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				 Lake Lanier drying up? 
 
			
			wrote:
 On Oct 16, 2:29 pm, Tim  wrote:
 wrote:
 
 From Lake Lanier Army Corp of Engineers website:
 Constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the 1950's, Lake
 Lanier is a multi-purpose lake that provides for flood protection,
 power production, water supply, navigation, recreation and fish and
 wildlife management.
 
 Same way with Lake Carlyle . that is with exception of power
 production.
 
 It is fed by the Kaskaskia river, and it's level has dropped
 considerably. it is a huge man made lake and is about 4 mi wide and 10
 mi long.  But in many places the shore line is rather shallow. in some
 cases un aprochable with a typical runabout up to 150 ft from shore.
 But when the lake is full, these spots are usually navagational within
 50-75 ft.
 
 Still plenty deep in the middle, but unhandy for reaching beach lines.
 
 Lake Lanier is fed by two rivers, each runoff from the mountains, so
 there is a LOT of water being pushed down, normally. Because of
 downstream concerns plus Atlanta's thirst, they are still, even with
 drought conditions releasing anywhere from 600 to 900 million gallons
 per day. Lanier is a really cool lake, because of the mountainous
 conditions, there are many coves and what used to be creek inlets to
 explore. How far is your lake down? Lanier is down 12 feet (so far).
 
 I don't really  know how much it has dropped and really don't know how
 to find the actual stats, but on the south end the lake is dammed, and
 there's very little coming over the spill way.
 
 kaskaskia isn't a large river, but now it's about like a creek.
 
 
 I saw a bit ont he Weather Channel about Lake Hartwell. It's in bad
 shape too.
 
 fortunately for our area, it's been raining fairly steady for the last
 three hrs and I did look and saw its steady on Carlyle too.  But it
 won't effect the lake much at all, unless the rains start saturating
 up north to flow down.
 
 
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