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Arbuthnot Lake | |
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Location | Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington |
Coordinates | 48°50′32″N 121°43′23″W / 48.8423456°N 121.7229198°W / 48.8423456; -121.7229198 |
Basin countries | United States |
Surface area | 5.0 acres (2.0 ha) |
Surface elevation | 4,800 ft (1,500 m) |
References |
Arbuthnot Lake, also misspelled as Arbuthnet Lake, is a lake in Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA. One of the Galena Chain lakes. At one end of the lake is "Arbuthnot Falls".
Arbuthnot was suggested 1906 as an appropriate name for the fourth lake, after James Arbuthnot, of Arbuthnot and Davis the two miners who tunnelled through the ridge between it and Natatorium Lake and with 52 sticks of giant powder blew out the face of the tunnel and lowered the surface of Natatorium 9 feet by drawing off the water through this drainage tube, for the purpose of exposing a vein of ore just in the edge of the lake.
References
- ^ Part 16: Whatcom County (PDF) in "Lakes of Washington, Volume 1", Water Supply Bulletin 14 (1973) p. 551
- Charles F. Easton's "Mt. Baker: Stories, Legends and Explorations".
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