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Smith Lake (Athabascan: Tr'exwghodegi Troth Yeddha' Bena') is a lake in Fairbanks, Alaska[1] on the property of the University of Alaska Fairbanks. It is triangular in shape, roughly 980 ft × 980 ft × 1,250 ft (300 m × 300 m × 380 m).[2]

The university maintains ecological and hydrological monitoring sites at the lake.[3]

Wildlife

Smith lake is a good wildlife viewing location.[4]

Bird species found at the lake may include Pacific loons, ring-necked duck, bufflehead, American wigeon, northern pintail, northern shoveler, green-winged teal, red-necked grebe, horned grebe, Bonaparte's gull, Wilson's snipe, lesser yellowlegs, long-billed dowitcher, red-necked phalarope, pectoral sandpiper and Bohemian waxwing.[5]

Recreation

In winter the frozen surface of Smith Lake is popular with ice skaters and cross-country skiers.[6]

Further reading

References

  1. ^ "Smith Lake". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
  2. ^ Tohko Kaufmann (1971). "Ecology, Biology and Gonad Morphology of Gerris rufoscutellatus (Hemiptera: Gerridae) in Fairbanks, Alaska". American Midland Naturalist 86(2), 407-416.
  3. ^ Robert W. Lichvar, Gary A. Laursen, Rodney D. Seppelt and Walter R. Ichs (2009). "Selecting and Testing Cryptogam Species for Use in Wetland Delineation in Alaska". Arctic 62(2), 201–211.
  4. ^ "Smith Lake & the University of Alaska Fairbanks Trail System". Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Accessed 11/10/2011.
  5. ^ Sue Guers. "It’s summer in the Interior; American Golden Plovers are back in town". Archived 2012-06-15 at the Wayback Machine Fairbanks Daily News Miner, 5/18/2011.
  6. ^ Friedman, Sam (17 November 2016). "Trip report: Smith Lake is refuge for skijorers in a dry winter". Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Retrieved 11 April 2021.


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