Finger Lake (Alaska)

Finger Lake is a lake in Wasilla, Alaska. It is not technically a finger lake, but was named so by Captain Edward Glenn, who led an army expedition to Alaska in 1898 and felt that "when viewing the lake on a map, a point of land in the lake gives the impression of a finger."[1] The lake has populations of Rainbow Trout, Arctic Char and Arctic Grayling and is a popular fishing spot, including ice fishing in winter.[3] The lake is at the south end of the Seven-mile canoe trail that ends at Wasilla Lake, the only portage is at the north end of Finger Lake.[4]

Finger Lake
Baqay Tuch'elisht Bena[1]
Finger Lake
Finger Lake
LocationWasilla, Alaska
Coordinates61.605°N 149.281°W / 61.605; -149.281
Native nameBakiatutsilictmuna[1]
Primary outflowsone small, unnamed creek[2]
Surface area146 acres (59 ha)[2]
Max. depth13.4 meters (44 ft)[2]
Surface elevation103 meters (338 ft)[2]
Frozenwinter months [3]

Park

Regional headquarters

Alaska State Parks operates the Finger Lake State Recreation Area, a 69 acres (28 ha) park with a campground, boat launch, and picnic areas.[3][5] The park also contains the regional headquarters for Matanuska-Susitna Valley area parks.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.