Lake Boehmer Explained

Lake Boehmer
Location:Pecos County, Texas
Coordinates:31.2237°N -102.7288°W
Type:reservoir
Etymology:named after former landowner Bernard Boehmer
Pushpin Map:Texas#USA

Lake Boehmer is an artificial lake in Pecos County, Texas.[1] [2]

Area and water composition

The lake has been slowly growing since 2003. It covers an area of more than sixty acres and the water is three times as salty as seawater. The casing in the well is corroded and the well hit a salt layer. The sulfate level is twenty-five times the legal limit for drinking water.

Origins

In the 1940s or 1950s, oil wells were drilled near Imperial, Texas. None of them produced oil, but water and the oil companies deeded them to landowners who used them to irrigate farms, but they have fallen into disuse.[3]

Name and ownership

The lake is named after former landowner Bernard Boehmer. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation have tried to contact him via a registered letter to an address in Missouri, but it is not known if it reached him or if he replied. The ownership of the lake wells is unclear.There is also controversy as to where responsibility lies for cleanup and remediation.

References

Houston Chronicle: Take the money and plug|https://www.houstonchronicle.com/opinion/editorials/article/Editorial-Take-the-money-and-plug-Texas-can-t-17709076.php

Notes and References

  1. The Dead Sea of West Texas. 2021-12-08. Texas Monthly. Gold. Russell.
  2. News: A toxic lake grows unchecked in the West Texas desert. Marks. Michael. 2021-12-09. 2021-12-18. Texas Standard.
  3. Web site: ABANDONED TEXAS OIL WELLS SEEN AS "TICKING TIME BOMBS" OF CONTAMINATION. Jim Malewitz. 2019-03-26. 17 Jan 2022.