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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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Zarathustra (3672 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Game: Reunification
Hey, I need two more people for a classic, very slow (7 day), WTA, full press, 50 point ante game. There are some newbies and some veterans (gryncat and I), all are welcome. http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=82423

PM me for password
6 replies
Open
Vaftrudner (2533 D)
09 Mar 12 UTC
To you in For fun-20
Whoever you are that wants a pause - how are we supposed to talk to each other to unpause later in an anonymous gunboat? That's why I'm not voting pause and I'm sorry if I'm a dick.
11 replies
Open
cteno4 (100 D)
09 Mar 12 UTC
Cheap WTA - 14D buy-in
gameID=82719
Anonymous players, 24h/phase. Obviously I'm in the game. Seven guesses which country I am; only six guesses for those who join.
0 replies
Open
Chanakya. (703 D)
09 Mar 12 UTC
I m happy with my first live ...
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=82649
I think I am learning good...
9 replies
Open
goldfinger0303 (3157 DMod)
24 Feb 12 UTC
EOG The Masters R5G6
39 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
08 Mar 12 UTC
Tru Ninja - where are you?
we're missing you and everyone else wants to unpause :'(
5 replies
Open
bolshoi (0 DX)
07 Mar 12 UTC
will obama tap hillary clinton?
for vp? also, will obama tap hillary clinton? discuss.
Page 4 of 6
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MichiganMan (5121 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
I have proven myself open-minded, nothing more. Labeling me a "conspiracy theorist" in an effort to discredit me is an obvious sign of weakness. You've been duped by the media into believing their propaganda and will lash out at others who see through their lies. You think that anyone that doesn't swallow their bait is irrational, and by implication, those that do (like yourself) are rational and somehow intellectually superior. You do this as a defense mechanism. I understand. It's easier to exist in the world that the media creates for you. You want to be safe, and you're willing to give your rights, your Republic, up in order to be safe. Trust me I understand. But don't for one second think that because you're willing to swallow their bullshit and call those that don't names that you're somehow superior.

Sleep tight sheeple!
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
I called you a conspiracy theorist. you called me naive first. Who is calling who names?

Done now.
MichiganMan (5121 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
"So not a reliable source for facts..."

and Wikipedia is? Get off it Draugner.
MichiganMan (5121 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Call me a conspiracy theorists all you want, I take no offense to it. It is YOU that hurl it like monkey feces. It have been my experience that "conspiracies", i.e., two or more people plotting, are far more prevalent in the world than the "lone gunman". I called you naive because that is what you are. You're willing to be led by the nose and will do as you are told and lash out at those that won't. I called you naive because you actually think that the American people select their president, and even further, that the man who holds that office is actually the President of the Republic. You believe these things despite a great deal of evidence to the contrary. Yet, you won't look at that evidence because it is a "conspiracy theory" and therefore not on the reading list of the true intellectual elite.
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
1500F? wow, those were some powerful office fires.
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
why not just claim it was a million degrees? that sounds even more hyperbolic.
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
I believe there are many conspiracies, but I know that a conspiracy involving a few people is easier and more likely than a conspiracy involving thousands including the news media who just loves to blow whistles, even havign their own little internal conspiracies if it pulls in ratings. what do you think would pull in more ratings? "President and cronies tell us to cover up what we know about 9/11!" or "Terrorists use planes against WTC!" I think the news would love it if they had proof of the former and word would spread like wildfire. Look at Iran-Contra. Look at Watergate. Look at Whitewatergate. the media *loves* to call the government out for conspiracies. So if one existed, they wouldn't be part of it. to think otherwise is to be the truly naive one.
LakersFan (899 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
I heard that Wikipedia reported the comedian/actor Sinbad as being dead a few years back. That must have been true (they must have meant his career though).
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
this could be relevant
http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Outreach/AboutVolcanoes/how_hot_is_a_volcano.html
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-17297443

Folk group the "Buranovo Grannies" will compete in the Eurovision Song Contest, after winning a televised contest in Moscow to represent Russia.

The six grandmothers beat 24 other acts - including a duet between 2008 winner Dima Bilan and Tatu's Yulia Volkova - with song Party For Everybody.

Buranovskiye Babushki, from the Udmurt Republic, say they will use any cash raised to build a church in Buranovo.

"Grandmothers do not need glory and wealth," a member told Vesti news.

The singer, named only as "Grandmother Olga", said building the village church was their "only goal".

Their winning song, which begins as a traditional folk tune before a modern dance beat kicks in, features the refrain, "party for everybody, come on and dance".

The lyrics to the song, which feature a mixture of English and Udmurt - a language related to Finnish - were written by the grandmothers.


Engelbert Humperdinck, 75, will represent the UK in this year's contest
Buranovskiye Babushki became known in Russia with covers - sung in Udmurt - of classics including the Beatles' Yesterday and the Eagles' Hotel California.

In 2010, they came third in the Russian Eurovision qualifying contest with their song Dlinnaya-dlinnaya beresta i kak sdelat' iz neyo aishon, which translates as "long, long birch bark and how to make a hat of it".

The UK will also be represented by a pensioner at the 57th Eurovision Song Contest in Baku, Azerbaijan when 75-year-old singer Engelbert Humperdinck will perform the British entry.

The Russian singers will take part in the first qualifying heat on 22 May. The Eurovision Song Contest takes place on 26 May.

Meanwhile, Eurovision organisers have announced that Armenia had pulled out amid tension with old rival Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijani and Armenian forces fought a war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s which left at least 25,000 people dead.

A ceasefire was signed in 1994 but no permanent peace deal has been reached.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Trolling (fishing)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


"Trolling for blue fish" lithograph by Currier & Ives, 1866.
Trolling is a method of fishing where one or more fishing lines, baited with lures or bait fish, are drawn through the water. This may be behind a moving boat, or by slowly winding the line in when fishing from a static position, or even sweeping the line from side-to-side, e.g. when fishing from a jetty. Trolling is used to catch pelagic fish such as salmon, mackerel and kingfish.
Trolling can be phonetically confused with trawling, a different method of fishing where a net (trawl) is drawn through the water instead of lines. Trolling is used both for recreational and commercial fishing whereas trawling is used mainly for commercial fishing.
Trolling from a moving boat involves moving quite slowly through the water. This can be accomplished with the use of a special trolling motor. Multiple lines are often used, and outriggers can be used to spread the lines more widely and reduce their chances of tangling. Downriggers can also be used to keep the lures or baits trailing at a desired depth.
Contents [hide]
1 Outriggers and downriggers
2 Baits and lures
3 Trolling speed
4 Recreational fishing
5 Commercial fishing
6 See also
7 Notes
8 References
[edit]Outriggers and downriggers



Artist's conception of tuna trolling operation, using outriggers to tow multiple trolling lines and give the appearance of schooling fish
Outriggers are poles which allow a boat to troll multiple lines in the water without tangling. A boat which trolls enough lines can simulate a school of fish.[1][2][3]
Downrigger are devices used while trolling to keep a bait or lure at the desired depth. In practice, fish swim at different depths according to factors such as the temperature and amount of light in the water, and the speed and direction of water currents.[4] A downrigger consists of a one or two metre horizontal pole which supports a weight, typically about three kilograms of lead, on a steel cable. A clip called a "line release" attaches the fishing line to the weight, and the bait or lure is attached to the release. The fishing line is reeled in by a spool powered either by manual cranking or by an electric motor.[5] Using a downrigger can be hazardous. For example, man-made reservoirs can contain submerged trees and other structures beneath the surface which downriggers can snag.
Paravanes (underwater kites) are sometimes used as depth controlling devices,[6] particularly in commercial tuna fishing operations. These kites have various shapes, such as arrowhead paravanes, flexi-wing paravanes, and bi-wing paravanes.[7] The devices can place the lure or bait at designated depths and positions; and in this way multiple devices can be towed at the same time without the devices and bait interfering with each other.[8]
"Spreaders" allow multiple baited hooks or lures to be trolled from a single line. There are many inventive spreader designs, such as devices which cause the baited hooks or lures to move in helical patterns, in a sophisticated emulation of the schooling behaviour of a group of fish.[9]
[edit]Baits and lures



Fishing lures are made in various creative designs like this top-water lure


Spoon lure
To be effective, trolling baits and lures must have the visual ability to attract fish and intrigue them with the way they move through the water.[10] Most trolling lures are designed to look and behave like dying, injured, or fast moving fish. They include:
Surface lures, also known as top water lures. They float and resemble prey that is on top of the water. They can make a popping sound from a concave-cut head, a burbling sound from "side fins" or scoops or a buzzing commotion from one or several propellers.
Plugs are also known as crankbaits. These lures have a fishlike body shape and as they troll through the water they make various movements caused by instability due to a scoop under their heads.
Swimbait, a minnow-like soft plastic bait that is reeled like a plug. Some have swimming tails.
Spoon lures resemble the inside of a table spoon. They flash in the light while randomly wobbling or darting due to their shape.[11]
Spinnerbait, pieces of wire bent at about a 60 degree angle with a hook on the lower end and a flashy spinner mechanism on the upper end.
Trolling baits and lures are either tied with a knot, such as the improved clinch knot, or connected with a tiny safety pin-like device called a "snap" onto the fishing line which is in turn connected to the reel. The reel is attached to a rod. The motion is of the lure is made by winding line back on to the reel, by sweeping the fishing rod, jigging movements with the fishing rod, or by trolling behind a moving boat. Lures can be contrasted with artificial flies, commonly called flies by fly fishers, which either float on the water surface, slowly sink or float underwater, in imitation some form of insect fish food. However some flies, such as the trolling tandem streamer fly, are designed for trolling behind a moving boat.
As an example, marlin lures are typically 7-14 inches or more long with a shaped plastic or metal head and a plastic skirt. The design of the lure head, particularly its face, gives the lure its individual action when trolled through the water. Lure actions range from an active side-to-side swimming pattern to pushing water aggressively on the surface to, most commonly, tracking along in a straight line with a regular surface pop and bubble trail. Besides the shape, weight and size of the lure head, the length and thickness of skirting, the number and size of hooks and the length and size of the leader used in lure rigging all influence the action of the lure: how actively it will run and how it will respond to different sea conditions. Experienced anglers fine tune their lures to get the action they want.
Specialized lures made specifically for trolling swordfish use plastic glow sticks.
A pattern of four or more lures can be trolled at varying distances behind the boat. Lures may be fished either straight from the rod tip ("flat lines"), or from outriggers.
In addition to attaching a lure to the fishing line, an oval piece of metal (often hammered or curved for reflective purposes) called a dodger is often used to attract fish from greater distances. Lures designed for trolling with downriggers include metal "spoons" that are often decorated with colour tape, and plastic or rubber "squids" with various colours.
A daisy chain is a chain of plastic lures which have no hooks. Their purpose is to function as teasers which attract a school of fish closer to the lures that do have hooks.[12]
[edit]Trolling speed



