Boomer Lake

Boomer Lake

Trail around Boomer Lake
Location Stillwater, Oklahoma
Coordinates 36°08′37″N 97°03′56″W / 36.14361°N 97.06556°W / 36.14361; -97.06556Coordinates: 36°08′37″N 97°03′56″W / 36.14361°N 97.06556°W / 36.14361; -97.06556
Primary inflows Stillwater Creek
Primary outflows Stillwater Creek
Built 1925
Surface area 251 acres
Average depth 9.7 feet
Shore length1 8.6 mi
Surface elevation 896 ft (273 m)
Settlements Stillwater, Oklahoma
References [1]
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Boomer Lake is located in the city of Stillwater, Oklahoma and was completed in 1925. The lake, as an artificial reservoir created by damming Stillwater Creek, serves several purposes such as cooling the local power plant and providing entertainment and recreation. Boomer Lake has a surface area of 251 acres, watershed area of 8954 acres, shoreline length of 8.6 miles, shoreline development ratio of 4.17, and mean depth of 9.7 feet.[2]

In 2011 Boomer Lake underwent severe drying due to lack of water, with water levels dropping as much as 15 ft and the shoreline receding up to 40 ft in some areas.

The lake serves as a great source for fishing and contains many varieties of fish such as largemouth bass, hybrid bass, saugeye, channel catfish, flathead catfish, crappie and many species of sunfish.

David L. Payne gravesite

The grave site of David L. Payne, a famous figure in pre-statehood history of Oklahoma is on Boomer Lake, where he was reinterred in 1995.[3]

Fish Advisory

In 2010, the Oklahoma State Department of Environmental Quality issued a fish advisory for the largemouth bass in the lake, with elevated mercury levels detected in the lake's population of largemouth bass. Other species of fish do not fall under the advisory. The advisory cautions against eating more than two servings per month of bass longer than 19 inches in length, and suggests children and women of childbearing age should restrict consumption to two servings per month of fish between 16-19 inches. As of early 2014, this advisory remains in effect.[4]

References

  1. "Boomer Lake". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  2. Craven, Richard E. and Bradford E. Brown. "Power Plant Heated Discharge Water and Benthos in Boomer Lake, Payne County, Oklahoma. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, April 1970, pp. 122-128.
  3. "David L. Payne - Boomer Lake - Stillwater, OK". Accessed January 26, 2016.
  4. Stillwater Newspress. July 16, 2010. Allen, Silas. "DEQ Issues Fish Advisory for Boomer Lake" Stillwater NewsPress

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.