Lake Wells

Lake Wells is an ephemeral salt lake in the centre of Western Australia, lying in close proximity to Lake Carnegie.[1] It lies east of Wiluna and is at the southern edge of the Little Sandy Desert and south western border of the Gibson Desert. It also lies to the north west of the Great Central Road and the Great Victoria Desert. Its surface elevation is 436 metres above mean sea-level.[2] Lake Wells has an area of 1895 square kilometres.[3]

Lake Wells
LocationGoldfields-Esperance, Western Australia
Coordinates26°43′23″S 123°15′00″E
TypeEphemeral
Basin countriesAustralia
Max. length70 km (43 mi)
Max. width52 km (32 mi)
Surface area1,895 km2 (732 sq mi)
Surface elevation436 m (1,430 ft)

Discovery

Lake Wells was discovered in March 1892 during the second part of The Elder Scientific Exploring Expedition 1891–1892.[4] The 1891 phase of the expedition led by David Lindsay had been recalled by its benefactor Sir Thomas Elder, so in February 1892 Lindsay sent his second in command Lawrence Wells on a smaller expedition to explore the area east of the Murchison River in Western Australia.[5] During this expedition Wells (a surveyor) found and named Lake Way, Lake Darlot and Lake Wells.

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gollark: I kind of want a watch with an atomic clock so I can avoid having to manually recalibrate the time every month.
gollark: > Ion thrusters in operational use have an input power need of 1–7 kW (1.3–9.4 hp), exhaust velocity 20–50 km/s (45,000–112,000 mph), thrust 25–250 millinewtons (0.090–0.899 ozf) and efficiency 65–80%[3][4] though experimental versions have achieved 100 kilowatts (130 hp), 5 newtons (1.1 lbf).[5]
gollark: I don't think so.
gollark: You can accelerate the ions or whatever to very high velocities, so they're efficient mass-use-wise but have low thrust.

See also

References

  1. Hema, Maps (2005). Australia’s Great Desert Tracks NW Sheet (Map). Eight Mile Plains Queensland: Hema Maps. ISBN 978-1-86500-159-3.
  2. Geoscience Australia elevation data portal
  3. "Largest Lake in Australia". Travel Australia. 2011. Archived from the original on 15 January 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  4. "Journal of the Elder Scientific Exploring Expedition, 1891-2 under command of D. Lindsay". Retrieved 14 February 2017.
  5. "The Leonora Miner (WA: 1910-1928) Sat 18 Dec 1926". Retrieved 14 February 2017.
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