Aluminium bass boat with trolling motor[13]
Baits and lures are typically trolled at speeds up to 9 knots, though speeds up to 15 knots can be used, particularly when boats are travelling to different fishing areas. The speed at which the lure is pulled through the water impacts on the fishing success. The optimum trolling speed varies with different species of fish, with weather conditions and the time of year, and other conditions. Chinook salmon can be successfully trolled at higher speeds than more docile lake trout. For these reasons fishermen use devices that accurately track speed.[4] Trolling motors calibrate speed more accurately than large outboard motors. Trolling plates are also used with larger motors to slow the boat to the desired speed, although some anglers experience mixed results with plates.
Trolling can be effective at surprisingly low speeds. Kayaks fitted with a deck-mounted bracket for holding a rod can be paddled to troll effectively for salmon.[14]
[edit]Recreational fishing

In marine environments trolling is used in big-game fishing to catch large offshore or open-water species such as tuna and marlin. Saltwater anglers also troll for inshore species such as bluefish, kingfish and various jacks.[15]
Rock fishermen can use an umbrella rig as a method of trolling without using a boat. Typically, an umbrella rig consists of four plastic neon green lures with a lead dragging behind. An additional lure is attached to the lead. Only the lure behind the lead need have hooks attached because this lure can appear to a stalking fish as a wounded or sick laggard in a school, making it a more likely target.[16]
A pattern of multiple baits or lures can be trolled at varying distances behind a boat. Lures can be fished straight from the rod tip (flat line), or from outriggers. Purpose designed sinkers exist to control the trolling depth on freshwater lakes.[17]
Freshwater anglers can also find trolling effective. Recreational fishermen can successfully troll lakes and reservoirs for salmon and trout. It can be the method of choice for catching the elusive muskie, and a useful technique for catching walleye, black bass and striped bass.[15] For light and medium freshwater gamefishing, any reasonably robust casting or spinning rod can be used as a trolling rod. Effective trolling rods should be fairly stiff with a relatively fast action, since "whippy" slow action rods are frustrating to troll with.

Trolling for fish in Hawaii



Inflatable boat with small electric trolling outboard motor



Trolling boats at the Finnish trolling championships on Pielisjoki River in Finland



Trolling during the Finnish championships

[edit]Commercial fishing

Commercial trolling vessels catch fish by towing astern one or more trolling lines. The trolling lines are fishing lines with natural or artificial baited hooks trailed by a vessel near the surface or at a certain depth. Several lines can be towed at the same time using outriggers to keep the lines apart. The lines can be hauled in manually or by small winches. A length of rubber is often included in each line as a shock absorber. The trolling line is towed at a speed depending on the target species, from 2.3 knots up to at least 7 knots. Trollers range from small open boats to large refrigerated vessels 30 meters long. In many tropical artisanal fisheries, trolling is done with sailing canoes with outriggers for stability. With properly designed vessels, trolling is an economical and efficient way of catching tuna, mackerel and other pelagic fish swimming close to the surface. Purpose built trollers are usually equipped with two or four trolling booms raised and lowered by topping lifts, held in position by adjustable stays. Electrically powered or hydraulic reels can be used to haul in the lines.[18] Drawing (FAO)

Diagram of a commercial troll vessel using outriggers to tow trolling lines



Commercial fishing vessel trolling for tuna in the Pacific



Fishing vessel trolling for tuna in the Atlantic



Commercial trolling in Alaska

Commercial trolling for tuna is more successful near offshore banks than in open water areas, and is also enhanced in the vicinity of a fish aggregation device (FAD).[19]
Historically, in Alaska, hand hook and line trolling were used to catch king and silver salmon in salt water. This method required minimal gear-boat, lines and hooks—and was used to catch fish that were still feeding in open water before returning to spawn. Trolling was very successful in southeast Alaska and historically the catch was used by the fresh and mild-cured fish packing industries. Power boats located near feeding grounds conducted most of the trolling. Each boat had four to ten lines, extending from tall poles hung outboard when fishing; each line carried several hooks, with heavy lead sinkers and spoons or baits as lures. Trolling lengthened the fishing season, allowing fishermen to fish in early spring before spawning runs.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Troll
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the mythical beings. For other uses, see Troll (disambiguation).



Look at them, troll mother said. Look at my sons! You won't find more beautiful trolls on this side of the moon. (1915) by John Bauer
A troll is a supernatural being in Norse mythology and Scandinavian folklore. In origin, the term troll was a generally negative synonym for a jötunn (plural jötnar), a being in Norse mythology. In Old Norse sources, beings described as trolls dwell in isolated rocks, mountains, or caves, live together in small family units, and are rarely helpful to human beings.
Later, in Scandinavian folklore, trolls became beings in their own right, where they live far from human habitation, are not Christianized, and are considered dangerous to human beings. Depending on the region from which accounts of trolls stem, their appearance varies greatly; trolls may be ugly and slow-witted or look and behave exactly like human beings, with no particularly grotesque characteristic about them. Trolls are sometimes associated with particular landmarks, which at times may be explained as formed from a troll exposed to sunlight. One of the most famous elements of Scandinavian folklore, trolls are depicted in a variety of media in modern popular culture.
Contents [hide]
1 Norse mythology
2 Scandinavian folklore
3 See also
4 Notes
5 References
6 External links
Norse mythology

In Norse mythology, troll, like thurs is a term applied to jötnar, and are mentioned throughout the Old Norse corpus. In Old Norse sources, trolls are said to dwell in isolated mountains, rocks, and caves, sometimes live together (usually as father-and-daughter or mother-and-son), and are rarely described as helpful or friendly.[1] In the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, a scenario describing an encounter between an unnamed troll woman and the 9th century skald Bragi Boddason is provided. According to the section, once, late in the evening, Bragi was driving through "a certain forest" when a troll woman aggressively asked him who he was, in the process describing herself:
Old Norse:
Troll kalla mik
trungl sjǫtrungnis,
auðsug jǫtuns,
élsólar bǫl,
vilsinn vǫlu,
vǫrð nafjarðar,
hvélsveg himins -
hvat's troll nema þat?[2]
Anthony Faulkes translation:
'Trolls call me
moon of dwelling-Rungnir,
giant's wealth-sucker,
storm-sun's bale,
seeress's friendly companion,
guardian of corpse-fiord,
swallower of heaven-wheel;
what is a troll other than that?'[3]
John Lindow translation:
They call me a troll,
moon of the earth-Hrungnir [?]
wealth sucker [?] of the giant,
destroyer of the storm-sun [?]
beloved follower of the seeress,
guardian of the "nafjord" [?]
swallower of the wheel of heaven [the sun].
What's a troll if not that?[2]
Bragi responds in turn, describing himself and his abilities as a skillful skald, before the scenario ends.[3]
There is much confusion and overlap in the use of Old Norse terms jötunn, troll, þurs and risi, which describe various beings. Lotte Motz theorized that these were originally four distinct classes of beings; lords of nature (jötunn), mythical magicians (troll), hostile monsters (þurs) and heroic and courtly beings (risi)—the last class being the youngest addition. Ármann Jakobsson calls this theory "unsupported by any convincing evidence" and argues that since the sources disagree, it may be most fruitful to investigate each text separately.[4]
Scandinavian folklore

Later, in Scandinavian folklore, trolls become defined as a particular type of being.[5] Numerous tales about trolls are recorded. in which they are frequently described as being extremely old, very strong, but slow and dim-witted, and are at times described as man-eaters and as turning to stone upon contact with sunlight.[6] However, trolls are also attested as looking much the same as human beings, without any particularly hideous appearance about them, but where they differ is in that they live far away from human habitation, and, unlike the rå and näck—who are attested as "solitary beings", trolls generally have "some form of social organization". Where they differ, Lindow adds, is that they are not Christian, and those that encounter them do not know them. Therefore trolls were in the end dangerous, regardless of how well they may get along with Christian society, and trolls display a habit of bergtagning ('kidnapping'; literally "mountain-taking") and overrunning a farm or estate.[7]
While noting that the etymology of the word "troll" remains uncertain, John Lindow defines trolls in in later Swedish folklore as "nature beings" and as "all-purpose otherworldly being[s], equivalent, for example, to fairies in Anglo-Celtic traditions" and that they "therefore appear in various migratory legends where collective nature-beings are called for". Lindow notes that trolls are sometimes are swapped out for cats and "little people" in the folklore record.[7]
A Scandinavian folk belief that lightning frightens away trolls and jötnar appears in numerous Scandinavian folktales, and may be a late reflection of the god Thor's role in fighting such beings. In connection, the lack of trolls and jötnar in modern Scandinavia is sometimes explained as a result of the "accuracy and efficiency of the lightning strokes".[8] Additionally, the absence of trolls in regions of Scandinavia are described in folklore as being a "consequence of the constant din of the church-bells". This ring caused the trolls to leave for other lands, although not without some resistance; numerous traditions relate how trolls destroyed a church under construction or lunged boulders at stones at completed churches. Large local stones are sometimes described as the product of a troll's toss.[9] Additionally, into the 20th century, the origins of particular Scandinavian landmarks, such as particular stones, are ascribed to trolls who may, for example, have turned to stone upon exposure to sunlight.[6]
Lindow compares the trolls of the Swedish folk tradition to supernatural mead hall invader Grendel in the Old English poem Beowulf, and notes that "just as the poem Beowulf emphasizes not the harrying of Grendel but the cleansing of the hall of Beowulf, so the modern tales stress the moment when the trolls are driven off."[7]
Smaller trolls are attested as living in burial mounds and in mountains in Scandinavian folk tradition.[10] In Denmark, these creatures are recorded as troldfolk ("troll-folk"), bjergtrolde ("mountain-trolls"), or bjergfolk ("mountain-folk") and in Norway also as troldfolk ("troll-folk") and tusser.[10] Trolls may be described as small, human-like beings or as tall as men depending on the region of origin of the story.[11] James MacCulloch theorizes a connection between the Old Norse vættir and trolls, theorizing that both concepts may either stem from (or ultimately derive from) spirits of the dead.[12]
In Norwegian tradition, similar tales may be told about the larger trolls and the Huldrefolk ("hidden-folk") yet a distinction is made between the two. The use of the word trow in Orkney and Shetland, to mean beings which are very like the Huldrefolk in Norway strongly suggests a common origin for the terms. The word troll may have been used by pagan Norse settlers in Orkney and Shetland as a collective term for supernatural beings who should be respected and avoided rather than worshiped. Troll could later have become specialized as a description of the larger, more menacing Jötunn-kind whereas Huldrefolk may have developed as the general term applied to smaller trolls.[13]
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
@boolshoi - wtf are you going on about? Steel starts to lose it's structural integrity at 650 degrees F. The jet fuel burned at around 1000 degrees and the steel experienced the equivalent to around 750-800 degrees of heat.

