Mendenhall Lake | |
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![]() The lake, mostly frozen over, and the Mendenhall Glacier | |
![]() ![]() Mendenhall Lake ![]() ![]() Mendenhall Lake | |
Location | Juneau, Alaska |
Coordinates | 58°25′24″N 134°34′10″W / 58.42333°N 134.56944°W[1] |
Primary inflows | Mendenhall Glacier, Steep Creek, Nugget Creek |
Primary outflows | Mendenhall River |
Basin countries | United States |
Max. width | 1.8 miles (2.9 km)[1] |
Surface elevation | 52 ft (16 m)[1] |
Mendenhall Lake is a proglacial lake in the Mendenhall Valley at the 1962 terminus of Mendenhall Glacier, three miles (4.8 km) north of the Juneau Airport in the Coast Mountains. It is the source of the short Mendenhall River.[1] The lake is included in the Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area of the Tongass National Forest.[2]
Name
Like other geographic features with Mendenhall in their title, Mendenhall Lake is named for physicist and meteorologist Thomas Corwin Mendenhall.
Local name derived from the Mendenhall Glacier and published in 1962 by United States Geological Survey. In 1909, the lake was called McCush Lake by miners because Neil McCush had mining property near it (DeArmond, 1957, p. 31).[1]
References
![](../I/Mendenhall_Ice_Dragon_21Sep2007.JPG.webp)
Melting ice on Mendenhall Lake near the start of the Mendenhall River with Nugget Falls in the background. For reference, the glacier is to the left and visitor center to the right.
External links
Media related to Mendenhall Lake at Wikimedia Commons
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