Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 4, No. 2, August 1931
Another Important Relic
By Earl U. Homuth, Ranger-Naturalist
After resting concealed among the rocks
on the shore of Wizard Island for forty-six years, the sounding
apparatus used in determining the depths in Crater Lake has recently
been discovered. This relic, one of the most valuable and interesting
which could possibly be added to the rapidly growing collection to be
installed in the exhibit room of the Memorial Lookout, is on display at
the Information Bureau on the Rim.

With the assistance of William G.
Steel, who made the soundings in 1886, the apparatus has been
reassembled. When in that year the Geological Survey sent a field party
to prepare a map of the region and to sound the Lake, Mr. Steel was
commissioned to have a boat constructed and to procure or build the
sounding apparatus. From descriptions of such instruments Mr. Steel
devised the apparatus subsequently used.
The machine consists of two wooden
drums mounted upon an iron bar which was revolved by a short handle with
two cog-wheels connecting to the bar. This was fastened by four iron
bars to a plank forty-six inches long. The plank and drums are weathered
and the iron very much rusted, and yet in remarkable state of
preservation.
The drums are ten inches in diameter.
One is seven inches wide and the rusted wire is still tightly wound
around it. The other is four inches in width and was used as a brake to
prevent the sounding weight from dropping too rapidly. The leather strap
used on this drum is still attached to the plank. Two small pulleys over
which the wire passed from the drum were also found. A small piece of
leather may be seen attached to the wire. To facilitate the reading of
the depths as they were determined, these thongs had been fastened at
fifty foot intervals; at each hundred feet, up to five hundred, notches
had been cut in the leather, and for each five hundred feet, holes had
been punched. Actual measurements were made of the length of wire
between these thongs when each depth was determined.
According to Mr. Steel, the machine was
placed across the center of the Cleetwood, the boat used in the
soundings. The boat was 26 feet in length and 5 feet, 10 inches beam.
From the center of either side of the boat planks were fastened which
were joined over the prow forming a triangular brace. On the point was
placed a pulley of lignum sitae over which the wire from the machine
dropped to the water.
Mr. Steel had procured ten thousand
feet of wire and several window sash weights. The sash-weights were too
heavy, however, and twice broke the wire carrying away sixteen hundred
feet on two occasions. The weights used were cut in half and later in
quarters and finally a piece of iron pipe eight inches long was used.
This piece of pipe was still attached to the wire when the relic was
discovered.
Mr. Steel, personally, was in charge of
the soundings. The field party was under the direction of Capt. Clarence
E. Dutton and Mark Kerr was Chief topographer. A group of men were
detailed to the summit of the peak subsequently called The Watchman, and
another group upon the eastern lakeshore. The weight was allowed to sink
slowly until bottom was reached. It was then pulled up a short distance
and allowed to touch bottom again. With a large flag Mr. Steel then
signaled the men stationed on the shore, and they in turn drew lines
upon their maps, passing on the position of the boat. In the evening
these results were compared and when the lines crossed for each
respective sounding the figures were entered upon the charts.
Ninety-four soundings were made, the work requiring nearly one month.
These are recorded upon the topographic maps used today. The greatest
depth found was 1996 feet.
When the work was completed the
apparatus was removed from the boat and left on Wizard Island where it
has remained for forty-six years. The Cleetwood was sunk in a shallow
bay of the island and the remains still lie where they were left.
Early this season the tiller and a
portion of the prow were salvaged from the wreckage.
This past week Senior Naturalist and
Forester Ansel F. Hall, while engaged in the work of laying out the new
trail on Wizard Island, discovered the window weights which were
originally used with the sounding apparatus. They were resting on the
rugged lava blocks about 25 feet above the present water level. Nearby
was found the wreckage of the Cleetwood, resting in a pool that is
detached from the main body of the lake; the level of the lake being
exceedingly low. The oar locks were found and along with the weights
they will be place on display with the sounding apparatus.