http://www.tms.org/pubs/journals/jom/0112/eagar/eagar-0112.html
LakersFan (899 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
The simple truth, Draugnaur, is that if 15 of the 19 terrorists had been from any country but Saudi Arabia, the headlines would have screamed "America attacked by {North Korea, Iran, Venezuela, etc.}

But given our close relationship to SA, not a single paper out there that ran w/ the headline of "Saudi Arabia attacks America!"
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
@LakersFan - And the news media oft reports an actor or actress or some other celebrity dead only to have to print a redaction/retraction later. Shit happens and things get incorrectly posted, but wikipedia has begun vetting it's articles and takes it's role much more seriously now than just a few years ago.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Michigan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

State of Michigan

Flag Seal
Nickname(s): The Great Lakes State, The Wolverine State
Motto(s): Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice
(Latin:If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look about you)

Official language(s) None (English, de-facto)
Demonym Michigander, Michiganian or Yooper (in the Upper Peninsula)
Capital Lansing
Largest city Detroit
Largest metro area Metro Detroit
Area Ranked 11th in the U.S.
- Total 96,716 sq mi
(250,493 km2)
- Width 386[1] miles (621 km)
- Length 456[1] miles (734 km)
- % water 41.5
- Latitude 41° 41' N to 48° 18' N
- Longitude 82° 7' W to 90° 25' W
Population Ranked 8th in the U.S.
- Total 9,876,187 (2011 est)[2]
- Density 174/sq mi (67.1/km2)
Ranked 17th in the U.S.
- Median income $44,627 (21st)
Elevation
- Highest point Mount Arvon[3][4]
1,979 ft (603 m)
- Mean 900 ft (270 m)
- Lowest point Lake Erie[3][4]
571 ft (174 m)
Before statehood Michigan Territory
Admission to Union January 26, 1837 (26th)
Governor Rick Snyder (R)
Lieutenant Governor Brian Calley (R)
Legislature Michigan Legislature
- Upper house Senate
- Lower house House of Representatives
U.S. Senators
Carl Levin (D)
Debbie Stabenow (D)
U.S. House delegation 9 Republicans
6 Democrats (list)
Time zones
- most of state Eastern: UTC-5/-4
- 4 U.P. counties Central: UTC-6/-5
Abbreviations MI Mich. US-MI
Website www.michigan.gov
[show]
Michigan State symbols
Michigan (i/ˈmɪʃɨɡən/) is a U.S. state located in the Great Lakes Region of the United States of America. The name Michigan is the French form of the Ojibwa word mishigamaa, meaning "large water" or "large lake".[1][5] Michigan is the 11th most extensive and the 8th most populous of the 50 United States.
Michigan has the longest freshwater coastline of any political subdivision in the world, being bounded by four of the five Great Lakes, plus Lake Saint Clair.[6] Michigan is one of the leading U.S. states for recreational boating.[7] The state has 64,980 inland lakes and ponds.[8] A person in the state is never more than six miles (10 km) from a natural water source or more than 85 miles (137 km) from a Great Lakes shoreline.[9] It is the largest state by total area[10] east of the Mississippi River.
Michigan is the only state to consist of two peninsulas. The Lower Peninsula, to which the name Michigan was originally applied, is often noted to be shaped like a mitten. The Upper Peninsula (often referred to as "The U.P.") is separated from the Lower Peninsula by the Straits of Mackinac, a five-mile (8 km)-wide channel that joins Lake Huron to Lake Michigan. The two peninsulas are connected by the Mackinac Bridge. The Upper Peninsula is economically important due to its status as a tourist destination. There is also a variety of natural resources to be found there, including a sizable amount of iron ore.
Contents [hide]
1 History
1.1 17th century
1.2 18th century
1.3 19th century
1.4 20th and 21st centuries
2 Government
2.1 State government
2.2 Law
2.3 Politics
2.4 Administrative divisions
3 Geography
3.1 Adjacent states and provinces
3.2 Climate
3.3 Geology
4 Demographics
4.1 Population
4.2 Religion
5 Economy
5.1 Taxation
5.2 Agriculture
5.3 Tourism
6 Transportation
6.1 Railroads
6.2 Roadways
6.3 Airports
7 Important cities and townships
8 Education
9 Professional sports
10 State symbols and nicknames
10.1 Sister states
11 See also
12 References
13 Further reading
14 External links
[edit]History

See also: Timeline of Michigan history and History of Michigan
Michigan was home to Native American cultures before colonization by Europeans[citation needed]. When the first European explorers arrived, the most populous and influential tribes were Algonquian peoples, specifically, the Ottawa, the Anishnabe (called Chippewa in French, after their language Ojibwe), and the Potawatomi. The Anishnabe, whose numbers are estimated to have been between 25,000 and 35,000, were the most populous.
The Anishnabe were well-established in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and northern Michigan, and also inhabited northern Ontario, northern Wisconsin, southern Manitoba, and northern and north-central Minnesota. The Ottawa lived primarily south of the Straits of Mackinac in northern and western Michigan, while the Potawatomi were primarily in the southwest. The three nations co-existed peacefully as part of a loose confederation called the Council of Three Fires. Other tribes in Michigan, in the south and east, were the Mascouten, the Menominee, the Miami, and the Wyandot, who are better known by their French name, Huron.
[edit]17th century


Père Marquette and the Indians (1869), Wilhelm Lamprecht
French voyageurs and coureurs des bois explored and settled in Michigan in the 17th century. The first Europeans to reach what later became Michigan were those of Étienne Brûlé's expedition in 1622. The first permanent European settlement was founded in 1668 on the site where Père Jacques Marquette established Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan as a base for Catholic missions.[11] Missionaries in 1671–75 founded outlying stations at Saint Ignace and Marquette. Jesuit missionaries were well received by the Indian populations in the area, with relatively few difficulties or hostilities. In 1679, Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle built Fort Miami at present-day St. Joseph.
[edit]18th century


Approximate area of Michigan highlighted in Guillaume de L'Isle's 1718 map.
In 1701, French explorer and army officer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac founded Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit or "Fort Pontchartrain on-the-Strait" on the strait, known as the Detroit River, between lakes Saint Clair and Erie. Cadillac had convinced King Louis XIV's chief minister, Louis Phélypeaux, Comte de Pontchartrain, that a permanent community there would strengthen French control over the upper Great Lakes and discourage British aspirations.
The hundred soldiers and workers who accompanied Cadillac built a fort enclosing one arpent[12][13] (about 0.85 acres (3,400 m2), the equivalent of just under 200 feet (61 m) per side) and named it Fort Pontchartrain. Cadillac's wife, Marie Thérèse Guyon, soon moved to Detroit, becoming one of the first European women to settle in the Michigan wilderness. The town quickly became a major fur-trading and shipping post. The Église de Saint-Anne (Church of Saint Ann) was founded the same year. While the original building does not survive, the congregation of that name continues to be active today. Cadillac later departed to serve as the French governor of Louisiana from 1710 to 1716.
At the same time, the French strengthened Fort Michilimackinac at the Straits of Mackinac to better control their lucrative fur-trading empire. By the mid-18th century, the French also occupied forts at present-day Niles and Sault Ste. Marie, though most of the rest of the region remained unsettled by Europeans.
From 1660 to the end of French rule, Michigan was part of the Royal Province of New France.[14] In 1759, following the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in the French and Indian War (1754–1763), Québec City fell to British forces. This marked Britain's victory in the Seven Years War. Under the 1763 Treaty of Paris, Michigan and the rest of New France east of the Mississippi River passed to Great Britain.[15]
During the American Revolutionary War, Detroit was an important British supply center. Most of the inhabitants were French-Canadians or Native Americans, many of whom had been allied with the French. Because of imprecise cartography and unclear language defining the boundaries in the 1783 Treaty of Paris, the British retained control of Detroit and Michigan after the American Revolution. When Quebec split into Lower and Upper Canada in 1790, Michigan was part of Kent County, Upper Canada. It held its first democratic elections in August 1792 to send delegates to the new provincial parliament at Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake).[16]
Under terms negotiated in the 1794 Jay Treaty, Britain withdrew from Detroit and Michilimackinac in 1796. Questions remained over the boundary for many years, and the United States did not have uncontested control of the Upper Peninsula and Drummond Island until 1818 and 1847, respectively.
[edit]19th century
During the War of 1812, Michigan Territory (effectively consisting of Detroit and the surrounding area) was surrendered after a nearly bloodless siege in 1812. An attempt to retake Detroit resulted in a severe American defeat in the River Raisin Massacre. This battle is still the bloodiest ever fought in the state and had the highest number of American casualties of any battle in the war. Ultimately, Michigan was recaptured by Americans in 1813 after the Battle of Lake Erie. An invasion of Canada which culminated in the Battle of the Thames was then launched from Michigan. The more northern areas were held by the British until the peace treaty restored the old boundaries. A number of forts, including Fort Wayne were built in Michigan during the 19th century out of fears of renewed fighting with Britain.


