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SHOALS completes Lake Tahoe Jigsaw
August 17, 2000
Lake Tahoe, one of North America’s deepest and clearest lakes may be an environment in peril.
The region’s exquisite scenery, abundant outdoor activities and world-class entertainment have made it a popular recreation and
vacation destination. However, decades of development and exploitation has caused significant, perhaps irreparable harm causing lake clarity to decline
by 30% in the last 30 years.
In 1997, a series of public workshops, culminating in a presidential forum attended by President Clinton, identified a number of
measures required to prevent the permanent loss of the lake’s deep blue clarity. As a result, an Executive Order established a Federal Interagency
Partnership to work with state and local entities to preserve this national treasure.
One member of this partnership, the U.S. Geological Survey, mapped the deeper portions of the lake (over 1600 feet deep) in 1998,
using a multi-beam sonar system. This technology proved ineffective in the critical shallow water margins from which unwanted nutrients entering the
lake are thought to originate from. Consequently, another member of the partnership, the Sacramento District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, recently
brought in the Scanning Hydrographic Operational Airborne Lidar Survey (SHOALS) system to survey these missing areas and complete the data set that would
provide a complete map the lake subsurface. This combined Corps/USGS data will be instrumental in understanding the cause and effect of natural and manmade
lakeshore erosion processes.
SHOALS is a state-of-the-art technology that uses an airborne mounted laser to determine the water depth by measuring the time difference
in laser energy returns from the water surface and the lake bottom. A world leader in airborne lidar hydrography, SHOALS is owned by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers and administered by the Joint Airborne Lidar Bathymetry Technical Center of Expertise (JALBTCX), a partnership with the Naval Meteorology and
Oceanography Command, located at the Mobile District Office.
The system is operated by international survey leader John E. Chance & Associates, Inc., a member of the multi-national Fugro group of
companies with 200 offices in 45 countries.
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