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The first people who inhabited the Lake Minnetonka area were Indigenous peoples who migrated to the region at the end of the last ice age circa 8000 BCE.Later peoples who inhabited the area between 3500 BCE and 1500 CE are commonly referred to collectively as the "Mound Builders" because they constructed large land features serving spiritual, ceremonial, burial, and elite residential functions.
The Crane Island Historic District is a historic district of vacation properties on Crane Island in Lake Minnetonka, part of the city of Minnetrista, Minnesota, United States. It consists of a number of private residential summer cottages and some communal amenities.
It passes under 70th Street and weaves through an office area. It then crosses a local road [3] and MN 100 on a 1,025 feet (312 m) bridge. [4] It parallels MN 100 and eventually goes east into the decommissioned Fred Richards Golf Course. [5] It passes north of Centennial Lakes Park and into Adams Hill Park.
With a résumé that took him from managing restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area, Lake Minnetonka and now Lake Waconia, it would seem that Ryan Sathre had a unique requirement in his job ...
Big Island, Lake Minnetonka; Boom Island - historical; Campers Island (Minnesota) Coney Island, Lake Waconia; Crane Island; Deering Island, Lake Minnetonka; Eagle Island, Lake Minnetonka; Enchanted Island, Lake Minnetonka; Goose Island, Lake Minnetonka; Gale's Island, Lake Minnetonka; Grey Cloud Island; Harriet Island - historical; Hennepin ...
The Lake Minnetonka LRT Regional Trail runs for 15.92 miles (25.62 km) from 8th Avenue in Hopkins through Minnetonka, Excelsior, and Chanhassen to 81st Street in Victoria. [6] The trail uses a crushed limestone surface. It is connected to the Minnesota River Bluffs LRT trail via "The Artery" along 8th Avenue South in Hopkins, which opened in 2018.
Minnehaha Creek (Dakota: Mniȟáȟa Wakpádaŋ) is a 22-mile-long (35 km) tributary of the Mississippi River that flows east from Gray's Bay Dam on Lake Minnetonka [2] through the suburban cities of Minnetonka, Hopkins, Saint Louis Park, and Edina, and the city of Minneapolis.
It is situated west of Minneapolis on the north shore of Lake Minnetonka. Orono is an affluent municipality that ranks as one of the wealthiest cities in the state. [6] The population was 7,437 at the 2010 census. [7] Orono is in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul metropolitan area.