Lake Chicago at the Valparaiso Moraine. The Valparaiso system includes five moraines north of
Chicago. The most northerly reach is to the
headwaters of the
Fox River in
Waukesha County, west of
Milwaukee. The moraine angles to the south and east, reaching the headwaters of the
Des Plaines River west of
Kenosha, Wisconsin. The moraine forms a major portion of the eastern divide of the Fox River basin and then the western bank of the Des Plaines River. The moraine continues southward along the Des Plaines River following the route of the modern Tri-State Tollway (
I-294) around the west side of Chicago. Where the Des Plaines River bends to the west and forms the
Illinois River, the moraine angles south and east, continuing along I-294 towards
Chicago Heights. In this area, the moraine has widened out towards the south and east, becoming a broad plain covering large portions of
Will and
Kankakee counties. Turning eastward, the moraine enters Indiana. The moraine is wide as it passes through
Lake County, Indiana, covering nearly half of the county's midsection. As it passes through
Porter County, Indiana, it is under the city of
Valparaiso, from which it derives its name. Through Indiana, the moraine forms a continental divide between the drainage of the
Great Lakes and the
Gulf of Mexico by the
Mississippi River. The moraine then turns northeast, passing just north of
La Porte, Indiana. Upon entering
Michigan the moraine forms much of the shoreline of Lake Michigan northward through
St. Joseph. ==Distribution==