Tunnel Explosion/Lake Huron Water Supply Project
On December 11, 1971, a shotgun-like blast claimed the lives of twenty-two men working on a water intake tunnel beneath the bed of Lake Huron. A pocket of methane trapped within a layer of ancient Antrim shale fueled the explosion. An exhaustive inquiry determined that drilling for a vertical ventilation shaft from the lake’s surface had released the trapped gas. A drill bit that fell ignited the gas. The blast created a shock wave with a speed of 4,000 miles an hour and a force of 15,000 pounds per square inch.
Witnesses reported seeing debris fly two hundred feet in the air from the tunnel’s entrance. This tragedy resulted in stronger mining safety regulations and enforcement. It was one of the deadliest industrial accidents in Michigan's history.
In 1968, to serve the water needs of a growing population, the Detroit Metro Water Department began work on the Lake Huron Water Supply Project. This massive feat involved erecting a submerged intake crib connected to a six-mile intake tunnel beneath Lake Huron. The mechanical mole that dug the sixteen-foot-wide tunnel bored through the bedrock beneath the lake at a rate of 150 feet a day. The project excavated more than one billion pounds of rock. The water treatment plant pumped clean water into an eighty-two-mile system of water mains supplying Detroit and Flint. When finished in 1973, the $123 million systems boasted a capacity of 400 million gallons a day.
site number: L2219C
era: Modern Era (>1970)
year listed: 2010
year erected: 2011