Researchers want your old Lake Michigan vacation pictures

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By Marshall Lee Weimer

Have any old photos of sand dunes collecting dust?

A new citizen science project has popped up in Michigan, and the managers are calling on you to help out by dusting them off.

The idea is to help researchers study the changes of sand dunes along Lake Michigan. The project is led by the Michigan Environmental Council, West Michigan Environmental Action Council and Michigan State University.

Michigan’s sand dunes are iconic features of the state. Conserving them has long been a priority of state and federal government and of residents.  Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore is perhaps the best-known, but many other state and federal protected areas contain these precious and rare landscapes.

Tom Zimnicki, agricultural policy director at the Michigan Environmental Council, said the first objective is to compare pictures of the same location at different times to look for changes. This is the same method that is used when researchers study how glaciers retreat.

Comparing old photos with more recent ones allows the research team to better understand how sand dunes move throughout time, Zimnicki said. That will give them better insight into how dunes respond to environmental changes and what causes them to change.

The team hopes to establish a large database from which sand dune changes can be more easily understood. Michigan State University will use these photos for mapping data and geographical analysis. The coalition also plans to hold a symposium in the fall to discuss its findings.

The research group is looking for anyone who has photographs of Lake Michigan sand dunes that are at least 25 years old. If you or anyone you know has such photographs, you can submit them here.

If possible, pinpoint the exact location on a map. You could win a prize at the end of the data collection.

For more information, email dunes@environmentalcouncil.org or call 517-999-0411.

6 thoughts on “Researchers want your old Lake Michigan vacation pictures

  1. Sounds like an interesting project. Good luck with your research! It’s too bad people have to use this medium to correct what was probably an auto correct spelling

  2. I do have some from the early 80s and more. Where should I text copies?

  3. Good luck with that. While it’s a great concept to compare old photos with new, when I try to do it to, advance ice boom theory, I couldn’t get anybody to contribute even one photo. people are naturally lazy and I just don’t think you’re going to get a single pic from anybody. it’s sad to say but good luck.

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