'Kamloops Lake' in
British Columbia,
Canada is situated on the
Thompson River just west of
Kamloops. The lake is 1.6 km wide, 29 km long, and up to 152 m deep. The community of
Savona is located at the west end of the lake.
The lake is bounded on all sides by steep embankments with level areas only near creek deltas and at the inlet and outlet. The surrounding land is mostly uninhabited and within the dry belt interior grasslands composed of
bunchgrass and
sagebrush with pockets of
Douglas fir,
Ponderosa pine and
spruce.
The lake appears to be a widening and deepening of the Thompson River which enters at the east end and exits at the west end. The limnology of the lake is controlled by the Thompson River which has large fluctuations in annual flow with over 60% occurring in the early summer during
freshet (May to July).
Bulk residence times are very short, ranging from 20 days to 340 days with a mean of 60 days. The Weyerhaeuser Pulp Mill discharges daily an average of 182,000 m³ of biologically treated effluent to the Thompson River just upstream of the lake. The City of Kamloops periodically (October and November) discharges up to 35,000 m³ day per day of tertiary treated domestic effluent. Major water quality problems which became evident in the Thompson River downstream of the lake in the early 1970s were attributed to the discharges. Improvements in water quality have occurred through improved treatment of the effluents.
Physical dimensions
★ Water level: Unregulated
★ Normal range of annual water level fluctuation: 5 m
----