Tangle Lakes Explained

Tangle Lakes
Location:Alaska
Pushpin Map:Alaska

The Tangle Lakes (Long Tangle Lake, Lower Tangle Lake, Round Tangle Lake, and Upper Tangle Lake[1]) are a 16miles long chain of lakes connected by streams in interior Alaska. They form the headwaters for the Delta River.

Access and use

The main public access to the Lakes is from a Bureau of Land Management maintained campground and boat launch at Round Tangle Lake, about from Paxson on the Denali Highway. The boat launch is also the upper terminus of the Delta River Canoe Trail, a 2-3 day route to the Gulkana River and the Richardson Highway. The lakes support many species of fish, including lake trout, burbot, and Arctic grayling. The area around the lakes consists mostly of tundra due to the high elevation .

History

Tangle Lakes Archeological District
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Nearest City:Paxson
Added:November 12, 1971
Refnum:71001091
Designated Other1:Alaska Heritage Resources Survey
Designated Other1 Name:Alaska Heritage Resources Survey
Designated Other1 Color:
  1. A8EDEF
Designated Other1 Abbr:AHRS
Designated Other1 Number:XMH-201
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom

The Tangle Lakes area has been the subject of extensive archaeological exploration. Prior to 1976, almost 150 sites had been discovered showing that The Tangle Lakes have been populated intermittently since the settlement of the New World. The sites are concentrated close to the lakes in a range covering about 80 square kilometres and the attraction of the location was most likely that the windswept hills surrounding the lakes would have attracted caribou seeking to graze on the exposed lichen (not for fishing as the lakes would not have been able to support a settlement).[2] Part of the Tangle Lakes area has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places as an archaeological district in 1971.

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. [The Milepost]
  2. F. H. West. "Old World Affinities of Archaeological Complexes from Tangle Lakes (Central Alaska)". Beringia in the Cenozoic Era. Ed. V. L. Kontrimavichus. New Delhi: Amerind Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., 1984. 571-596.