Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 24, 1993
Lake Level Bottoms Out
By Thomas McDonough
The lowering in the surface level of
Crater Lake recorded during the last few years could be over. A return
to a more average winter pattern where snowfall amounts exceed 500
inches has already been realized in 1992-93. This snowpack, and any
additional precipitation, should all but stop the decline in lake level
observed since 1986.
The rise and fall of Crater Lake's
level this century is connected closely to the fluctuations in the
region's weather. Lake levels have been observed and recorded since
early this century. Crater Lake was at its deepest in March of 1975 when
the lake level measured 6179 feet above mean sea level. This is 16 feet
above its lowest point, which was measured in early September of 1942.
In 1959, when the U.S. Geological Survey measured the depth of the lake
and found it to be 1,932 feet deep, the lake level was 6,176 feet above
sea level. This is a good indication that the lake level is always in
flux.
Lake level is primarily affected by
annual precipitation. For the lake to retain the same level observed the
year before, 66 inches of precipitation must be recorded at Park
Headquarters. This would come largely as snow and approximates to
roughly 530 inches of annual snowfall. If more is received, the lake
will be higher during the following summer. If less is recorded, the
lake level will fall. A declining lake level has been the case for the
last six years. Only 243 inches of snow fell from July 1, 1991 to June
30, 1992. In late September of 1992, at the end of the water year,
Crater Lake's level fell below 6,169 feet. This is close to levels seen
in the 1940s and therefore represents a fifty year low. Crater Lake has,
however, not been alone among lakes in the region. Upper Klamath Lake
and reservoirs throughout southern Oregon also dropped to levels not
seen for decades.
If precipitation patterns observed
earlier this century are used, Crater Lake will require six years of
greater than average snowfall to regain the volume of water lost since
1986. It is likely that the lake will take many more than six years to
reach higher levels again. Forecasting future weather patterns and
associated lake levels is, at best, risky. Nevertheless, we seem to be
at the end of a dry cycle that has been expressed by a drop in Crater
Lake's surface level.
Crater Lake
Surface Variation
September 30th

Observed elevation of the lake surface this century.
The surface elevation of 6,176 feet is 1,932 feet above the deepest part
of the lake. Gaps in the chart are due to periods when measurements were
not taken.