The name "Butte des Morts" was given by French colonial settlers. It means "Mound of the Dead", in reference to a nearby prehistoric Native Americanburial mound. In the Menominee language this place is known as Paehkuahkīhsaeh which means "small mound".[3]
Physical Aspects
With a surface area of 34.7 km2 (8,575 acres), it is the second smallest of the Winnebago Pool Lakes after Lake Winneconne. Much of the lake is flooded marshland, which was created by the damming of the Fox River downstream in Menasha in the 19th century.[2] This has resulted in the lake's flat and shallow character, with a maximum depth of 2.7 m (9 ft).[4] It is rather narrow, with a maximum length of 11.6 km (7 mi) but a maximum width of just 2.8 km (2 mi). Its total watershed (the combined drainage areas of the Fox and Wolf Rivers plus minor tributaries) is 5,566.2 square miles (14,416 km2).[2] Surface water temperature varies from a minimum of about 0.4 °C (33 °F) in the winter to a maximum of about 26.7 °C (80 °F) in the summer. The extensive littoral zone will usually freeze over in the winter, though only during particularly cold winters does the entire lake freeze over. The lake is polymictic, maintaining a continuously mixed water column with no patterns of seasonal temperature stratification.
Water Quality
Lake Butte des Morts is classified as eutrophic. The lake is listed with the Wisconsin DNR as having "impaired" water quality, citing high levels of phosphorus, mercury, and PCBs and low levels of dissolved oxygen, among other problems.[5][6] Much of these pollutants enter the watershed from agricultural and urban runoff.[5] Large algal blooms and high E. coli populations occasionally make the water unsafe for swimming.[5][7] The water is typically a murky brown or green color, with high turbidity, though prior to the 1970s the water was reported to be much clearer.[8] Lake Butte des Morts has been the subject of numerous DNR management and monitoring projects aimed at protecting or improving water quality, often alongside other bodies of water in the same watershed.[5]
The city of Oshkosh lies between Lake Butte des Morts and Lake Winnebago. The unincorporated community of Butte des Morts lies on the lake's northern shore, west of Oshkosh. Lake Butte des Morts is part of the Fox-Wisconsin Waterway, which used to be used to travel between the Mississippi River and Lake Michigan, but with the closure of both the Portage Canal and the locks on the lower Fox River has ceased operation. A marked navigation channel guides passage across the lake from the inflow of the Wolf River in the west (connecting to Lake Poygan), to the outflow of the Fox River east to Lake Winnebago, a remnant of the waterway. Lake Butte des Morts is popular among both fishermen and recreational boaters during the warm months, and with ice fishermen in the winter. U.S. Highway 41 (US 41) / Interstate 41 (I41) spans the east end of the lake via a bridge and causeway combination. The bridge includes the Tribal Heritage Crossing, a designated national trail, which is a portion of the Wiouwash State Trail.[10]Terrell's Island is a DNR-organized wetlands conservation project located on the south shore, enclosed by a breakwall that extends some distance into the lake.
Gallery
Winnebago pool, July 1996. Lake Winnebago is in the center, with Lake Butte des Morts just to the left of the center of the lake.
^Sloey, William E. (1970). "The Limnology of Hypereutrophic Lake Butte des Morts, Wisconsin". Proceedings of Rhte 13th Conference on Great Lakes Research.