Redoubt Lake, or Kunaa Shak Áayi,
is a long, narrow lake on
Baranof Island
Baranof Island is an island in the northern Alexander Archipelago in the Alaska Panhandle, in Alaska. The name Baranof was given in 1805 by Imperial Russian Navy captain U. F. Lisianski to honor Alexander Andreyevich Baranov. It was called ...
, near
Sitka, Alaska
russian: Ситка
, native_name_lang = tli
, settlement_type = Consolidated city-borough
, image_skyline = File:Sitka 84 Elev 135.jpg
, image_caption = Downtown Sitka in 1984
, image_size ...
. It is located in a glacially-carved valley in
Tongass National Forest
The Tongass National Forest () in Southeast Alaska is the largest U.S. National Forest at . Most of its area is temperate rain forest and is remote enough to be home to many species of endangered and rare flora and fauna. The Tongass, which is ...
. It was named ''Ozero Glubokoye'', meaning "deep lake", in 1809 by the Russian navigator
Ivan Vasilyev.
Redoubt Lake is one of the largest
meromictic lake
A meromictic lake is a lake which has layers of water that do not intermix. In ordinary, holomictic lakes, at least once each year, there is a physical mixing of the surface and the deep waters.
The term ''meromictic'' was coined by the Austr ...
s in North America. Its water is fresh to a depth of , below which is a dense, saltwater layer. The lake's maximum depth is with a mean depth of . Its surface area covers .
[Redoubt Lake Sockeye Salmon Enhancement and Monitoring]
Tongass National Forest, US Forest Service
In the early 19th century Redoubt Lake was part of
Russian America
Russian America (russian: Русская Америка, Russkaya Amerika) was the name for the Russian Empire's colonial possessions in North America from 1799 to 1867. It consisted mostly of present-day Alaska in the United States, but a ...
. The Russians established a small settlement near the lake's outlet known variously as Ozersk Redoubt, Ozyorsk Redoubt, The Redoubt, Seleniye Dranishnikova, or Dranishnikov Settlement. Salmon traps were set in the lake and the catch was salted and dried at Ozersk Redoubt. Between 1817 and 1832 the Russians at Sitka and Ozersk Redoubt salted an average of 20,000 salmon annually.
The fishermen's frontier: people and salmon in Southeast Alaska
by David F. Arnold, William Cronon
Fish harvests by the Russians at Redoubt Lake sometimes exceeded 50,000 sockeye salmon
The sockeye salmon (''Oncorhynchus nerka''), also called red salmon, kokanee salmon, blueback salmon, or simply sockeye, is an anadromous species of salmon found in the Northern Pacific Ocean and rivers discharging into it. This species is a ...
per year. Annual escapements possibly exceeded 100,000 sockeye. In the 1980s, sockeye escapement or returns of adult fish had declined to an average less than 10,000 annually. Some years the numbers measured in the low hundreds.[
]
Notes
Lakes of Alaska
Meromictic lakes
Lakes of Sitka, Alaska
Glacial lakes of the United States
{{SitkaAK-geo-stub