(Mitchell Lake Specific)
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(Mitchell Lake Specific)
5 messages
Updated 2/24/2010 2:35:48 PM
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Name: |
Mack
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/11/2010 7:06:48 PM
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WOW!! Over a 3 foot rise in just 4 days. It boggles my brain to imagine the volume of rainwater/inflow required to raise the level that much on a lake as big as Martin.
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Name: |
lakeweekends
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/11/2010 7:38:43 PM
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OMG- I have just checked the water level and am so amazed since last weekend - good thing our shore is clean and docks secured. Imagine it will be muddy - with the water rising so fast in many areas.
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Name: |
roswellric
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Subject: |
Don't be fooled...
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Date:
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3/11/2010 9:34:30 PM
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This is just the wet part of the drought brought on by global warming and it will take 10 years to fill up the lake. So send a check to Zimbabwe for their cap & trade credits.
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Name: |
alabamaangler
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/11/2010 9:49:11 PM
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If my conversion factors and calculations are correct:
The area of one acre is defined as 66 by 660 feet then the volume of an acre-foot is exactly 43560 cubic feet. Alternatively, this is approximately 325,851.4 U.S. gallons. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acre-foot)
Lake Martin encompasses 39,180 acres.
With this, 325,851 x 3 = 977,553 gallons per acre of surface area 3 feet deep.
977,553 x 39,180 acres = 38,300,526,540 gallons for the recent three-foot rise.
Maybe there is an engineer among us that can confirm, or correct this.
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Name: |
lakeplumber
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/11/2010 11:33:13 PM
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Your math is spot on (a perfectly squared acre equals 208.71032557111303591192697393256 x 208.71032557111303591192697393256 feet, which is the same number of square feet as your 66 x 660 feet)
Bottom line would still be the same (We in the trade of dealing with water calculations round off the volume of 1 cubic foot of H2O to 7.5 gallons; more accurately 7.48 gallons)
Still a massive volume of water.
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Name: |
lakeplumber
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/11/2010 11:35:38 PM
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That amount of water would weigh a staggering 317,894,370,282 pounds.
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Name: |
BigFoot
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/12/2010 8:35:57 AM
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...don't forget that the banks are not vertical to the horizon...better pull out the calc 1 and 2 books....
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Name: |
charlesph30
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Subject: |
Water Level
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Date:
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3/13/2010 8:29:34 AM
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Maybe somewhere in the neighborhood of 390 billion gallons. 39180 acres = 61 sq mi 3 feet rise = 0.00057 cu mi and 11 trillion gal/cu mi 130 billion a day lot of water!
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