Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 13, October 1947
The Future Wizard Peninsula
By L. T. Grose, Ranger-Naturalist
The Watchman-Hillman talus slopes form
the largest single slide area within the caldera walls. The slide is
constantly in action, though no mass slumps have occurred in the last
few years. The coarse, flat, detrital beach at the base grows rapidly
outward in Skell Channel. It has been built up as follows: Perennial
snow patches remain at the base of the talus. Most of the detritus
slides over the snow and is deposited farther out on to the beach or
into the water. In the early summer when the snow is deepest, the rocks
are carried into the water. Already the beach extends 300 feet into
Skell Channel. The Channel is now approximately 1,600 feet wide and less
than 100 feet deep.
The earliest pictures of Crater Lake,
about 50 years old, do not show any such wide beach. Wizard's status as
an island is endangered; if the present rate of erosion continues and
the lake level does not rise, our great grandchildren will view Wizard
Peninsula.