Lumbering pines in the late 1800s
The population grew slowly until the opening in 1825 of the Erie Canal connecting the Great Lakes and the Hudson River and New York City. The new route brought a large influx of settlers, who became farmers and merchants and shipped out grain, lumber, and iron ore. By the 1830s, Michigan had 80,000 residents, more than enough to apply and qualify for statehood. In October 1835 the people approved the Constitution of 1835, thereby forming a state government, although Congressional recognition was delayed pending resolution of a boundary dispute with Ohio known as the Toledo War. Congress awarded the "Toledo Strip" to Ohio. Michigan received the western part of the Upper Peninsula as a concession and formally entered the Union on January 26, 1837. The Upper Peninsula proved to be a rich source of lumber, iron, and copper. Michigan led the nation in lumber production from the 1850s to the 1880s. Railroads became a major engine of growth from the 1850s onward, with Detroit the chief hub.
The first statewide meeting of the Republican Party took place July 6, 1854 in Jackson, Michigan, where the party adopted its platform. The state was heavily Republican until the 1930s. Michigan made a significant contribution to the Union in the American Civil War and sent more than forty regiments of volunteers to the federal armies.
Modernizers and boosters—especially Yankees set up systems for public education, including founding the University of Michigan (1817; moved to Ann Arbor in 1841), for a classical academic education; and Michigan State Normal School, (1849) now Eastern Michigan University, for the training of teachers. In 1899, it became the first normal college in the nation to offer a four-year curriculum. Michigan Agricultural College (1855), now Michigan State University in East Lansing, was founded as the pioneer land-grant college, a model for those authorized under the Morrill Act (1862). Many other private colleges were founded as well, and the smaller cities formed high schools late in the century.[17]
[edit]20th and 21st centuries
See also: History of Ford Motor Company
Michigan's economy underwent a transformation at the turn of the 20th century. Many individuals, including Ransom E. Olds, John and Horace Dodge, Henry Leland, David Dunbar Buick, Henry Joy, Charles King, and Henry Ford, provided the concentration of engineering know-how and technological enthusiasm to start the birth of the automotive industry.[18] Ford's development of the moving assembly line in Highland Park marked the beginning of a new era in transportation. Like the steamship and railroad, it was a far-reaching development. More than the forms of public transportation, the automobile transformed private life. It became the major industry of Detroit and Michigan, and permanently altered the socio-economic life of the United States and much of the world.
With the growth, the auto industry created jobs in Detroit that attracted immigrants from Europe and migrants from across the U.S., including those from the South. By 1920, Detroit was the fourth largest city in the U.S. Residential housing was in short supply, and it took years for the market to catch up with the population boom. By the 1930s, so many immigrants had arrived that more than 30 languages were spoken in the public schools, and ethnic communities celebrated in annual heritage festivals. Over the years immigrants and migrants contributed greatly to Detroit's diverse urban culture, including popular music trends, such as the influential Motown Sound of the 1960s led by a variety of individual singers and groups.


Skyscrapers in downtown Detroit
Grand Rapids, the second-largest city in Michigan, is also an important center of manufacturing. Since 1838, the city has also been noted for its furniture industry and is home to five of the world's leading office furniture companies. Grand Rapids is home to a number of major companies including Steelcase, Amway, and Meijer. Grand Rapids is also an important center for GE Aviation Systems.
Michigan held its first United States presidential primary election in 1910. With its rapid growth in industry, it was an important center of union industry-wide organizing, such as the rise of the United Auto Workers.
In 1920 WWJ (AM) in Detroit became the first radio station in the United States to regularly broadcast commercial programs. Throughout that decade, some of the country's largest and most ornate skyscrapers were built in the city. Particularly noteworthy are the Fisher Building, Cadillac Place, and the Guardian Building, each of which is a National Historic Landmark (NHL).
Detroit continued to expand through the 1950s, at one point doubling its population in a decade. After World War II, housing was developed in suburban areas outside city cores; newly constructed U.S. Interstate Highways allowed commuters to navigate the region more easily. Modern advances in the auto industry have resulted in increased automation, high tech industry, and increased suburban growth since 1960.
Michigan is the leading auto-producing state in the U.S., with the industry primarily located throughout the Midwestern United States, Ontario, Canada, and the Southern United States.[19] With almost ten million residents, Michigan is a large and influential state, ranking eighth in population among the fifty states. Detroit is the centrally located metropolitan area of the Great Lakes Megalopolis and the second largest metropolitan area in the U.S. linking the Great Lakes system.
The Metro Detroit area in Southeast Michigan is the largest metropolitan area in the state (roughly 50% of the population resides there) and the eleventh largest in the USA. The Grand Rapids metropolitan area in Western Michigan is the fastest-growing metro area in the state, with over 1.3 million residents as of 2006. Metro Detroit receives more than 15 million visitors each year. Michigan has many popular tourist destinations which include areas such as Traverse City on the Grand Traverse Bay in Northern Michigan. Tourists spend about $17 billion annually in Michigan supporting 193,000 jobs.[20]
Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall Research & development (R&D) expenditures in the U.S.[21][22] The state's leading research institutions include the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University which are important partners in the state's economy and the state's University Research Corridor.[23] Michigan's public universities attract more than $1.5 B in research and development grants each year.[24] Agriculture also serves a significant role making the state a leading grower of fruit in the U.S., including blueberries, cherries, apples, grapes, and peaches.[25]
[edit]Government

See also: List of Governors of Michigan and United States congressional delegations from Michigan


Michigan State Capitol in Lansing
[edit]State government
Main article: Government of Michigan
Michigan is governed as a republic, with three branches of government: the executive branch consisting of the Governor of Michigan and the other independently elected constitutional officers; the legislative branch consisting of the House of Representatives and Senate; and the judicial branch consisting of the one court of justice. The state also allows direct participation of the electorate by initiative, referendum, recall, and ratification. Lansing is the state capital and is home to all three branches of state government.
The Governor of Michigan and the other state constitutional officers serve four-year terms and may be re-elected only once. The current Governor is Rick Snyder. Michigan has two official Governor's Residences; one is in Lansing, and the other is at Mackinac Island.
The Michigan Legislature consists of a 38-member Senate and 110-member House of Representatives. Senators serve four-year terms and Representatives two. The Michigan State Capitol was dedicated in 1879 and has hosted the state's executive and legislative branches ever since.
[edit]Law


Michigan Supreme Court at the Hall of Justice
The Michigan Court System consists of two courts with primary jurisdiction (the Circuit Courts and the District Courts), one intermediate level appellate court (the Michigan Court of Appeals), and the Michigan Supreme Court. There are several administrative courts and specialized courts. The Michigan Constitution provides for voter initiative and referendum (Article II, § 9,[26] defined as "the power to propose laws and to enact and reject laws, called the initiative, and the power to approve or reject laws enacted by the legislature, called the referendum. The power of initiative extends only to laws which the legislature may enact under this constitution").
In 1846 Michigan became the first state in the Union, as well as the first English-speaking government in the world,[27][28] to abolish the death penalty. Historian David Chardavoyne has suggested that the movement to abolish capital punishment in Michigan grew as a result of enmity toward the state's neighbor, Canada. Under British rule, it made public executions a regular practice.
[edit]Politics
See also: Elections in Michigan and Political party strength in Michigan


Michigan Governor Rick Snyder (R) (2011–present)
Voters in the state elect candidates from both major parties. Economic issues are important in Michigan elections. The three-term Republican Governor John Engler (1991–2003) preceded the former two-term Democratic Governor Jennifer Granholm (2003–2011). The state has elected successive Republican attorneys general twice since 2003. The Republican Party has won a majority in both the House and Senate of the current Michigan Legislature (2011–present). Michigan supported the election of Republican Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. The current Governor Rick Snyder (2011–present) is a Republican.
Presidential elections results[29]
Year Republicans Democrats
2008 40.89% 2,048,639 57.33% 2,872,579
2004 47.81% 2,313,746 51.23% 2,479,183
2000 46.14% 1,953,139 51.28% 2,170,418
1996 38.48% 1,481,212 51.69% 1,989,653
1992 36.38% 1,554,940 43.77% 1,871,182
1988 53.57% 1,965,486 45.67% 1,675,783
1984 59.23% 2,251,571 40.24% 1,529,638
1980 48.99% 1,915,225 42.50% 1,661,532
1976 51.83% 1,893,742 46.44% 1,696,714
1972 56.20% 1,961,721 41.81% 1,459,435
1968 41.46% 1,370,665 48.18% 1,593,082
1964 33.10% 1,060,152 66.70% 2,136,615
1960 48.84% 1,620,428 50.85% 1,687,269
However, the state has supported Democrats in the last five presidential election cycles. In 2008, Barack Obama carried the state over John McCain, winning Michigan's 17 electoral votes with 57% of the vote. Democrats have won each of the last three, nine of the last ten, and 15 of the last 18 U.S. Senate elections in Michigan with confidence on national economic issues posing a challenge. Republican strength is greatest in the western, northern, and rural parts of the state, especially in the Grand Rapids area. Republicans also perform well in select areas of suburban Detroit, namely in affluent suburbs like the Grosse Pointe communities, Bloomfield Township, Northville Township, and Novi, as well as in communities with large upper middle-class populations like Rochester Hills. Democrats have performed strongest in urban parts of the state, in cities like Detroit, Ann Arbor, Flint, and Lansing; they have also performed strongly in areas of suburban Detroit, namely in inner, working-class suburbs like Lincoln Park and Eastpointe; African American-majority suburbs like Southfield, Oak Park, and River Rouge; and other suburbs like West Bloomfield Township and Farmington Hills, which both have large Jewish and African-American populations, and suburbs of the Woodward Corridor, like Royal Oak, Berkley, Ferndale, and Huntington Woods are heavily Democratic voting blocs. Other suburbs, like middle-class Sterling Heights, lower middle- to middle-class St. Clair Shores, and Allen Park, are politically competitive for members of both parties.[30]
Metropolitan Detroit, with approximately one-half of the state's population, remains a substantial factor in affecting its elections and political culture more broadly. Overall, Wayne County, where Detroit is located, remains heavily Democratic and voted 74% for Barack Obama and 25% for John McCain. Oakland County, with a moderate political culture, has increasingly shifted towards support for Democratic presidential candidates, and Macomb County, once a bastion of support for Democratic New-Deal politics, has shifted towards becoming an intense political battleground.[31]
Historically, the first county-level meeting of the Republican Party took place in Jackson on July 6, 1854,[32] and the party thereafter dominated Michigan until the Great Depression. In the 1912 election, Michigan was one of the six states to support progressive Republican and third-party candidate Theodore Roosevelt for president after he lost the Republican nomination to William Howard Taft.
Michigan remained fairly reliably Republican at the presidential level for much of the 20th century. It was part of Greater New England, the northern tier of states settled chiefly by migrants from New England who carried their culture with them. The state was one of only a handful to back Wendell Willkie over Franklin Roosevelt in 1940, and supported Thomas E. Dewey in his losing bid against Harry S. Truman in 1948. Michigan went to the Democrats in presidential elections during the 1960s, and voted for Republican Richard Nixon in 1972.
Michigan was the home of Gerald Ford, the 38th President of the United States. He was born in Nebraska and moved as an infant to Grand Rapids and grew up there.[33][34] The Gerald R. Ford Museum is located in Grand Rapids, and the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library is located on the campus of his alma mater, the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
[edit]Administrative divisions
Main article: Administrative divisions of Michigan
See also: List of Michigan county seats, List of counties in Michigan, and List of municipalities in Michigan (by population)
State government is decentralized among three tiers – statewide, county and township. Counties are administrative divisions of the state, and townships are administrative divisions of a county. Both of them exercise state government authority, localized to meet the particular needs of their jurisdictions, as provided by state law. There are 83 counties in Michigan.
Cities, state universities, and villages are vested with home rule powers of varying degrees. Home rule cities can generally do anything that is not prohibited by law. The fifteen state universities have broad power and can do anything within the parameters of their status as educational institutions that is not prohibited by the state constitution. Villages, by contrast, have limited home rule and are not completely autonomous from the county and township in which they are located.
There are two types of township in Michigan: general law township and charter. Charter township status was created by the Legislature in 1947 and grants additional powers and stream-lined administration in order to provide greater protection against annexation by a city. As of April 2001, there were 127 charter townships in Michigan. In general, charter townships have many of the same powers as a city but without the same level of obligations. For example, a charter township can have its own fire department, water and sewer department, police department, and so on—just like a city—but it is not required to have those things, whereas cities must provide those services. Charter townships can opt to use county-wide services instead, such as deputies from the county sheriff's office instead of a home-based force of ordinance officers.
[edit]Geography

