Silver Lake (Kansas)

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Silver Lake
Location of Silver Lake in Kansas, USA.
Location of Silver Lake in Kansas, USA.
Silver Lake
LocationShawnee County, Kansas
Coordinates39°06′05″N 95°51′46″W / 39.1014°N 95.8628°W / 39.1014; -95.8628
Lake typenatural freshwater oxbow lake
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area14 acres (6 ha)
Surface elevation896 ft (273 m)
SettlementsSilver Lake, Kansas

Silver Lake is a lake on the west side of the town of Silver Lake, Kansas. It is about a half mile north of the Kansas River. Having an average surface area of 14-acre (57,000 m2), it is one of the very few natural lakes in Kansas. It originally was a part of the Kansas River and was left as a lake when the river changed course in the nineteenth century or earlier. However, it is said to be fed by a spring in the lakebed. The lake is crescent-shaped. When the town of Silver Lake was founded in 1871, the lake already existed. Silver Lake is one of at least six oxbow lakes formed from the Kansas River.[1]

Since the lakebed is mostly shallow, the surface area of Silver Lake can vary considerably. In a drought in the 1980s the lakebed all but dried up. During times of much rain the surface area of the lake can be at least 40-acre (160,000 m2).[2]

Silver Lake is a public lake, and boating and fishing are allowed. No swimming is permitted, and there is no public boat ramp, so boaters must obtain permission of landowners to launch boats. Almost the entire eastern side is bordered by business and residential buildings. The west side is bordered by crop fields.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Fishing Works website, http://www.fishingworks.com/lakes/kansas/shawnee/silver-lake/silver-lake/ ; Wikimapia website, http://www.wikimapia.org/ James R. McCauly, "Development and General Geology of the Kansas River Corridor," Kansas Geological Survey website, http://www.kgs.ku.edu/Publications/KR/kr_geol.html ; John Roony, in the GoingOutside.com website, http://www.goingoutside.com/lake/103/1035016_Silver_Lake_Kansas.html ; Kansas Foundation for Agriculture in the Classroom website, http://www.ksagclassroom.org/
  2. ^ Rooney, GoingOutside.com website.
  3. ^ Wikimapia website; Fishing Works website.
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