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・ Devils Glacier
・ Devils Gullet State Reserve
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・ Devils Head Site
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Devils Kitchen Lake
・ Devils Kitchen Picnic Shelter
・ Devils Lake (Amtrak station)
・ Devils Lake (Deschutes County, Oregon)
・ Devils Lake (Lincoln County, Oregon)
・ Devils Lake (Michigan)
・ Devils Lake (Minnesota)
・ Devils Lake (North Dakota)
・ Devils Lake Carnegie Library
・ Devils Lake Commercial District
・ Devils Lake High School
・ Devils Lake Journal
・ Devils Lake Masonic Temple
・ Devils Lake Public Schools
・ Devils Lake Regional Airport


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Devils Kitchen Lake : ウィキペディア英語版
Devils Kitchen Lake

Devil's Kitchen Lake is an 810-acre (3.3 km²) reservoir in southern Illinois, created by the damming of ''Grassy Creek'', a tributary of Crab Orchard Lake and the Big Muddy River. Most of the lake is located in Williamson County, southwest of Marion, Illinois. The lake is accessible from Interstate 57. Two arms of the lake penetrate into adjacent Union County. The lake is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
==Geology and history ==
Devil's Kitchen Lake is located just south of the farthest advance reached by glaciers during the Ice Ages. Instead of being located in the relatively flat, rolling terrain characteristic of most of Illinois, the lake is located in an unglaciated zone of deep sandstone valleys and steep slopes. Devils Kitchen Lake is located in one of these valleys, and it is one of the deepest lakes in Illinois. Sections of the lake are as deep as 90 feet (27 m).〔Chris McKinley, "Southern Illinois Lakes: Cool, Cool Water", accessed April 23, 2007.()〕
The drainage area surrounding Devil's Kitchen Lake was not very suitable for agriculture and, after being cleared in the early 19th century by frontier settlers, the region drifted out of cultivation. Much of the land was condemned by the federal government during the Great Depression of the 1930s as a form of agricultural readjustment and relief. The Civilian Conservation Corps built Crab Orchard Lake in that decade, and two lakes in Crab Orchard's drainage area, Devils Kitchen Lake and Little Grassy Lake, soon followed it to stabilize water supply to the larger, downstream lake and provide additional recreational opportunities. The drainage area around Devil's Kitchen Lake was allocated to Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge, Crab Orchard Wilderness, Panther Den Wilderness, and Shawnee National Forest.〔Susan L. Post, "Hiking Illinois" (1997; Human Kinetics), page 189.〕

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