May - June 2002

By Lakes' Restless Edge

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Water, wind, and waves drive dynamic processes that both erode shorelines and sustain them. Smart development recognizes these processes and gives them wiggle room.

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By Martha S. Mitchell

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Lakes are jewels of the landscape. We are drawn to their shifting beauty and consider ourselves lucky to live close to their rustling shores. We take for granted many benefits that accrue from management of lakes' water levels: electricity, irrigation, domestic water, visual splendor, and recreation. Yet unintended shoreline erosion often results when we simplify or armor shorelines to protect built environments at the water's edge or when water levels are raised or lowered to increase the benefits of water management. When such changes result in chronic shoreline erosion, lake water quality, habitats, and benefits can suffer. Smart development can allow people to live, work, and recreate near the water's edge without accelerating the rate of natural shoreline erosion.

To most of us, lakes are permanent features of enduring landscapes. Yet in the grand scheme of landscape evolution, lakes are an accident of drainage, present on the earth's dynamic skin for a mere blink in geologic time. Sooner than later, lakes will evaporate, be drained by erosion of their outlets, or be filled with decaying plants or with dust, pollen, and sediments carried to them by wind, ice, or water. Some filled lakes will persist for a time as meadows, but eventually the meadow fill too will be lost to erosion. In fact, lakes change relatively quickly, and shoreline erosion is an important process that contributes to this change. The challenge for lake managers is to identify what shoreline processes are normal, how human activities influence shoreline changes, the rate of those changes, and what measures can be taken to protect the dynamic equilibrium of shorelines.

These questions become more pressing as populations boom, the need for clean water grows, and decisions about land and water management are increasingly affected by concerns about water quality and endangered species. The answers are complex, for the relations between shoreline conditions and the chemical and biological conditions of lakes involve many interacting variables, many of which might be changing seasonally or be influenced by disturbances or conditions in tributary watersheds.

Lakes' etiology and morphology are related to the climate, the tectonic and surficial processes that formed them, and the materials of their basins (see the table). Therefore, the perspective of geoscience can be useful in sorting out the physical factors involved in the interplay of lake conditions. A physical geologist, a geomorphologist, or a physical geographer can interpret lakes' geologic origins from topographic maps to assist lake managers in understanding the background conditions of particular lakes and anticipate the nature of physical changes expected to occur.

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Signatures of Changing Landscapes

And change is certain, for lakes are formed in landscapes of change. In uplands, lakes are an expression of youthful drainage systems in which rivers have not yet worn their bounding interfluves back to well-drained, maximum relief. Lakes are frequent in the high latitudes and higher elevations, where they commonly occupy rock basins scoured out by alpine or continental glaciation, or are held by the rock detritus of glaciers. Lakes can be formed by the damming effects of dynamic mass-wastage events such as landslides or alluvial-fan floods. They may form as a result of crustal movements that cause warps or faults that interrupt the flow of streams from higher elevations to lower.

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