Lake Chabot

Lake Chabot
Location Alameda County, California, United States
Coordinates 37°43′47″N 122°7′18″W / 37.72972°N 122.12167°WCoordinates: 37°43′47″N 122°7′18″W / 37.72972°N 122.12167°W
Type reservoir
Primary inflows San Leandro Creek
Primary outflows San Leandro Creek
Basin countries United States
Surface area 315 acres (127 ha)
Surface elevation 243 ft (74 m)[1]
Islands 1
Settlements Oakland, California
References [1]

Lake Chabot is a man-made lake covering 317 acres (1.3 km2) in Alameda County, California. Part of the lake lies within Oakland city limits, but most of it lies in unincorporated Castro Valley, just east of San Leandro. It was formed by the damming of San Leandro Creek.

Description

The Lake Chabot dam was built in 1874-1875 as a primary source for water in the East Bay.[2] The lake was closed to recreation for 91 years. Legislation passed in the 1960s opened the lake for controlled recreation uses. Currently, the lake serves as a standby emergency water supply. For this reason, visitors are asked to observe certain necessary regulations to keep the waters pure.

Anthony Chabot Regional Park and Lake Chabot offer a number of activities including family and group camping, hiking, a public marksmanship/shooting range, equestrian trails, bicycle trails, nature study, picnicking, golf, fishing, boat rental, a marina, a restaurant and boat tours of the lake.

Impact

Construction of the Lake Chabot dam is considered to be one of the main causes of the formation of Arrowhead Marsh in San Leandro Bay, at the mouth of San Leandro Creek near the Oakland International Airport. Coastal surveys show the marsh appearing sometime between 1855 and 1895, though logging of the San Antonio Forest may have also played a role. Aside from sedimentation caused by normal earth-fill dam construction, much of the dam's clay core and soil overburden were washed away in a storm during construction in either 1874 or 1875.

Today, Arrowhead Marsh is one of the last remaining wetlands in the East Bay, and part of Martin Luther King Jr. Regional Shoreline, while nearly all of the surrounding historic marsh has been covered with industrial development.[3]

See also

References

External links