Further information: Geography of Michigan, Protected areas of Michigan, and List of Michigan state parks


Marquette Park on Mackinac Island.
Michigan consists of two peninsulas that lie between 82°30' to about 90°30' west longitude, and are separated by the Straits of Mackinac. The 45th parallel north runs through the state—marked by highway signs and the Polar-Equator Trail[35]—along a line including Mission Point Light near Traverse City, the towns of Gaylord and Alpena in the Lower Peninsula and Menominee in the Upper Peninsula. With the exception of two small areas that are drained by the Mississippi River by way of the Wisconsin River in the Upper Peninsula and by way of the Kankakee-Illinois River in the Lower Peninsula, Michigan is drained by the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence watershed and is the only state with the majority of its land thus drained.


Aerial view of Sleeping Bear Dunes.
The Great Lakes that border Michigan from east to west are Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan and Lake Superior. It has more lighthouses than any other state. The state is bounded on the south by the states of Ohio and Indiana, sharing land and water boundaries with both. Michigan's western boundaries are almost entirely water boundaries, from south to north, with Illinois and Wisconsin in Lake Michigan; then a land boundary with Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula, that is principally demarcated by the Menominee and Montreal Rivers; then water boundaries again, in Lake Superior, with Wisconsin and Minnesota to the west, capped around by the Canadian province of Ontario to the north and east.


Tahquamenon Falls in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
The heavily forested Upper Peninsula is relatively mountainous in the west. The Porcupine Mountains, which are part of one of the oldest mountain chains in the world,[36] rise to an altitude of almost 2,000 feet (610 m) above sea level and form the watershed between the streams flowing into Lake Superior and Lake Michigan. The surface on either side of this range is rugged. The state's highest point, in the Huron Mountains northwest of Marquette, is Mount Arvon at 1,979 feet (603 m). The peninsula is as large as Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island combined but has fewer than 330,000 inhabitants. They are sometimes called "Yoopers" (from "U.P.'ers"), and their speech (the "Yooper dialect") has been heavily influenced by the numerous Scandinavian and Canadian immigrants who settled the area during the lumbering and mining boom of the late 19th century.


The Pointe Mouillee State Game Area
The Lower Peninsula is shaped like a mitten and many residents hold up a hand to depict where they are from.[37] It is 277 miles (446 km) long from north to south and 195 miles (314 km) from east to west and occupies nearly two-thirds of the state's land area. The surface of the peninsula is generally level, broken by conical hills and glacial moraines usually not more than a few hundred feet tall. It is divided by a low water divide running north and south. The larger portion of the state is on the west of this and gradually slopes toward Lake Michigan. The highest point in the Lower Peninsula is either Briar Hill at 1,705 feet (520 m), or one of several points nearby in the vicinity of Cadillac. The lowest point is the surface of Lake Erie at 571 feet (174 m).
The geographic orientation of Michigan's peninsulas makes for a long distance between the ends of the state. Ironwood, in the far western Upper Peninsula, lies 630 highway miles (1,015 km) from Lambertville in the Lower Peninsula's southeastern corner. The geographic isolation of the Upper Peninsula from Michigan's political and population centers makes the U.P. culturally and economically distinct. Occasionally U.P. residents have called for secession from Michigan and establishment as a new state to be called "Superior".
A feature of Michigan that gives it the distinct shape of a mitten is the Thumb. This peninsula projects out into Lake Huron and the Saginaw Bay. The geography of the Thumb is mainly flat with a few rolling hills. Other peninsulas of Michigan include the Keweenaw Peninsula, making up the Copper Country region of the state. The Leelanau Peninsula lies in the Northern Lower Michigan region. See Also Michigan Regions


Little Sable Point Light south of Pentwater, Michigan.
Numerous lakes and marshes mark both peninsulas, and the coast is much indented. Keweenaw Bay, Whitefish Bay, and the Big and Little Bays De Noc are the principal indentations on the Upper Peninsula. The Grand and Little Traverse, Thunder, and Saginaw bays indent the Lower Peninsula. Michigan has the second longest shoreline of any state—3,288 miles (5,292 km),[38] including 1,056 miles (1,699 km) of island shoreline.[39]


Michigan map, including territorial waters
The state has numerous large islands, the principal ones being the North Manitou and South Manitou, Beaver, and Fox groups in Lake Michigan; Isle Royale and Grande Isle in Lake Superior; Marquette, Bois Blanc, and Mackinac islands in Lake Huron; and Neebish, Sugar, and Drummond islands in St. Mary's River. Michigan has about 150 lighthouses, the most of any U.S. state. The first lighthouses in Michigan were built between 1818 and 1822. They were built to project light at night and to serve as a landmark during the day to safely guide the passenger ships and freighters traveling the Great Lakes. See Lighthouses in the United States.
The state's rivers are generally small, short and shallow, and few are navigable. The principal ones include the Detroit River, St. Marys River, and St. Clair River which connect the Great Lakes; the Au Sable, Cheboygan, and Saginaw, which flow into Lake Huron; the Ontonagon, and Tahquamenon, which flow into Lake Superior; and the St. Joseph, Kalamazoo, Grand, Muskegon, Manistee, and Escanaba, which flow into Lake Michigan. The state has 11,037 inland lakes (totaling 1,305 square miles (3,380 km2) of inland water) in addition to 38,575 square miles (99,910 km2) of Great Lakes waters. No point in Michigan is more than six miles (10 km) from an inland lake or more than 85 miles (137 km) from one of the Great Lakes.[40]
The state is home to a number of areas maintained by the National Park Service including: Isle Royale National Park, located in Lake Superior, about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Thunder Bay, Ontario. Other national protected areas in the state include: Keweenaw National Historical Park, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Huron National Forest, Manistee National Forest, Hiawatha National Forest, Ottawa National Forest and Father Marquette National Memorial. The largest section of the North Country National Scenic Trail passes through Michigan.
With 78 state parks, 19 state recreation areas, and 6 state forests, Michigan has the largest state park and state forest system of any state. These parks and forests include Holland State Park, Mackinac Island State Park, Au Sable State Forest, and Mackinaw State Forest.
[edit]Adjacent states and provinces
Minnesota Ontario Ontario
Wisconsin Ontario
Michigan

Illinois & Indiana Indiana & Ohio Ohio & Ontario
[edit]Climate
Detroit, MI
Climate chart (explanation)
J F M A M J J A S O N D
1.9 3118
1.9 3420
2.5 4529
3.1 5838
3.1 7049
3.6 7959
3.2 8364
3.1 8162
3.3 7454
2.2 6143
2.7 4834
2.5 3623
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: Detroit Climate
[show]Metric conversion
Lansing, MI
Climate chart (explanation)
J F M A M J J A S O N D
1.6 2914
1.5 3315
2.3 4424
3.1 5735
2.7 6945
3.6 7854
2.7 8258
3.5 8057
3.5 7249
2.3 6039
2.7 4630
2.2 3420
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: Lansing Climate
[show]Metric conversion
Marquette, MI
Climate chart (explanation)
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2.6 203
1.9 245
3.1 3314
2.8 4627
3.1 6239
3.2 7048
3 7554
3.6 7352
3.7 6344
3.7 5134
3.3 3522
2.4 2410
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: Marquette Climate
[show]Metric conversion


Michigan USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map.
Michigan has a continental climate, although there are two distinct regions. The southern and central parts of the Lower Peninsula (south of Saginaw Bay and from the Grand Rapids area southward) have a warmer climate (Koppen climate classification Dfa) with hot summers and cold winters. The northern part of Lower Peninsula and the entire Upper Peninsula has a more severe climate (Koppen Dfb), with warm, but shorter summers and longer, cold to very cold winters. Some parts of the state average high temperatures below freezing from December through February, and into early March in the far northern parts. During the winter through the middle of February the state is frequently subjected to heavy lake-effect snow. The state averages from 30–40 inches (76–100 cm) of precipitation annually, however some areas in the northern lower peninsula and the upper peninsula average almost 160" of snowfall per year.[41] Michigan's highest recorded temperature is 112 °F (44 °C) at Mio on July 13, 1936 and the coldest recorded temperature is −51 °F (−46 °C) at Vanderbilt on February 9, 1934.[42]
The entire state averages 30 days of thunderstorm activity per year. These can be severe, especially in the southern part of the state. The state averages 17 tornadoes per year, which are more common in the extreme southern portion of the state. Portions of the southern border have been nearly as vulnerable historically as parts of Tornado Alley. For this reason, many communities in the very southern portions of the state are equipped with tornado sirens to warn residents of approaching tornadoes. Farther north, in the Upper Peninsula, tornadoes are rare.[43]
Monthly Normal High and Low Temperatures For Other Michigan Cities in °F(°C)
City Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Flint 29/13
(−2/−11)
32/15
(0/−9)
43/24
(6/−4)
56/35
(13/2)
69/45
(21/7)
78/55
(26/13)
82/59
(28/15)
80/57
(27/14)
72/49
(22/9)
60/39
(16/4)
46/30
(8/−1)
34/19
(1/−7)
Grand Rapids 29/16
(−2/−9)
33/17
(1/−8)
43/26
(6/−3)
57/36
(14/2)
70/47
(21/8)
78/56
(26/13)
82/60
(28/16)
80/59
(27/15)
72/51
(22/11)
60/40
(11/4)
46/31
(8/−1)
34/21
(1/−6)
Muskegon 30/17
(−1/−8)
32/18
(0/−8)
42/25
(6/−4)
55/35
(13/2)
67/45
(19/7)
76/54
(24/12)
80/60
(27/16)
78/59
(26/15)
70/51
(21/11)
59/41
(15/5)
46/32
(8/0)
35/23
(2/−5)
Sault Ste. Marie 22/5
(−6/−15)
24/7
(−4/−14)
34/16
(1/−9)
48/29
(9/−2)
63/39
(17/4)
71/46
(22/7)
76/52
(24/11)
74/52
(23/11)
65/45
(18/7)
53/36
(12/2)
39/26
(12/−3)
27/13
(−3/−11)
[4][dead link]
[edit]Geology
The geological formation of the state is greatly varied. Primary boulders are found over the entire surface of the Upper Peninsula (being principally of primitive origin), while Secondary deposits cover the entire Lower Peninsula. The Upper Peninsula exhibits Lower Silurian sandstones, limestones, copper and iron bearing rocks, corresponding to the Huronian system of Canada. The central portion of the Lower Peninsula contains coal measures and rocks of the Permo-Carboniferous period. Devonian and sub-Carboniferous deposits are scattered over the entire state.
[edit]Demographics

