you would have to drive a long time!
You would have to drive through: Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan. Or drive across the bridge in Sault Saint Marie into Ontario and follow the water to Windsor, then cross the bridge/tunnel into Detroit.
If there were no bridge connecting upper and lower Michigan, it would be almost 1,000 miles to get from Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan to Detroit, Michigan by traveling to the east around Lake Huron. It a person traveled around Lake Michigan to the west, it would be over 1,000 miles.
Wisconsin, Illinois, and Indiana. you would pass through all three of those if you went the southern route.
Michigan, the two parts are not joined naturally but they are connected by the man-made Mackinac Bridge.
Lake Michigan divides Michigan into two parts
yes,michigan is divided by two parts, there is a great lake dividing it
Australia does not have a connecting bridge to any surrounding country's
for a joke - Maxwell Bridge is connecting two sides of the Wabash River.
The two parts of Michigan, known as the Upper Peninsula (U.P.) and the Lower Peninsula, are separated by the Straits of Mackinac. This narrow waterway connects Lake Huron and Lake Michigan and is spanned by the Mackinac Bridge. The bridge is a vital transportation link, allowing vehicles to travel between the two peninsulas. The geographical division creates distinct cultural and environmental differences between the two regions.
MICHIGAN
The two parts of Michigan are called the peninsulas. There is a lower peninsula as well as an upper peninsula.
there is a lake in the middle lake Michigan