What will happen when Niagara Falls erodes all the way to Lake Erie?

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I’ve read that Niagara Falls erodes backwards towards Lake Erie at a rate of 3 feet per year. This means that in a few hundred, maybe thousand (maybe even longer), the falls would have eroded all the way to Lake Erie. What will happen when it does? Will the lake’s floor begin to erode as well or will the water even out? I can’t wrap my head around it.

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Anonymous 0 Comments

First, what’s important is the overall volume of the mass that creates the falls. It’s not eroding at a uniform three feet of height across its entire width and depth annually. Second, all the stuff that erodes goes somewhere, so it’s a matter of where it’s redistributed to. It won’t be static and it probably won’t be sudden. The boundaries and sources of water bodies inevitably and fairly constantly (though at different rates and for different reasons) change all the time. The erosion of one waterfall does not mean much in isolation.

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