Burntside Lake

Burntside Lake
Location of Burntside Lake in Minnesota
Location of Burntside Lake in Minnesota
Burntside Lake
LocationMorse Township / Slim Lake, Saint Louis County, near Ely, Minnesota
Coordinates47°55′27″N 91°59′42″W / 47.92417°N 91.99500°W / 47.92417; -91.99500
Primary inflowsTamarack Creek, Coo Lake, Crab Lake, Slim Lake, Hanson Lake, Chant Lake, Everett Lake (via Twin Lakes and Dead River), Minister Lake
Primary outflowsBurntside River
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area7,139 acres (2,889 ha)
Max. depth126 ft (38 m)[1]
Surface elevation1,371 ft (418 m)[2]
Islands>100
References[1][2]

Burntside Lake is a 7,139-acre (28.89 km2) lake, located 3 miles (4.8 km) northwest of Ely, Minnesota, in Saint Louis County, Minnesota. Its western boundary adjoins the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness on Tamarack Creek.

Native fish include Bluegill, Golden Shiner, Green Sunfish, Lake Trout, Lake Whitefish, Northern Pike, Rainbow Smelt, Rock Bass, Shorthead Redhorse, Smallmouth Bass, Walleye, White Sucker and Yellow Perch.

On its shores are two historic resorts with original hand-scribed log cabins, both built in the early 1900s and operating continuously since then: Burntside Lodge (1913) and Camp Van Vac (1918).[3] The YMCA's Camp Widjiwagan is also located on the lake's shore.

Burntside Lake's more than 100 islands include Beach; Bear; Berry; Blueberry; Brownell; Burnt; Burntside Islands; Gem; Dollar; Evans; Good Dog; Half Dollar; Honeymoon; Indian; Lockhart; Long; Lost Girl; Miller; Oliver; Picnic; Porkchop; Ripple; Snake; State; Sumpter; Waters; and many more.

Long Island was recently acquired by the Trust for Public Land.[4]

The Burntside Islands (Snellman and Pine) are SNAs (Scientific and Natural Areas, gifted by the Nature Conservancy)[5] held by the DNR.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b State Lake information report
  2. ^ a b Burntside Lake on Placenames.us Archived July 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Lodging". Archived from the original on 2009-06-17. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  4. ^ Minnesota, 43-Acre Island in MN Lake Protected: The Trust for Public Land Archived July 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Burntside Islands Scientific and Natural Area: Minnesota DNR

Burntside Lake Association