Speculative; map of Lakes region w/ much higher water levels

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the visualization of the Great Lakes under significantly increased water levels, to the point where their geographical features become unrecognizable. The goal is to create a speculative map that illustrates how the lakes might merge and alter the surrounding landscape, potentially transforming parts of Michigan into islands. The user seeks high-resolution elevation maps of the region, ideally without current coastlines or text, and expresses interest in software that could simulate varying water levels for further exploration. The conversation emphasizes the need for creative and scientific approaches to visualize dramatic environmental changes in the Great Lakes area.
JQP
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I remember this forum from years back as a good place to ask speculative science questions, so I figured I'd give you guys first dibs. Sorry if I put this thread in the wrong place.

I'm doing some fantasy world-building, and I'm curious as to what the Great Lakes would look like at various stages of a dramatic increase in water level. To the point where they're no longer instantly recognizable as the Great Lakes on a map, basically. My web-fu didn't turn up anything, so I'm turning to you guys.

Here are a couple of images that inspired my quest:

http://i.imgur.com/7a8VMJn.png
http://cdn.phys.org/newman/gfx/news/hires/2012/whyseasareri.jpg

I'd love to see a map like those, but for the Great Lakes region, if the Lakes' water levels were raised enough to make them unrecognizable to the layman. I'd like to see them raised enough that they start to merge into one (biting off big chunks of Michigan or the like and turning them into islands would be a bonus), if that is at all feasible (if not, I'm open to suggestions, e.g. dams, that might make it so). Short of that, a good elevation map of the Lakes and the surrounding region would be great; I could drum up my own crude map that way.

I'd also love to get my hands on a high res version of the first one (the bigger the better, but the resolution of the second map wouldn't disappoint), but presented clean, without the outline of current coastline, text, or graphic.

Any ideas?
 
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I guess the ideal would be software that would let me play with sea and water levels and spit out maps that look like my examples, but a man's got to rein in his expectations. :)
 
A map of a four-dimensional planet is three dimensional, so such can exist in our Universe. I made one and posted a video to the Internet. This is all based on William Kingdon Clifford's math from the 19th century. It works like this. A 4D planet has two perpendicular planes of rotation. The intersection of such a plane with the surface of the planet is a great circle. We can define latitude as the arctan( distance from one plane/distance from the other plane). The set of all points...

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