Historical Water Level Data Print
Friday, 14 August 2009 16:39

The record low level of the lake occurred in December of 2007 when the lake fell to an elevation of 1050.79 ft, approximately 20 feet below its full level.The record high was in April of 1964 when the lake reached elevation 1077.2 ft, approximately 6 feet above its full level.

At the end of 2007, the water level of Lake Lanier became notable, on a daily basis, for setting record low levels, not seen in over 25 years. By early November, the water level was dropping a fifth of a foot per day, with the largest drop on November 9 of 0.26 ft to 1054.08 ft.

The dropping water level slowed to 0.05 ft on November 17, 2007, after local rains and the reduced water flow at Buford Dam. However, water levels continued to decline almost daily during December 2007.

Further rains during November and December stabilized the water level at a low of 1,050.79 ft on December 26, 2007, with the water level fluctuating up/down by about 0.03 ft daily. On December 27, the water level began rising above the record low level, but fluctuating every few days, as effected by further rain and snow during December and January 2008. By the end of December 2007, alone, the water level had risen over a half-foot to 1,051.32 ft, rising over 3 times faster than it had recently dropped, and reversing more than 18 days of losses within just 5 days.

Finally, on February 18, 2008, the water level of Lake Lanier had risen back, above the record-low levels set in November, rising to 1,052.80 ft even higher than the December 1981 level of 1,052.7 ft, effectively reversing and ending the record-low phase of the drought crisis. As of April 21, 2009, the lake had risen back to 1063.39 feet.

Multiple rain storms further to the south, along the Chattahoochee River to Apalachicola Bay, brought increased fresh water to the Florida wildlife in November and December 2007, despite the reduced water flow from Lake Lanier at Buford Dam. Rainfall along the Chattahoochee River was often
greater than at Lake Lanier, spanning the much longer length of the river.

On November 22, 2007 the water level was at 1,052.34 feet, setting a new record low. The previous low was 1,052.7 ft, set in December 1981. The water level as of November 28, 2007 had dropped below the newly set record to 1,051.98 feet and still decreasing at 0.05 ft a day. One month later, the water level stabilized around a final low of 1,050.79 ft, recorded December 26, 2007 at Buford Dam, with the level rising or falling daily by about 0.03 ft, although a foot lower than November levels. The day after Christmas, the water level began rising from week to week.

Click to go back to main Lake Lanier Water Levels page.

Comments (5)Add Comment
0
I like graphs
September 20, 2009

Can we get a graph of the water level vs. time? That would be easier than having to read through the commentary.

0
T.L.May
September 21, 2009

How about giving the elevation of full pool in the article?
or giving how many feet below full pool is substantial.

Article left too many numbers out of the commentary to be useful, a newbie reporter could have written a better article than this.

lakeman
lakeman
September 21, 2009

All of the historical data is on the USACE website. And some really up to the minute data is on the USGS website, with all the cool graphs. Full pool is 1071 msl.

According to 2:15pm today were up 28.56 inches since 9/15. Rising fast. Fun Fun!

lakeman
lakeman
September 21, 2009

Sorry! "according to USGS, at 2:15pm . . .

0
i like graphs
September 22, 2009

awesome, lakeman. thanks. Here is the link (may need to refresh if the link is to real-time data).

http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ga/nwis/uv/?site_no=02334400&PARAmeter_cd=00062,72036,00054

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