Illinois Waterway (Illinois River)

The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.
Illinois - Kankakee - Des Plaines Junction Junction of the Illinois River with the Kankakee and the Des Plaines Rivers |
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Dresden Island Lock | 1.41 miles | 0 locks | |
Aux Sable Rail Lift bridge Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway |
2.32 miles | 1 lock | |
Morris Bridge | 10.32 miles | 1 lock | |
Seneca Rail Bridge | 20.69 miles | 1 lock | |
Seneca Bridge | 22.14 miles | 1 lock | |
Marseilles Bridge | 28.41 miles | 1 lock | |
Marseilles Lock | 30.95 miles | 1 lock | |
Veterans Memorial Bridge (Ottawa, Illinois) | 36.24 miles | 2 locks | |
Ottawa Rail Bridge | 36.60 miles | 2 locks | |
Starved Rock Lock | 44.90 miles | 2 locks | |
Utica Bridge | 46.40 miles | 3 locks | |
Abraham Lincoln Memorial Bridge | 50.30 miles | 3 locks | |
Buzzi Unicem Railspur | 50.70 miles | 3 locks | |
Shippingsport Bridge | 51.53 miles | 3 locks | |
Peru Bridge | 53.35 miles | 3 locks | |
Spring Valley Bridge | 58.17 miles | 3 locks | |
Gudmund "Sonny" Jessen Bridge | 67.81 miles | 3 locks | |
Henry Bridge (IL 18) | 79.82 miles | 3 locks | |
Lacon Bridge | 87.41 miles | 3 locks | |
BNSF RailRoad Bridge | 95.48 miles | 3 locks | |
McClugage Bridge | 112.70 miles | 3 locks | |
Murray Baker Bridge | 116.03 miles | 3 locks | |
Bob Michel Bridge | 116.60 miles | 3 locks | |
Cedar Street Bridge | 117.35 miles | 3 locks | |
Peoria and Pekin Union Railway Bridge | 118.36 miles | 3 locks | |
Shade-Lohmann Bridges | 121.05 miles | 3 locks | |
Peoria Lock | 121.33 miles | 3 locks | |
John T. McNaughton Bridge | 126.42 miles | 4 locks | |
Union Pacific Railroad Bridge | 128.46 miles | 4 locks | |
Scott W. Lucas Bridge | 160.93 miles | 4 locks | |
BNSF Railway Bridge | 192.69 miles | 4 locks | |
Beardstown Bridge | 193.73 miles | 4 locks | |
La Grange Lock | 203.22 miles | 4 locks | |
Meredosia Bridge | 210.44 miles | 5 locks | |
Norfolk Southern Railroad Bridge (Valley City) | 219.95 miles | 5 locks | |
Valley City Eagle Bridges | 221.04 miles | 5 locks | |
Florence Bridge | 225.30 miles | 5 locks | |
Kansas City Southern Railroad Lift Bridge | 238.66 miles | 5 locks | |
Hardin Bridge | 261.48 miles | 5 locks | |
Grafton Harbor Marina | 284.69 miles | 5 locks | |
Mississippi - Illinois Junction Junction of the Mississippi River with the Illinois River |
286.19 miles | 5 locks |
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Wikipedia has a page about Illinois Waterway
The Illinois Waterway system consists of 336 miles (541 km) of navigable water from the mouth of the Calumet River at Chicago to the mouth of the Illinois River at Grafton, Illinois. It is a system of rivers, lakes, and canals which provide a shipping connection from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico via the Illinois and Mississippi rivers. The Illinois and Michigan Canal (I&M) opened in 1848. In 1900, the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal replaced the I&M and reversed the flow of the Chicago River so it no longer flowed into Lake Michigan. The United States Army Corps of Engineers maintains a 9-foot-deep (2.7 m) navigation channel in the waterway. The waterway's complex northern section is referred to in various contexts for study and management as the Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS).
A series of eight locks, managed by the Army Corps of Engineers, controls water flow from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River system. The upper lock, T.J. O'Brien, is 7 miles from Lake Michigan on the Calumet River and the last lock is 90 miles (140 km) upstream from the Mississippi River at the LaGrange lock and dam. The amount of water released into the Illinois often is a sore point among lake and river interests. When Lake Michigan water levels are high, lake interests want to increase the flow, and when lake levels are low, they want to restrict the flow. That is why an international treaty regulates the flow, as Canada also has an interest in Lake Michigan levels, which eventually flow into Lakes Huron, Erie and Ontario.
Cargoes include bulk commodities, such as coal, chemicals, and petroleum, as well as corn, soybeans and other agricultural products.
During some winters, ice floes, especially around the locks and dams, occasionally prevent navigation on the Waterway.