
West Unity and
Fayette, Ohio, the beach is at . The strong beach is generally above and at a few points rises to . On the south side of Lake Maumee the highest beach from
Fort Wayne to
Cleveland. The maps show it to be from
Delphos to
Findlay. ==See also==