See also: Michigan census statistical areas


Michigan population distribution


Map showing the largest ancestry group in each county (2008)
Historical populations
Census Pop. %±
1800 3,757

1810 4,762 26.8%
1820 7,452 56.5%
1830 28,004 275.8%
1840 212,267 658.0%
1850 397,654 87.3%
1860 749,113 88.4%
1870 1,184,059 58.1%
1880 1,636,937 38.2%
1890 2,093,890 27.9%
1900 2,420,982 15.6%
1910 2,810,173 16.1%
1920 3,668,412 30.5%
1930 4,842,325 32.0%
1940 5,256,106 8.5%
1950 6,371,766 21.2%
1960 7,823,194 22.8%
1970 8,875,083 13.4%
1980 9,262,078 4.4%
1990 9,295,297 0.4%
2000 9,938,444 6.9%
2010 9,883,640 −0.6%
Source: 1910–2010[44]
[edit]Population
The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of Michigan was 9,876,187 on July 1, 2011, a -0.08% decrease since the 2010 United States Census.[2]
The center of population of Michigan is located in Shiawassee County, in the southeastern corner of the civil township of Bennington, which is located northwest of the village of Morrice.[45]
As of the 2010 American Community Survey for the U.S. Census, the state had a foreign-born population of 592,212, or 6.0% of the total. Michigan has the largest Dutch, Finnish, and Macedonian populations in the United States.
The 2010 Census reported:
White: 78.9% (Non-Hispanic Whites: 76.6%)
Black or African American: 14.2%
American Indian: 0.6%
Asian: 2.4%
Pacific Islander: <0.1%
Some other race: 1.5%
Multiracial: 2.3%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race): 4.4%
The ten largest reported ancestries in Michigan are:[46]
German (22.3%)
Irish (11.9%)
English (10.1%)
Polish (9.0%)
French or French Canadian (6.7%)
Dutch (5.1%)
Italian (4.7%)
American (4.6%)
Scottish (2.4%)
Swedish (1.7%)
The large majority of Michigan's population is Caucasian. Americans of European descent live throughout Michigan and most of Metro Detroit. Large European American groups include those of German, Irish, French, Belgian and British ancestry. People of Scandinavian descent, especially those of Finnish ancestry, have a notable presence in the Upper Peninsula. Western Michigan is known for the Dutch heritage of many residents (the highest concentration of any state), especially in metropolitan Grand Rapids.
About 300,000 people trace their descent from the Middle East.[47] Dearborn has a sizeable Arab community, with many Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac, and Lebanese who immigrated for jobs in the auto industry in the 1920s along with more recent Yemenis and Iraqis.[48] African Americans, who came to Detroit and other northern cities in the Great Migration of the early 20th century, form a majority of the population of the city of Detroit and of other cities, including Flint and Benton Harbor.
An individual from Michigan is called a "Michigander" or "Michiganian".[49] Also at times, but rarely, a "Michiganite".[50] Residents of the Upper Peninsula are sometimes referred to as "Yoopers" (a phonetic pronunciation of "U.P.ers"), and Upper Peninsula residents sometimes refer to those from the lower as "trolls" (they live below the bridge).[51]
[edit]Religion
The Catholic Church has six dioceses and one archdiocese in Michigan, the Diocese of Gaylord, Diocese of Grand Rapids, Diocese of Kalamazoo, Diocese of Lansing, Diocese of Marquette, Diocese of Saginaw and Archdiocese of Detroit.[52] The Catholic Church is the largest denomination by number of adherents, according to a survey in the year 2000, with 2,019,926 parishioners.[53] The Roman Catholic Church was the only organized religion in Michigan until the 19th century, reflecting the territory's French colonial roots. Detroit's St. Anne's parish, established in 1701, by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac is the second-oldest Catholic parish in the country.[54] On March 8, 1833, the Holy See formally established a diocese in the Michigan territory, which included all of Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and the Dakotas east of the Mississippi River. When Michigan became a state in 1837, the boundary of the Diocese of Detroit was redrawn to coincide with that of the State.[55]
The largest Protestant denominations were the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod with 244,231 adherents; followed by the United Methodist Church with 222,269; and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with 160,836 adherents. In the same survey, Jewish adherents in the state of Michigan were estimated at 110,000, and Muslims at 80,515.[56] The Lutheran Church was introduced by German and Scandinavian immigrants; Lutheranism is the second largest religious denomination in the state. The first Jewish synagogue in the state was Temple Beth El, founded by twelve German Jewish families in Detroit in 1850.[57] In West Michigan, Dutch immigrants fled from the specter of religious persecution and famine in the Netherlands around 1850 and settled in and around what is now Holland, Michigan, establishing a "colony" on American soil that fervently held onto Calvinist doctrine that established a significant presence of Reformed churches.[58] Islam was introduced by immigrants from the Near East during the 20th century.[59]
[edit]Economy

See also: List of companies based in Michigan and Economy of metropolitan Detroit


Michigan is the center of the American automotive industry. Pictured is the Ford Shelby GT500 at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit. The GT500 is manufactured in Ford's Flat Rock, Michigan assembly plant.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimated Michigan's 2010 gross state product at $384.1 B.[60] In November 2011, the state's unemployment rate was 9.8%.[61][62]
Top publicly traded companies
in Michigan for 2009
according to revenues
with State and U.S. rankings
State Corporation US
1 General Motors 6
2 Ford 7
3 Dow 38
4 Delphi 121
5 Whirlpool 133
6 Ally 147
7 TRW Automotive 169
8 Lear 195
9 Kellogg 210
10 Penske Automotive 225
11 Masco 277
12 Visteon 282
13 DTE Energy 285
14 Arvin Meritor 346
15 CMS Energy 369
16 Stryker 375
17 Autoliv 376
18 Pulte Homes 393
19 Kelly Services 437
20 BorgWarner 453
21 Auto-Owners 476
22 Steelcase 625
23 Spartan Stores 751
24 Cooper Standard 814
25 Valassis 809
26 Universal Forest 837
27 Affinia Group 853
28 Hayes-Lemmerz 856
29 American Axle 874
30 Herman Miller 897
31 Perrigo 897
Further information:
List of Michigan companies
Source: Fortune [63]
Some of the major industries/products/services include automobiles, cereal products, pizza, information technology, aerospace, military equipment, copper, iron, and furniture. Michigan is the third leading grower of Christmas trees with 60,520 acres (245 km2) of land dedicated to Christmas tree farming.[64][65] The beverage Vernors was invented in Michigan in 1866, sharing the title of oldest soft drink with Hires Root Beer. Faygo was founded in Detroit on November 4, 1907. Two of the top four pizza chains were founded in Michigan and are headquartered there: Domino's Pizza by Tom Monaghan and Little Caesars Pizza by Mike Ilitch.
Since 2009, GM, Ford, and Chrysler have managed a significant reorganization of their benefit funds structure after a volatile stock market which followed the September 11 attacks and early 2000s recession impacted their respective U.S. pension and benefit funds (OPEB).[66][67] General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler reached agreements with the United Auto Workers Union to transfer the liabilities for their respective health care and benefit funds to a 501(c)(9) Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association (VEBA). Manufacturing in the state grew 6.6% from 2001 to 2006,[68] but the high speculative price of oil became a factor for the U.S. auto industry during the economic crisis of 2008 impacting industry revenues. In 2009, GM and Chrysler emerged from Chapter 11 restructurings with financing provided in part by the U.S. and Canandian governments.[69][70] GM began its initial public offering (IPO) of stock in 2010.[71] For 2010, the Big Three domestic automakers have reported significant profits indicating the beginning of rebound.[72][73][74][75]
Michigan ranks fourth in the U.S. in high tech employment with 568,000 high tech workers, which includes 70,000 in the automotive industry.[76] Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall Research & development (R&D) expenditures in the United States.[21][22] Its research and development, which includes automotive, comprises a higher percentage of the state's overall gross domestic product than for any other U.S. state.[77] The state is an important source of engineering job opportunities. The domestic auto industry accounts directly and indirectly for one of every ten jobs in the U.S.[78]
Michigan was second in the U.S. in 2004 for new corporate facilities and expansions. From 1997 to 2004, Michigan was the only state to top the 10,000 mark for the number of major new developments;[19][79] however, the effects of the late 2000s recession have slowed the state's economy. In 2008, Michigan placed third in a site selection survey among the states for luring new business which measured capital investment and new job creation per one million population.[80] In August 2009, Michigan and Detroit's auto industry received $1.36 B in grants from the U.S. Department of Energy for the manufacture of electric vehicle technologies which is expected to generate 6,800 immediate jobs and employ 40,000 in the state by 2020.[81] From 2007 to 2009, Michigan ranked 3rd in the U.S. for new corporate facilities and expansions.[82][83]
As leading research institutions, the University of Michigan, Michigan State University,and Wayne State University are important partners in the state's economy and the state's University Research Corridor.[23] Michigan's public universities attract more than $1.5 B in research and development grants each year.[24] The National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory is located at Michigan State University. Michigan's workforce is well-educated and highly skilled, making it attractive to companies. It has the third highest number of engineering graduates nationally.[84]
Detroit Metropolitan Airport is one of the nation's most recently expanded and modernized airports with six major runways, and large aircraft maintenance facilities capable of servicing and repairing a Boeing 747 and is a major hub for Delta Air Lines. Michigan's schools and colleges rank among the nation's best. The state has maintained its early commitment to public education. The state's infrastructure gives it a competitive edge; Michigan has 38 deep water ports.[85] In 2007, Bank of America announced that it would commit $25 billion to community development in Michigan following its acquisition of LaSalle Bank in Troy.[86]
Michigan led the nation in job creation improvement in 2010.[87]
[edit]Taxation
Michigan's personal income tax is set to a flat rate of 4.35%. Some cities impose additional income taxes. Michigan's state sales tax is 6%. Property taxes are assessed on the local level, but every property owner's local assessment contributes six mills (six dollars per thousand dollars of property value) to the statutory State Education Tax. In 2011, the State repealed the Michigan Business Tax and replaced it with a 6% corporate income tax which substantially reduces taxes on business.[88][89]
[edit]Agriculture


