Water levels in Lake Michigan are at their highest point in the past 16 years. The level currently sits a foot higher than its long-term average of 578.8 feet. Officials say the cause is higher than average rain and snow levels.
"The reason they're so high really started during 2013 and 2014 when the lakes had above average water supplies," says Lauren Fry, lead forecaster at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Detroit District.
With more water entering the lakes, and the same amount of water leaving the lakes, water levels have gone up.
An extra foot of lake is a big deal. As wind blows across Lake Michigan, it creates waves, which chew up the sand in shallow water and erode the lake bed.
"That wave energy now has much easier access to the bluffs and the beaches, areas that we care more about," says Jim Selegean, hydraulic engineer with the Army Corps.
No readily available data on erosion rates for Indiana's coast exists. But Selegean says Indiana's sandy shoreline is at greater risk of erosion during high water periods.
The Army Corps forecasts Lake Michigan's water levels will stay high over the next six months.