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The lake's primary inflow is seepage from East Lake, snow melt, and hot springs, and its outflow is Paulina Creek, a tributary of the Little Deschutes River. It has an area of 1,531 acres (619.6 ha), a volume of 249,850 acre-feet (308,185 dam 3 ), a maximum depth of 250 feet (76.2 m), a shore length of about 6.7 miles (11 km), and a residence ...
The volcano has two crater lakes, Paulina Lake and East Lake, which are filled by precipitation and percolation of ground water. [18] Paulina Lake occupies an area of 1,530 acres (6.2 km 2) and reaches a maximum depth of 250 feet (76 m), and it is separated from East Lake by a narrow isthmus, which is composed of rhyolite lava. [19]
The average depth is 67 feet (20 m), 180 feet (55 m) at the deepest point, and covers 1,044 acres (4.2 km 2). East Lake is about 50 feet (15 m) higher in elevation and is to the east of its twin, Paulina Lake. [1] East Lake has two main camping grounds along the lake shore as well as East Lake Resort.
a natural lake (though artificially enlarged) that is a former channel of the Tualatin River: Owyhee Reservoir: an impoundment of the Owyhee River by Owyhee Dam in Eastern Oregon; Oregon's longest lake (52 miles (84 km)) Paulina Lake: one of two crater lakes in Newberry Caldera: Phillips Lake: an impoundment of the Powder River: Perkins Lake
Crews have "notched" the Paulina Dam in Blairstown, the first step in lowering Paulina Lake and removing the dam to restore the Paulins Kill River.
“Mufasa,” “Sonic 3,” and “Nosferatu” took the top three spots on the Thursday box office chart, leaving Universal’s “Wicked” and Disney’s “Moana 2” to round out the top ...
Paul Maslansky, a producer behind films such as “Police Academy” and “Return to Oz,” died on Monday of natural causes at a hospital in Los Robles, Calif. He was 91. Maslansky collaborated ...
Newberry National Volcanic Monument was designated on November 5, 1990, to protect the area around the Newberry Volcano in the U.S. state of Oregon. [2] The monument was created within the boundaries of the Deschutes National Forest, which is managed by the U.S. Forest Service, and includes 54,822 acres (86 sq mi; 222 km 2) of lakes, lava flows, and geologic features in central Oregon.