Michigan is the leading U.S. producer of tart cherries, blueberries, pickling cucumbers, red beans and petunias.
A wide variety of commodity crops, fruits, and vegetables are grown in Michigan, making it second only to California among U.S. states in the diversity of its agriculture.[90] The state has 55,000 farms utilizing 10,000,000 acres (40,000 km2) of land which sold $6.6 billion worth of products in 2008.[91] The most valuable agricultural product is milk. Leading crops include corn, soybeans, flowers, wheat, sugar beets and potatoes. Livestock in the state included 1 million cattle, 1 million hogs, 78,000 sheep and over 3 million chickens. Livestock products accounted for 38% of the value of agricultural products while crops accounted for the majority.
Michigan is a leading grower of fruit in the U.S., including blueberries, cherries, apples, grapes, and peaches.[25][92] Plums, pears, and strawberries are also grown. These fruits are mainly grown in West Michigan due to the moderating effect of Lake Michigan on the climate. There is also significant fruit production, especially cherries, but also grapes, apples, and other fruits, in Northwest Michigan along Lake Michigan. Michigan produces wines, beers and a multitude of processed food products. Kellogg's cereal is based in Battle Creek, Michigan and processes many locally grown foods. Thornapple Valley, Ball Park Franks, Koegel's, and Hebrew National sausage companies are all based in Michigan.
Michigan is home to very fertile land in the Flint/Tri-Cities and "Thumb" areas. Products grown there include corn, sugar beets, navy beans, and soy beans. Sugar beet harvesting usually begins the first of October. It takes the sugar factories about five months to process the 3.7 million tons of sugarbeets into 970 million pounds of pure, white sugar.[93] Michigan's largest sugar refiner, Michigan Sugar Company[94] is the largest east of the Mississippi River and the fourth largest in the nation. Michigan Sugar brand names are Pioneer Sugar and the newly incorporated Big Chief Sugar. Potatoes are grown in Northern Michigan, and corn is dominant in Central Michigan. Alfalfa, cucumbers, and asparagus are also grown.
[edit]Tourism
See also: List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan, List of Registered Historic Places in Michigan, and List of museums in Michigan
Michigan's tourists spend $17.2 billion per year in the state, supporting 193,000 tourism jobs.[82] Michigan's tourism website ranks among the busiest in the nation.[95] Destinations draw vacationers, hunters, and nature enthusiasts from across the United States and Canada. Michigan is fifty percent forest land, much of it quite remote. The forests, lakes and thousands of miles of beaches are top attractions. Event tourism draws large numbers to occasions like the Tulip Time Festival and the National Cherry Festival.


The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island is a classic image of Michigan tourism.
In 2006, the Michigan State Board of Education mandated that all public schools in the state hold their first day of school after the Labor Day holiday, in accordance with the new Post Labor Day School law. A survey found that 70% of all tourism business comes directly from Michigan residents, and the Michigan Hotel, Motel, & Resort Association claimed that the shorter summer in between school years cut into the annual tourism season in the state.[96]
Tourism in metropolitan Detroit draws visitors to leading attractions, particularly The Henry Ford, the Detroit Institute of Arts, and the Detroit Zoo, and to sports in Detroit. Other museums include the Detroit Historical Museum, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, museums in the Cranbrook Educational Community, and the Arab American National Museum. The metro area offers four major casinos, MGM Grand Detroit, Greektown, Motor City, and Caesars Windsor in Windsor, Ontario, Canada; moreover, Detroit is the largest American city and metropolitan region to offer casino resorts.[97]
Hunting and fishing are significant industries in the state. Charter boats are based in many Great Lakes cities to fish for salmon, trout, walleye and perch. Michigan ranks first in the nation in licensed hunters (over one million) who contribute $2 billion annually to its economy. Over three-quarters of a million hunters participate in white-tailed deer season alone. Many school districts in rural areas of Michigan cancel school on the opening day of firearm deer season, because of attendance concerns.
Michigan's Department of Natural Resources manages the largest dedicated state forest system in the nation. The forest products industry and recreational users contribute $12 billion and 200,000 associated jobs annually to the state's economy. Public hiking and hunting access has also been secured in extensive commercial forests. The state has the highest number of golf courses and registered snowmobiles in the nation.[98]
The state has numerous historical markers, which can themselves become the center of a tour.[99] The Great Lakes Circle Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River.[100]
With its position in relation to the Great Lakes and the countless ships that have foundered over the many years in which they have been used as a transport route for people and bulk cargo, Michigan is a world-class scuba diving destination. The Michigan Underwater Preserves are 11 underwater areas where wrecks are protected for the benefit of sport divers.
[edit]Transportation



Mackinac Bridge
Michigan has nine international crossings with Ontario, Canada:
Ambassador Bridge, North America's busiest international border crossing the Detroit River
Blue Water Bridge, a twin-span bridge (Port Huron, Michigan and Point Edward, Ontario, but the larger city of Sarnia, Ontario is usually referred to on the Canadian side)
Blue Water Ferry (Marine City, Michigan and Sombra, Ontario)
Canadian Pacific Railway tunnel
Detroit–Windsor Truck Ferry (Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario)
Detroit–Windsor Tunnel
International Bridge (Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan and Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario)
St. Clair River Railway Tunnel (Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario)
Walpole Island Ferry (Algonac, Michigan and Walpole Island First Nation, Ontario)
A second international bridge is currently under consideration between Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario.[101]
[edit]Railroads
See also: List of Michigan railroads and History of railroads in Michigan
Michigan is served by four Class I railroads: the Canadian National Railway, the Canadian Pacific Railway, CSX Transportation, and the Norfolk Southern Railway. These are augmented by several dozen short line railroads. The vast majority of rail service in Michigan is devoted to freight, with Amtrak and various scenic railroads the exceptions.[102]
Main article: Michigan Services
Amtrak passenger rail services the state, connecting many southern and western Michigan cities to Chicago, Illinois. There are plans for commuter rail for Detroit and its suburbs (see SEMCOG Commuter Rail).[103][104][105]
[edit]Roadways


Welcome sign.
See also: Michigan Highway System
Interstate 75 is the main thoroughfare between Detroit, Flint, and Saginaw extending north to Sault Sainte Marie and providing access to Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. The expressway crosses the Mackinac Bridge between the Lower and Upper Peninsulas. Branching highways include I-275 and I-375 in Detroit; I-475 in Flint; and I-675 in Saginaw.
Interstate 69 enters the state near the Michigan-Ohio-Indiana border, and it extends to Port Huron and provides access to the Blue Water Bridge crossing into Sarnia, Ontario.
Interstate 94 enters the western end of the state at the Indiana border, and it travels east to Detroit and then northeast to Port Huron and ties in with I-69. I-194 branches off from this freeway in Battle Creek. I-94 is the main artery between Chicago, Illinois and Detroit.
Interstate 96 runs east–west between Detroit and Muskegon. I-496 loops through Lansing. I-196 branches off from this freeway at Grand Rapids and connects to I-94 near Benton Harbor. I-696 branches off from this freeway at Novi and connects to I-94 near St Clair Shores.
U.S. Highway 2 enters Michigan at the city of Ironwood and runs east to the town of Crystal Falls, where it turns south and briefly re-enters Wisconsin northwest of Florence. It re-enters Michigan north of Iron Mountain and continues through the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the cities of Escanaba, Manistique, and St. Ignace. Along the way, it cuts through the Ottawa and Hiawatha National Forests and follows the northern shore of Lake Michigan. Its eastern terminus lies at exit 344 of I-75, just north of the Mackinac Bridge. This is generally regarded as the main route through the Upper Peninsula, although some prefer to travel on M-28 as it tends to save time (U.S. 2 hugs the Lake Michigan shoreline for much of its length.)
[edit]Airports
See also: List of airports in Michigan
The Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, located in the western suburb of Romulus, was in 2010 the 16th busiest airfield in North America measured by passenger traffic.[106] The Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids is the next busiest airport in the state, served by eight airlines to 23 destinations. Flint Bishop International Airport is the third largest airport in the state, served by four airlines to several primary hubs. Smaller regional and local airports are located throughout the state including on several islands.
[edit]Important cities and townships



The Detroit skyline along the Detroit River.


The Grand Rapids skyline centered on the Grand River.


A Lansing sunset


Downtown Flint as seen from the Flint River.


The Ann Arbor skyline as seen from Michigan Stadium.
Further information: List of cities, villages, and townships in Michigan
The largest municipalities in Michigan are (according to 2010 Census):
Rank City Population Image
1 Detroit 713,777


Map showing largest Michigan municipalities.
2 Grand Rapids 188,040
3 Warren 134,056
4 Sterling Heights 129,699
5 Lansing 114,297
6 Ann Arbor 113,934
7 Flint 102,434
8 Dearborn 98,153
9 Livonia 96,942
10 Clinton Township 96,796
Other important cities include:
Battle Creek ("Cereal City U.S.A.", world headquarters of Kellogg Company)
Benton Harbor / St. Joseph (headquarters of Whirlpool Corporation)
East Lansing (home of Michigan State University)
Holland (home of Tulip Time, the largest tulip festival in the U.S.)
Jackson (headquarters of CMS Energy)
Kalamazoo (Largest city in southwest Michigan and home to Western Michigan University)
Manistee (home to the world's largest salt plant, owned by Morton Salt)
Marquette (largest city in the Upper Peninsula with 19,661 people and home of Northern Michigan University)
Midland (headquarters of the Dow Chemical Company and the Dow Corning Corporation)
Pontiac (major automobile manufacturing center, and home of the Pontiac Silverdome)
Saginaw (the largest of the Tri-Cities, which also consist of Bay City and Midland, and home to Saginaw Valley State University)
Sault Ste. Marie (home of the Soo Locks and Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge)
Traverse City ("Cherry Capital of the World", making Michigan the country's largest producer of cherries)
Half of the wealthiest communities in the state are located in Oakland County, just north of Detroit. Another wealthy community is located just east of the city, in Grosse Pointe. Only three of these cities are located outside of Metro Detroit. The city of Detroit itself, with a per capita income of $14,717, ranks 517th on the list of Michigan locations by per capita income. Benton Harbor is the poorest city in Michigan, with a per capita income of $8,965, while Barton Hills is the richest with a per capita income of $110,683.
[edit]Education

See also: List of colleges and universities in Michigan and List of high schools in Michigan
Michigan's education system provides services to 1.6 million K-12 students in public schools. More than 124,000 students attend private schools and an uncounted number are home-schooled under certain legal requirements.[107][108] The public school system has a $14.5 billion budget in 2008–2009.[109] Michigan has a number of public universities spread throughout the state and numerous private colleges as well. Michigan State University has one of the largest enrollments of any U.S. school. Michigan State University, the University of Michigan, and Wayne State University are the three major research institutions in the state.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Michigan fossil hunting - RELEVANT TO HILARY CLINTON ALSO BECAUSE THIS IS NOT A CONSPIRACY Y'ALL ARE JUST CRAZY DOOBS.

