
Editor's Note: Today's story is the answer to the May Puzzler.About 15,000 years ago, southeastern Manitoba sat beneath tens of meters of frigid water. Lake Agassiz--which once encompassed present-day Lake Manitoba, Lake Winnipeg, and Lake of the Woods--covered an area larger than all of the Great Lakes combined. It formed in front of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet, which dammed rivers that otherwise might have drained into Hudson Bay, producing an expansive body of water 1,100 kilometers (700 miles) long by 300 kilometers wide that spanned parts of today's Manitoba, Ontario, Saskatchewan, North Dakota, and Minnesota.
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