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Seneca Lake (New York)

Coordinates: 42°39′20″N 76°53′51″W / 42.65556°N 76.89750°W / 42.65556; -76.89750
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Seneca Lake
Aerial view from the southern part of Seneca Lake.
Seneca Lake is located in New York Adirondack Park
Seneca Lake
Seneca Lake
Location within New York
Seneca Lake is located in the United States
Seneca Lake
Seneca Lake
Seneca Lake (the United States)
LocationSchuyler, Seneca, Yates, and Ontario counties, New York, United States
GroupFinger Lakes
Coordinates42°39′20″N 76°53′51″W / 42.65556°N 76.89750°W / 42.65556; -76.89750
TypeGround moraine
Primary inflowsCatharine Creek, Keuka Lake Outlet, underwater sources
Primary outflowsSeneca River/ Cayuga-Seneca Canal
Basin countriesUnited States
Max. length38 mi (61 km)
Surface area66.9 sq mi (173 km2)
Average depth292 ft (89 m)
Max. depth618 ft (188 m)
Water volume3.81 cu mi (15.9 km3)
Shore length175.4 miles (121.3 km)
Surface elevation446 ft (136 m)
SettlementsWatkins Glen, Geneva
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Seneca Lake is the largest of the glacial Finger Lakes of the U.S. state of New York, and the deepest glacial lake entirely within the state. It is promoted as the lake trout capital of the world, and is host of the National Lake Trout Derby. Because of its depth and relative ease of access, the US Navy uses Seneca Lake to perform test and evaluation of equipment ranging from single element transducers to complex sonar arrays and systems.[1] The lake takes its name from the Seneca nation of Native Americans. At the north end of Seneca Lake is the city of Geneva, New York, home of Hobart and William Smith Colleges and the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, a division of Cornell University. At the south end of the lake is the village of Watkins Glen, New York, famed for auto racing (hosting Watkins Glen International racetrack) and waterfalls.

Due to Seneca Lake's unique macroclimate it is home to over 50 wineries, many of them farm wineries and is the location of the Seneca Lake AVA. (See Seneca Lake wine trail).

Description

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Seneca Lake from Watkins Glen

At 38 miles (61 km) long, it is the second longest of the Finger Lakes and has the largest volume, estimated at 3.81 cubic miles (15.9 km3), roughly half of the water in all the Finger Lakes. It has an average depth of 291 feet (89 m),[2] a maximum depth of 618 feet (188 m), and a surface area of 66.9 square miles (173 km2).

Map showing Seneca Lake and the other Finger Lakes in relation to Lake Ontario and upstate New York

For comparison, Scotland's famous Loch Ness is 22.5 miles (36.2 km) long, 1.7 miles (2.7 km) wide, has a surface area of 21.8 square miles (56 km2), an average depth of 433 feet (132 m), a maximum depth of 744.6 feet (227.0 m), and total volume of 1.8 cubic miles (7.5 km3) of water.

Seneca's two main inlets are Catharine Creek at the southern end and the Keuka Lake Outlet. Seneca Lake lets out into the Seneca River/ Cayuga-Seneca Canal, which joins Seneca and Cayuga Lakes at their northern ends.

It is fed by underground springs and replenished at a rate of 328,000 gallons (1240 m³) per minute. These springs keep the water moving in a circular motion, giving it little chance to freeze over. Because of Seneca Lake's great depth its temperature remains a near-constant 39 °F (4 °C).[3] In summer the top 10 to 15 feet (3.0 to 4.6 m) warms to 70–80 °F (21–27 °C).

Ecology

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Seneca lake has a typical aquatic population for large deep lakes in the northeast, with coldwater fish such as lake trout and Landlocked Atlantic salmon inhabiting the deeper waters, and warmwater fish such as smallmouth bass and yellow perch inhabiting the shallower areas. The lake is also home to a robust population of "sawbellies," the local term for alewife shad.

History

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Looking south on Seneca Lake in the city of Geneva, New York

Seneca Lake was formed at least two million years ago by glacial carving of streams and valleys. Originally it was a part of a series of rivers that flowed northward. Around this time many continental glaciers moved into the area and started the Pleistocene glaciation also known as the Ice Age. It is presumed that the Finger Lakes were created by many advances and retreats of massive glaciers that were up to 2 miles thick.[4]

Over 200 years ago, there were Iroquois villages on Seneca Lake's surrounding hillsides. During the American Revolutionary War, their villages, including Kanadaseaga ("Seneca Castle"), were wiped out during the 1779 Sullivan Expedition.

