Keweenaw Waterway

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The Keweenaw Waterway in winter, looking west toward the Portage Lake Lift Bridge.
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The Keweenaw Waterway in winter, looking west toward the Portage Lake Lift Bridge.

The Keweenaw Waterway is a partly natural, partly manmade waterway which cuts across the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan. Parts of the waterway are variously known as the Keweenaw Waterway, Portage Canal, Portage Lake Canal, Portage River, Lily Pond, and Portage Lake. The waterway connects to Lake Superior at its north and south entries, with Portage Lake and Torch Lake) in between. The primary tributary to Portage Lake is the Sturgeon River.

Originally a small river used by natives for transportation and fishing, the waterway was dredged and extended in the 1860s in a joint venture between the United States Government and several mining corporations. The expanded canal allowed freighters to haul copper from the rich copper mines of the Keweenaw Peninsula out through Lake Superior to larger cities. It also enabled supply boats and freighters to reach the cities of Houghton and Hancock, which supplied goods to most of Michigan's copper region. The local mines' stamp mills dumped large quantities of stamp sand (containing traces of copper and arsenic) into the waterway, causing significant environmental damage near the sand dumps.

The area north of the waterway is known locally as Copper Island, because the waterway separates the northern part of the Keweenaw Peninsula from the mainland.

The only land route across the waterway is US-41/M-26 across the Portage Lake Lift Bridge.