The village is built on land owned by the Northern Midlands Council. Inhabitants must purchase a license to have a building there, and are restricted in the number of days per year they can live there. The main purpose is to accommodate recreational anglers.
Water flowing out from the lake has an electrical conductivity of 56 μS/cm.
Rawlinna is a locality located between the south side of the lake and Lake Yaleena, another water impoundment. Lake Yaleena is a privately built dammed lake, specifically for fishing. It is a business that includes accommodation in cabins.
History
The traditional custodians of the area were the Peenrymairmemener clan of the North Midlands nation.[5] The area was originally a wetland, or series of lagoons, and was transcribed by Europeans as koan.ner.we (written in palawa kani as kunawi).[5][6] The area was described by contemporary colonial British as a "resort of the natives" - an Aboriginal meeting place, and contemporaries describe finding several Aboriginal huts in the area.[7] The area contains remains of Aboriginal artefacts and a quarry where the Peenrymairmemener crafted stone tools.[7]
The area was renamed by colonials "Kearney's Bogs" and then Lake Leake after the dam was constructed. The reservoir was constructed after a long debate. A 5-metre (16 ft) high dam was finished in 1884. The initial capacity was 19.9 cubic metres (700 cu ft) and an area of 6 square kilometres (2.3 sq mi). In 1971 the spillway highest point was raised by 18 centimetres (7.1 in) to increase storage capacity. Water is released for irrigation and also stored to maintain a fishing facility. Lake Leake is usually at least half full.[8]
Climate
Climate data for Lake Leake (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1989–2020)
^ abPlomley, Brian (1991). The Tasmanian Tribes and Cicatrices as Tribal Indicators among the Tasmanian Aborigines. Launceston,Tasmania: QVMAG. p. 23.
^"Palawa kani map". Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
^ abKee, Sue (1990). Midlands Aboriginal Archeological Site Survey. Hobart Tasmania: National parks, wildlife and heritage Occasional Paper number 26. ISBN07246-1738-8.
^"Macquarie Catchment"(PDF). South Esk Basin State of Rivers Report. 8 September 2004. p. 172.