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How did fish end up in Lake Tahoe?

Kokanee salmon were introduced into Lake Tahoe in 1944 by a fish hatchery in Tahoe City, but the circumstances surrounding their introduction are murky. “We've heard two different versions,” says Jean Norman of the U.S. Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit's interpretive services department.



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So far, their discoveries include a diamond ring, possible ship wreckage, and over 25,000 pounds of trash. However, Fallen Leaf Lake, about one-mile southwest of Tahoe, contains an ancient underwater forest with 80-foot tall trees from 2,000 years ago.

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In short, yes, it is normally safe to swim in Lake Tahoe. Just be sure to wear boots when walking around the lake. The most common snake you might see in the lake is a garter snake. If you do happen to see a snake swimming in the lake, just let it pass by, as they are normally not venomous.

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Allegedly it's a 60-foot-long serpentine “monster” named Tessie. Tahoe Tessie that is. This isn't a new story either. The local Indian tribes have long spoken of monsters in the lake and some other theories point to a giant sturgeon perhaps inhabiting the dark areas of the water.

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First of all, Lake Tahoe's only natural outlet, the Truckee River, carries water into Nevada, not California, where it terminates at Pyramid Lake. This means there are no legal water rights to use Tahoe water in California, aside from a few local uses along the river's path to Nevada.

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Because of that 2 million year old routing, a very very deep lake was created in the basin. Lake Tahoe is 1,645 feet deep (compared to a height of 1,454 for the Empire State Building). The depth means that, despite the chill, the lake never completely freezes.

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Now, researchers report that Tahoe is the clearest it's been in 40 years—and it's thanks to tiny zooplankton that gobble up the particles that make the water cloudy.

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Most people say that Lake Tahoe's famous blue waters go hand in hand with the lake's clarity, but scientists say these two traits actually have separate causes, The Atlantic reports. The lake owes its clearness to a lack of fine particulates, while the blue color is caused by lack of algae.

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Nestled in the Sierra Nevada and straddling the California/Nevada border, Lake Tahoe is the second deepest lake in the United States after Crater Lake, Oregon. Lake Tahoe is the fourth deepest lake in North America and the sixteenth deepest lake in the world. The maximum depth of Lake Tahoe is 1,644.1 feet.

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Allegedly it's a 60-foot-long serpentine “monster” named Tessie. Tahoe Tessie that is. This isn't a new story either. The local Indian tribes have long spoken of monsters in the lake and some other theories point to a giant sturgeon perhaps inhabiting the dark areas of the water.

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Is Lake Tahoe man-made? A. The formation of Lake Tahoe occured naturally over the course of 3-4 million years through faulting, volcanic activity, and glaciation. However, as a result of the dam (controlled by the federal water master) located in Tahoe City, the Lake is also a reservoir.

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