Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Avalanche Lake (New York)

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Primary outflows
  
Lake Colden

Max. length
  
0.4 miles (0.64 km)

Surface area
  
9 acres (3.6 ha)

Area
  
4 ha

Width
  
76 m

Basin countries
  
United States

Max. width
  
250 feet (76 m)

Surface elevation
  
879 m

Length
  
600 m

Outflow location
  
Lake Colden

Avalanche Lake (New York) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Avalanche Lake is a 9-acre (3.6 ha) mountain lake located in the Adirondack High Peaks in New York. Avalanche Lake sits at 2885 feet (879 m) between 4,714-foot (1,437 m) Mount Colden and-3816 foot (1163 m) Avalanche Mountain. The two mountains rise in vertical cliffs from the surface of the lake. Immediately west of Avalanche Mountain (formerly known as Caribou Mountain) lies the MacIntyre Range— 5,115-foot (1,559 m) Algonquin Peak (the second highest mountain in the state), 4829-foot (1472 m) Boundary Peak, 4,843-foot (1,476 m) Iroquois Peak and 4,380-foot (1,335 m) Mount Marshall. Mount Marcy is 2.5 (4 km) miles to the east. Avalanche Lake feeds Lake Colden to the south, in the Hudson River watershed. To the north, the trail to the lake from the Adirondak Loj surmounts Avalanche Pass, which is only slightly above lake level but separates it from the Lake Champlain (St. Lawrence River) watershed. Following the lake toward Lake Colden, the trail is choked with large boulders, and a number of wooden ladders have been built to make passage possible. There are also three places where the trail takes to wooden catwalks, first built in the 1920s, that are bolted directly into the cliff face. This section is known as the "Hitch-Up Matilda;" in the nineteenth century it is said a mountain guide waded to carry one of his expeditioners on his back past a point with no footing on shore, urging her to hitch up her skirts above the water.

Contents

Map of Avalanche Lake, Keene, NY 12943, USA

HistoryEdit

The European discovery of the lake dates to an 1833 surveying party led by Judge John Richards and Major Reuben Sanford; it was named by William C. Redfield. A large avalanche occurred on August 20, 1869, that created a number of the landslides on Mount Colden, the rubble from which substantially raised the level of the lake. Another avalanche in 1942 caused further slides that raised the lake level by 10 feet (3 m).

References

Avalanche Lake (New York) Wikipedia