Maximum Depth

acres

native plant species

Volume (acre feet)

THE THREE LAKES CHAIN PHYSIOGRAPHY

The Three Lakes Chain resides in the “Northern Lakes and Forests” ecoregion in Wisconsin in north-eastern Oneida County and consists of 21 lakes and 2 waterways. The chain drains north as the Eagle River over the Burnt Rollways Dam into the lower Eagle River Chain of Lakes. The date of the original dam construction is circa 1893 when the Nine Mile Creek Improvement Company was authorized to build. The Wisconsin Valley Improvement Company (WVIC) controls flowage at the dam and has a federal license specifying water levels be kept between 1,625.71 and 1,622.96 ft.

 

topographic map of the three lakes chain

"A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT"

The Three Lakes Chain is part of the Eagle River system and contributes 71,000 Acre-feet of water annually making its way to the Wisconsin River and on to the Gulf of Mexico. What is not apparent is the dynamic nature of these serene lakes that could be considered sleeping giants.

How much water is in your lake?  The Three Lakes Chain, aka the Burnt Rollways Reservoir holds over 100,000 Acre-feet of water or about 33 billion gallons.  The table lists the individual lakes in the chain arranged by capacity. Planting Ground is clearly the reigning champion followed closely by the triumvirate of the aptly named Big Stone, Big Fork and Big lakes. These four basins contain half of the entire water budget of the reservoir.

Lake Surface Acres Mean Depth Capacity    Acre-Feet  Volume % Refresh Rate   (times/year) Total Flow/year (Acre-feet) Residence Time (days)
Planting Ground 1045 15 15675 15 4.3 67403 88
Big Stone 609 20 12180 12 4 48720 91
Big Fork 670 17 11390 11 0.8 9112 453
Big 872 13 11336 11 3.6 40810 102
Medicine 397 22 8734 9 5.8 50657 62
Long 613 12 7356 7 9.7 71353 37
Little Fork 343 16 5488 5 10.9 59819 33
Spirit 355 14 4970 5 0.2 994 1544
Virgin 264 13 3432 3 2.3 7894 161
Island 304 11 3344 3 18.6 62198 18
Whitefish 199 16 3184 3 3.2 10189 113
Fourmile 210 11 2310 2 3.5 8085 106
Laurel 254 7 1778 2 27.1 48184 15
Deer 188 9 1692 2 28.1 47545 15
Range Line 128 13 1664 2 0.6 998 606
Dog 204 8 1632 2 24.7 40310 15
Townline 145 11 1595 2 1.5 2393 245
Round 151 8 1208 1 49.3 59554 7
Maple 139 8 1112 1 0.5 556 748
Moccasin 91 8 728 1 0.4 291 843
Crystal 117 6 702 1 8.5 5967 44
Total 7298 101510
gallons/Acre foot 325851

WATER CAPACITY OF THE CHAIN

All the lakes on the chain are classified as drainage lakes in that they have surface water inflow and/or outflow in the form of rivers or streams, some demonstrably more than others. Lake water capacities are color-coded from dark to light representing large to smaller volumes.

The darker colored lakes including Planting Ground and the triumvirate “Bigs” – Big Fork, Big Stone and Big Lake contain nearly half of the entire water budget in the Chain.

 

FLOWAGE RATES OF "THE HIDDEN RIVER" ON THE CHAIN

Since our water is constantly on the move, it is interesting to note the refresh rate or conversely, the residence time of water in our lakes.  The Refresh rates from table above,  show the number of times per year that the holding capacity of each lake is displaced by the inflow of water from upstream.  For example, Laurel Lake (27 times) is refreshed every two weeks, Medicine (5.8) every two months and Spirit (0.2) once every five years.  If you happen to live along the main channel, somewhere between 30 and 60 million gallons of water are cruising past your pier every day.  It’s no wonder fish on the chain like to find a nice back bay to chill out.

The overall flow of Eagle River begins in the lower right corner of the map in the headwaters near Whitefish and Virgin lakes and picks up steam at Big Lake turning northerly along the trail of light green colored lakes.  The darkest colored lakes on the left side from northwest to southeast:  Range Line through Moccasin as well as Big Fork Lake contribute to the overall budget but are not “main channel lakes.”

 

Teamwork amongst the lakes provides 71K Acre-feet of water pouring out of the Burnt Rollways dam on a yearly basis.  This impressive “ hidden river” flow emanating in the ‘headwaters’ wends its way along The Thoroughfare to collectively decant 15K acre-feet or more into the northeast end of Big Lake.  Big Lake and its watershed adds a gushy 25K acre-feet to this flow and together 40K acre-feet are quietly rumbling down drainage into Dog Lake.  Reserves from Deer Lake and Crystal Lake bring the outflow to nearly 50K acre-feet which then takes a breather and maintains equilibrium from Big Stone through Laurel and Medicine.  At Little Fork, the river receives a 9K acre-feet influx from Big Fork which boosts it to 60K acre-feet as it continues through Island and Round into Planting Ground.  The final contributions from Planting Ground and Long lakes result in 71K acre feet flowing out towards Burnt Rollways Dam and eventually into the Wisconsin River system.

ONTERRA LAKE RESEARCH REPORT AND MAPS