'Owens Lake' is a large
dry lake in eastern
California's
Owens Valley, located about 5 miles (8 km) south of
Lone Pine, California. Unlike most dry lakes in the
Basin and Range Province that have been dry for thousands of years, Owens held significant water until
1924, fed by the
Owens River.
History
Changes in
climate since the end of the last
ice age have slowly shrunk the size of the lake from at least twice its current area and more than 250 feet (76 m) deep to its recorded history depth of 30 feet (9 m) and 10 by 15 mile (16 by 24 km) size.
However, starting in
1913, the streams that fed Owens were diverted by
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) to feed the
Los Angeles Aqueduct and the lake level started to drop quickly (see
California Water Wars). As the lake dried-up, soda processing at Keeler switched from relatively cheap chemical methods to more expensive physical ones. The
Natural Soda Products Company sued the city of Los Angeles and built a new plant with a $15,000 settlement. A fire destroyed this plant shortly after it was built but the company rebuilt it on the dry lakebed in the
1920s.
During the unusually wet winter of
1937, LADWP diverted water from the
aqueduct into the lakebed, flooding the soda plant. Because of this the courts ordered the city to pay $154,000. After an unsuccessful appeal attempt to the state supreme court in
1941, LADWP built the
Long Valley Dam which impounded
Lake Crowley for
flood control.
Current Conditions
The lake is currently a large
salt flat or playa whose surface is made of a mixture of
clay,
sand, and a variety of
minerals including
halite,
mirabilite,
thenardite and
trona. In wet years these minerals form a chemical soup in the form of a small
brine pond within the
playa. When conditions are right, bright pink
halophilic (salt-loving)
bacteria spread across the salty lakebed. Also, on especially hot summer days when ground temperatures exceed 150°
F (66° C), water is driven out of the
hydrates on the lakebed creating a muddy brine. More commonly, periodic
winds stir up noxious
alkali dust storms which carry away as much as four million tons (3.6 million metric tons) of dust from the lakebed each year, causing respiratory problems in nearby residents.
Influence on Ecology
This once blue,
saline lake was a very important feeding and resting stop for millions of
waterfowl each year and is still considered to be a
Nationally Significant Bird Area by the
Audubon Society even though Owens is now a mostly dry lake. At the playa's shore, a chain of
wetlands, fed by springs and
artesian wells, keep part of the former Owens Lake
ecosystem alive.
Snowy Plovers nest at Owens along with several thousand
Snow Geese and
ducks. As part of an
air quality mitigation settlement, LADWP is shallow flooding 15 square miles (39 square km) of the salt pan to help minimize alkali dust storms. There is also about 3.5 square miles (9 square km) of managed vegetation being used as a dust control measure. The vegetation consists of saltgrass, which is a native perennial grass highly tolerant of the salt and boron levels in the lake sediments. A total of 30 square miles (78 square km) must be controlled by the end of 2006. Shallow flooding has created both shallow and deeper (about 3 feet or 1 m deep) habitats on the lakebed. This water, although seasonally applied, is helping to buoy the lake's ecosystem causing hope in conservationists that an expanded shallow flooding program could do even more. There are no serious plans, however, to restore Owens to anything resembling a conventional lake.
Influence on Industry
Before the lake dried up, a chemical plant at
Bartlet evaporated brine to extract chemicals. A
charcoal kiln burned wood from
Cottonwood Canyon near the lake to feed
silver and
lead smelters across the lake at
Swansea.
Cartago was a
port out of which a barge-like vessel, the ''Bessie Brady'' (launched in
1872), cut the three-day freight journey around the lake to three hours. Much of the freight it carried was silver-lead bullion mined from the
Cerro Gordo Mines which at its height was so productive that bars of the refined
metals had to wait in large stacks before teamsters could haul it to Los Angeles in a trying three-week journey (one way). This situation improved after the formation of the Cerro Gordo Freighting Company.
Keeler, now nearly deserted, is a town near the lake that once had a population of 5,000 people and was the center of
trade for the Cerro Gordo mine in the
1870s. Its current population is only about 50 people and continues to fall as residents die from
lung cancer or relocate. In
1879 silver mining ended but the town was saved when the
Carson & Colorado Railroad built narrow-gauge rail tracks to the town. The town then became a soda,
salt and
marble shipping center until
1960 (the rail line was sold to
Southern Pacific Railroad in
1900).
References and external links
"Dammed by Past, Owens River Flows Again",
[1]
★ ''Geology Underfoot in Death Valley and Owens Valley'', Sharp, Glazner (Mountain Press Publishing Company, Missoula; 1997) ISBN 0-87842-362-1
★
The Owens Valley Committee: Owens Lake
★
Owens (Dry) Lake, California: A Human-Induced Dust Problem
★
Owens Lake Dust Bedevils Keeler
★
David Maisel's "The Lake Project"
★
"The Eternal Dustbowl" 03/22/2006 feature article in the LA Weekly on the controversy surrounding the Los Angeles Dept. of Water and Power's environmental mitigation efforts at Owens Lake, written by Jeffrey Anderson, with photographs by Claudio Cambon.