After the war, the Iroquois were forced to cede their land when Britain was defeated. Their millions of acres were sold and some lands in this area were granted to veterans of the army in payment for their military service. A slow stream of European-American settlers began to arrive circa 1790. Initially the settlers were without a market nearby or a way to get their crops to market. The settlers' isolation ended in 1825 with the opening of the Erie Canal.

The canal linked the Finger Lakes Region to the outside world. Steamships, barges and ferries quickly became Seneca Lake's ambassadors of commerce and trade. The former, short Crooked Lake Canal linked Seneca Lake to Keuka Lake.

Numerous canal barges sank during operations and rest on the bottom of the lake. A collection of barges at the southwest end of the lake, near the village of Watkins Glen, is being preserved and made accessible for scuba diving by the Finger Lakes Underwater Preserve Association.

Recreation

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Fishing

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The lake is a popular fishing destination. Fish species in the lake include lake trout, rainbow trout, brown trout, landlocked salmon, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, northern pike, pickerel, and yellow perch.[5]

Folklore

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Sea serpent

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In July 1900, newspaper reports[6] carried reports that on the evening of 14 July 1899, the steamboat Otetiani, carrying several dozen passengers, encountered a 25-foot-long[6] sea monster with "two rows of sharp, white teeth." The steamer is said to have given chase to the creature and deliberately rammed it at full speed. The creature was struck by the ship's paddle wheel midway between head and tail, it spine broken. It raised its four-foot-long head, then gave a gasp as it died. The ship attempted to rope the monster and tow it back to shore, but it sank to the bottom of Seneca Lake.[7][8] A report sometime later in the Geneva Gazette suggested that the incident was a hoax.[8]

Painted rocks

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The painted rocks located at the southern end of the lake on the eastern cliff face depict an American flag, tee-pee, and several Native Americans. The older paintings, located on the bottom of the cliff, were said to have been drawn in 1779 after the Senecas escaped men from John Sullivan's campaign. However, this account is questioned by historian Barbara Bell, arguing that it is unlikely that the Senecas would have returned to paint the paintings having just escaped from Sullivan's men. She suggests instead that these paintings may have been made much later, for tourists on Seneca Lake boat tours.[9]

It is known that the more visible and prominent paintings of the Native Americans, American flag, and tee-pee were added in 1929 during the Sullivan Sesquicentennial. There are two mistakes in these 1929 additions: firstly the Native Americans in the Seneca Region used longhouses and not tee-pees,[10] and secondly the flag is displayed pointing to the left which is never to be done on a horizontal surface.[11]

Seneca Guns

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Seneca Lake is also the site of strange and currently unexplained cannon-like booms and shakes that are heard and felt in the surrounding area. They are known locally as the Seneca Guns, Lake Drums, or Lake Guns, and these types of phenomena are known elsewhere as skyquakes. The term Lake Guns originated in the short story "The Lake Gun" by James Fenimore Cooper in 1851.[12] There is no explanation that takes into account sounds the Iroquois heard before Cooper's time; it is possible sonic booms have been mistaken for natural sounds in modern days.[13]

Sampson Navy and Air Force bases

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The east side of Seneca Lake was once home to a military training ground called Sampson Naval Base, primarily used during World War II. It became Sampson Air Force Base during the Korean War and was used for basic training. After Sampson AFB closed, the airfield remained as Seneca Army Airfield but was closed in 2000.[14] The training grounds of Sampson have since been converted to a civilian picnic area called Sampson State Park.[15]

There is still a Naval facility at Seneca Lake, the Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC) Sonar test facility. A scale model of the sonar section of the nuclear submarine USS Seawolf (SSN 21) was tested during the development of this ship, [16] which was launched in June, 1995.

