Lake Tight | |
---|---|
Location | Ohio & West Virginia |
Coordinates | 38°48′N 82°13′W / 38.8°N 82.21°W |
Lake type | former lake |
Etymology | William G. Tight |
Primary inflows | Laurentide Ice Sheet |
Primary outflows | Ohio River |
Basin countries | United States |
First flooded | 2,000,000 years before present |
Max. length | c. 85 mi (137 km) |
Max. width | c. 90 mi (140 km) – 212 mi (341 km) |
Surface area | 9,920 sq mi (25,700 km2) |
Average depth | 340 ft (100 m) |
Max. depth | 400 ft (120 m) |
Residence time | 170,000 years in existence |
Surface elevation | c. 1,160 ft (354 m) |
References | Goldthwaite, R. P., "The Teays Valley Problem, a Historical Perspective", pp. 3-8 in Wilton N. Melhorn, 1991, Geology and Hydrogeology of the Teays-Mahomet Bedrock Valley Systems, Geological Society of America Special Paper. |
Lake Tight, named for geologist William G. Tight, was a glacial lake in what is present-day Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia, during the Ice Age the early Pleistocene before 700,000 years.[1]