Lake Ogawara

Lake Ogawara

Landsat image
Location Aomori Prefecture
Coordinates 40°47′00″N 141°19′00″E / 40.78333°N 141.31667°E / 40.78333; 141.31667Coordinates: 40°47′00″N 141°19′00″E / 40.78333°N 141.31667°E / 40.78333; 141.31667
Primary outflows Pacific Ocean
Basin countries Japan
Surface area 63.2 km²
Average depth 11 meters
Max. depth 25 meters
Water volume 0.714 km³
Shore length1 67.4 kilometers
Surface elevation 0 meters
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Lake Ogawara (小川原湖 Ogawarako) is Japan's eleventh largest lake (by area) and the largest in Aomori Prefecture. It spans the boundaries of the city of Misawa and the town of Tohoku and the village of Rokkasho in Kamikita District.

Data

The lake has an area of 63.2 km² and holds 0.714 km³ of water. Its circumference is 67.4 kilometers. At its deepest point, the water is 25 meters deep, with an average depth of 11 meters. The surface is at sea level. The lake is shallow (under 2 meters) from the shoreline to a distance of approximately 200 meters, whereupon the depth drops off precipitously. The edge of Lake Ogawara is very near the coast of the Pacific Ocean, and the sand bar guarding its mouth has been breached numerous times by storms or typhoons, thus accounting for the brackish water of the lake. There are four inflowing rivers, all coming from Hakkoda Mountain Range. The only outflow is the Takase River.

Economic activity

Lake Ogawara is an abundant habitat for fish and birds, and is recognized as such by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment. A variety of marimo occurs naturally in the lake. It is a commercial source of cultivated Japanese smelt, icefish, goby and shijimi, and was previously home to the critically endangered Hucho perryi, which was last spotted in 1943. Migratory birds include the whooper swan and tundra swan, among others.

History

Lake Ogawara was originally a marine bay, which became a lake approximately 3,000 years ago by the formation of a sand bar at its mouth. The shoreline around Lake Ogawara has been settled since prehistoric times, and numerous Jomon period remains and shell middens have been discovered.

The lake was used by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service units at Misawa Airfield to practice for the attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II for its similarity in depth to Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.

The Japanese government initiated a project beginning in the 1970s to convert the lake from brackish to fresh water to serve as a source of drinking, industrial and irrigation water despite the adverse environmental impact.

See also

Sources

This article incorporates material from the article 浜名湖 (Ogawarako) in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved on November 11, 2009.

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