Water quality

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There is a YSI EMM-2500 Buoy Platform located in the north end of Seneca Lake roughly in the center. Its coordinates are: latitude: 42°41'49.99"N, longitude: 76°55'29.93"W. The buoy has cellular modem communications and measures wind speed and direction, relative humidity, air temperature, barometric pressure, light intensity, and the water's depth and temperature, conductivity, turbidity, and chlorophyll-a levels.[17]

The buoy was initially deployed in June 2006. The water depth where it is located is about 200 feet (61 m).[18]

On June 30, 2022, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation denied a request for an air permit for a natural gas power plant owned by Greenidge Generation, a bitcoin mining company, on the lake used for powering an 8,000-machine operation which the company argued had no legal basis and would challenge in court in a press statement.[19][20]

Seneca Harbor wine center

Wine

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Vineyards in the Seneca Lake AVA

Viticulture and winemaking in the area date back to the 19th century, with the foundation of the Seneca Lake Wine Company in 1866 marking the first major winery in the area. The modern era of wine production began in the 1970s with the establishment of several wineries and the passage of the New York Farm Winery Act of 1976.[21] The region was established as an American Viticultural Area in 1988.[22]

Seneca Lake Wine Trail hosts many events on and around the lake including the annual winter 'Deck the Halls' event, at which local wineries showcase their vintages.

Transport

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The Elmira & Seneca Lake Railway opened for operation on 19 June 1900 from Horseheads, New York to Seneca Lake. An active railroad track still runs along the west side of the lake from Watkins Glen to Geneva and beyond, operated by Finger Lakes Railway.

References

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  1. ^ "Home - Seneca Lake". Archived from the original on 27 March 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  2. ^ "Seneca Lake - NYS Dept. Of Environmental Conservation".
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Paleontological Research Institution". www.priweb.org. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  5. ^ Sportsman's Connection (Firm) (1 January 2011), Western Adirondacks New York fishing map guide: includes lakes & streams for the following counties: Allegany, Broome, Cattaraugus, Cayuga, Chautauqua, Chemung, Cortland, Erie, Livingston, Madison, Monroe, Niagara, Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, Oswego, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, Wayne, Wyoming, and Yates., Sportsman's Connection, ISBN 978-1-885010-63-6, OCLC 986498446
  6. ^ a b "That Sea Serpent: The Story Again Sprung by a Vivid Correspondent". Elmira, New York: Star-Gazette. 17 July 1900. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  7. ^ Githler, Charley (26 July 2018). "Here there be monsters: Diving into the legacy of the beasts of the Finger Lakes". Ithaca.com. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  8. ^ a b Westerdahl, B. (9 December 1984). "The Seneca Lake Monster". Upstate magazine. Democrat & Chronicle. pp. 12–13. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  9. ^ Bell, Barbara. "Painted Rocks." Schuyler County New York: History and Families. Turner Publishing Co., 2005: 30–31.
  10. ^ "Mohawk Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Longhouse". New York State Museum. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  11. ^ Lawson, Susan H. "Do's and Don'ts for Displaying Old Glory". U.S. Department of Defense. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  12. ^ "Lake Guns".
  13. ^ "Earthquake Booms, Seneca Guns, and Other Sounds". U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  14. ^ http://www.airfields-freeman.com/NY/Airfields_NY_Rochester.html#seneca Archived 17 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: New York State: Rochester area
  15. ^ Shaw, David L. (10 November 2017). "REMEMBERING SAMPSON: It's been 75 years since the Navy built its training station on the shores of Seneca Lake". Finger Lakes Times. Archived from the original on 27 March 2020.
  16. ^ "Submarine Testing Seneca Lake". nyheritage.contentdm.oclc.org. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  17. ^ "Seneca Lake water quality buoy". people.hws.edu. (old site).
  18. ^ "Seneca Lake water quality buoy".
  19. ^ Morgenson, Gretchen (30 June 2022). "New York state denies air permit to bitcoin mining plant on Seneca Lake". NBC News. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  20. ^ Morgenson, Gretchen (5 July 2021). "Some locals say a bitcoin mining operation is ruining one of the Finger Lakes. Here's how". NBC News. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  21. ^ "Seneca Lake Wine Trail". Finger Lakes Wine Country. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  22. ^ "Cayuga Lake wins own wine region". The Ithaca Journal. Ancestry.com#Newspapers.com. 6 May 1988. The new Cayuga Lake wine region was established inside the existing Fingers Lake wine region and includes parts of Seneca, Tompkins, and Cayuga counties located adjacent to Cayuga Lake between Seneca and Owasco Lakes.
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