Michigan is a state within the USA that is not known for fossiliferous rocks, but there are some localities where fossils may be found. Most are from the Late Devonian period, others are from the Late Pleistocene period, the Silurian period, and Carboniferous periods.
Devonian fossils of Michigan are marine, consisting of brachiopods, crinoids, corals, bryzoans, trilobites, gastropods, fish, blastoids, and cephalopods.
Carboniferous fossils are usually found in central Michigan, and are not usually well preserved. Near St. Charles, Michigan there is a site that has plants in good preservation, but this site is nearly impossible for the amateur to access.
Silurian fossils are usually found on the shores of the Great Lakes. This is revealed by the presence of the index fossil Halysites.
Pleistocene fossils are few and far between, often found by construction workers or farmers. The chance of finding a mammoth or mastodon is very low. Higher quality fossils are found mostly in the northern region of the Lower Peninsula.
[edit]Localities

Many of Michigan’s fossil sites are located on lake shores. An example is Point Betsie, near the small town of Frankfort, Michigan. Erosion from wave action sometimes damages the fossils but fossils such as corals or bryzoans can be found here.
in northern Michigan there are limestone quarries and drop-off sites where limestone has been transferred from those quarries. Bothe the quarries and the stop-off sites can sometimes be rich in fossils including invertebrates and armored fish, or placoderms as well as gastropods, cephalopods, and trilobites. The abandoned Rockport Quarry Alpena, is considered to be a rich locality, but permission must be applied for a month in advance.
Active quarries cannot be accessed without the permission of the owners. Quarries in general area hazardous places with falling rocks, limestone dust and quarry trucks, so caution is necessary for fossil hunters.
The Besser Museum fossil park in Alpena has limestone brought in from this quarry, so the amateur may enjoy fossil hunting without the hassle. One part of the park is free for all; you must pay to get into the other part, but it has better fossils. Visitors may take as much as they want from the park, but are not allowed to take from the blocks that form the barrier walls, for safety reasons.
Another type of Michigan fossil site is the quarry drop off. This is when quarries put backfill in areas that have been dubbed unusable or abandoned for building. These sites are usually large piles of rock that appear to be out of place, and usually are in public places. The advantages to these sites is that they are easy to find, and are easy to access. They usually yield close to quarry-quality fossils, and require no digging to access, but the fossils have been exposed to the weather and have been picked up and transported by large vehicles, thus some fossils are scraped and gouged.
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
@LF - I actually agree with that. The media reports what it thinks will get the most attention and "terrorists" got more attention than "Saudi Arabia". The same could be said if they had been from the IRA. It wouldn't have said "Ireland attacks!" but would have stuck with the "Terrorists attack".
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Sarg you crazy.
MichiganMan (5121 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Come on Draugnar? Do you even believe what you write? The news me "loves to blow whistles..." Do you know who owns the new media? Do you have any idea of the corporate forces that are control basically every bit of information that is disseminated via the "mainstream media?" It is comments like these that evidence your nativity. What you call the "government" is not the government of the Constitution, it is a foreign corporate abomination that has taken on the trappings and guise of "government." They control the media and will use it to destroy those that don't toe their line, and it will remain silent as they run amok gutting our Republic from the inside. The media is there to give people a false reality to follow -- i.e., these so-called "elections". It's all a show, and lots of people eat it up like it was popcorn.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Bump
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
copy-pasting hundreds of pages of text just buries the points people are making and makes it harder to debate.
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
@mm< if this is how you feel, go find another fucking country to live in. Jesus Christ!
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Like you care.
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Which is why Sarg is doing it, BS.
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
just post a link to the article, plus, i don't know, a paragraph or two, at the most, of what you think people should get out of it. if people want to read the entire article, they can go to the link.
Invictus (240 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
"copy-pasting hundreds of pages of text just buries the points people are making and makes it harder to debate."

Yes it does. And he's brilliant for doing it.
Sargmacher (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
When you say "the points" people are making, are you purposefully stretching the definition of the word 'point'?
Draugnar (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
If the government owned the news media (or influenced it so much) as you describe, then how do things like the aforementioned watergate, whitewatergate, Iran-Contra, or blackwater ever get released? These came from mainstream media. And should I also believe that American corporations (supposedly owned by foreign corporations according to your post, although the largest ones in the nation like Microsoft are clearly *not* owned by them) also own the BBC and other european and gloabl mainstream news agencies? Who is beoing naive?
bolshoi (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
we were talking about the temperature of the fires in building 7. sure, the claim that it was 1500F was hilarious, but at least they're trying.

Page 4 of 6
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154 replies
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
08 Mar 12 UTC
Book of Mormon
Just got back from NYC where I watched Book of Mormon. If you're a fan of South Park, I cannot recommend you watch this highly enough.

There were a few people there who clearly had no idea what was happening and were horrified; it made it all the better.
4 replies
Open
redhouse1938 (429 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Women's day
Happy women's day all,
Let's thank them for admitting that the rest of the year it's in fact men's day.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Women's_Day
8 replies
Open
irvinklein (0 DX)
08 Mar 12 UTC
two player games
can I and my friend just play, like we each get 3/4 countries and play against each other?
2 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
EoG Lavango
gameID=82603
Game will be ending in a few minutes, so people can post once it's finished.
5 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
a 9/11 Thread
To Unhijack the President tapping Hillary thread. Please continue the dialogue from that one about conspiracy stuff here.
9 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
06 Mar 12 UTC
Stop the bullies......
....... I would be interested to know how many other people have been abused (or amused) by e-mails from the 'experts' on this site because they played in an anonymous game and the 'expert' didn't like something you had done, so waits until the end of the game to e-mail abuse.
180 replies
Open
MrWhiskers (112 D)
07 Mar 12 UTC
Game Glitch
link: http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=81163#gamePanel

I believe there was a glitch in this game. As you can see, in spring 1904, the fleet in rumania attacked the fleet in the black sea which was convoying an army into sev. this attack should have prevented the convoy even though it had support from Armenia.
15 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Gotta be BS
Why are some people such idiots?

If a game starts w/ two CD's, and 1 other player misses a move for some reason, who in their right mind wouldn't just cancel or draw that game for sake of balance?
12 replies
Open
Agent K (0 DX)
23 Feb 12 UTC
Ghost Ranking
So someone explain to me how a player like Dizzy (userID=34274) can jump to ghost ranking of 11 just from playing live games, when great players like Ivo, Crazyter, uclabb etc actually play real ones
148 replies
Open
The Czech (39951 D(S))
08 Mar 12 UTC
Game 5: Sacrifice gameID=78707 EOG Statements
Did I beat Barn in getting this up?
20 replies
Open
Court Jester (0 DX)
07 Mar 12 UTC
Austria bs Italy.
Ive been trying a strategy when I get Austria to surprise attack Italy off the bat. Ive mostly failed. Does anyone know of good results where Austria takes on Italy and succeeds in the first few years or is it always better to just go east and hope for a friendly Italy?
10 replies
Open
Conor07 (942 D)
06 Mar 12 UTC
Forums
Quick Question. Why do people use the forums? Wouldn't you be able to both join games and learn the rules faster by just joining new games?
56 replies
Open
DiploMerlin (245 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Why do some users have no statistics what-so-ever?
For example some profiles say they have no messages even though I know they've messaged.
3 replies
Open
bolshoi (0 DX)
07 Mar 12 UTC
bolshoi rankings jan+feb
so you've all been waiting for them. i downloaded the 22 pages of live gunboat wta games on the standard map from jan+feb. and i ran them. these are the top 31 users. would have done top-30 but i recognized the name santosh. not sure if there's a bug in the code cause i don't think 2ndwhiteline should be in the top-100.
48 replies
Open
santosh (335 D)
07 Mar 12 UTC
Panda Fever EOG
gameID=82589 Most arbitrary, but fun game I've ever played.
9 replies
Open
Dcvin (100 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Cheaters
Checkout ancientmed40 gameID=82622
For a anonymous, no ingame messaging game. Egypt and Persia are obviously the same person on two machines, or two people working together. This was my first game on web diplomacy. What a disgrace!
3 replies
Open
Gunfighter06 (224 D)
08 Mar 12 UTC
Quick Question
If I have a unit in an SC that I occupied last turn but has not yet been completely captured yet, can I move that unit elsewhere, move another unit into the SC that I just occupied, and still get that SC?
10 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2591 D(B))
07 Mar 12 UTC
Ten minute phases
Are the worst. I can't imagine playing 30 minute phases. Any idea why these game lengths exist? Four hours and its only 1911. Shoot me.
11 replies
Open
rokakoma (19138 D)
07 Mar 12 UTC
Boatgun-2 EOG
10 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
07 Mar 12 UTC
Boatgun 2 EoG
1 reply
Open
Check_mate (100 D)
07 Mar 12 UTC
New game 1 day phase starts in 24hrs
gameID=82598

In accordance with soem guidelines on etiquette I read a while back, I wanted to let everyone who joins this game know that two of my friends will be playing in it. We have pledged not to reveal to each other who is who.
6 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
06 Mar 12 UTC
In-Game Notes possibility?
Hey. Is there any chance that a notes function could be added to games? I think it would help some of us that don't generally write out elaborate EoG's to have the ability to include something, even if it is just terse notes like:

Russia didn't get bounced in Sweden in '01, what was Germany thinking?
18 replies
Open
Chanakya. (703 D)
06 Mar 12 UTC
New to diplomacy... Hello to world.....
Some suggestion on how to play efficiently?
28 replies
Open
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