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・ Lake Leopoldo
・ Lake Lerma salamander
・ Lake Lescarbot
・ Lake Leschenaultia
・ Lake Lesina
・ Lake Lessing
・ Lake Lestijärvi
・ Lake Letas
・ Lake Letta
・ Lake Lewis
・ Lake Leśnia
・ Lake Lida
・ Lake Liddell
・ Lake Lidzbark
・ Lake Liepāja
Lake Lila
・ Lake Lillian
・ Lake Lillian (Florida)
・ Lake Lillian (Kandiyohi County, Minnesota)
・ Lake Lillian Neighborhood Historic District
・ Lake Lillian Township, Kandiyohi County, Minnesota
・ Lake Lillian, Minnesota
・ Lake Lillinonah
・ Lake Limestone
・ Lake Lincoln State Park
・ Lake Linden Historic District
・ Lake Linden Village Hall and Fire Station
・ Lake Linden, Michigan
・ Lake Linden–Hubbell High School
・ Lake Lindero, Agoura Hills, California


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Lake Lila : ウィキペディア英語版
Lake Lila

Lake Lila is a 1,400 acre (5.6 km²) Lake in the William C. Whitney Wilderness Area, in the town of Long Lake, in the west-central portion of the Adirondack Park.
Lake Lila is the largest lake in the Adirondack Park whose shoreline is entirely state-owned; it is the twenty-second largest body of water in the park. The southeastern portion of Lake Lila is an extensive wetland drained by the Shingle Shanty Brook, which feeds the lake; the lake is drained by the Beaver River. The lake is bordered by Mount Frederica.
There are 24 primitive campsites, 18 of which are accessible only by boat. Boats must be hand-launched, and motors are not permitted; there is a carry from the parking lot to the lake.
==History==
Lake Lila was originally called Smith Lake. William Seward Webb assembled a preserve, called Nehasane Park, in the process of creating the Mohawk and Malone Railway. Webb built a Great Camp, Forest Lodge, on the western shore of Smith Lake, which he renamed for his wife, Lila Osgood Vanderbilt Webb, the daughter of William H. Vanderbilt.
In 1979, New York State acquired the of Nehasane Park surrounding Lake Lila; Forest Lodge was razed by the state at the request of the Webb family as part of the acquisition process. The railway station that formerly served the lodge still stands. The area was originally known as Lake Lila Primitive Area, before it was made a part of the William C. Whitney Wilderness Area in 1997. The railroad right-of-way is now the Remsen-Lake Placid Travel Corridor.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Lake Lila」の詳細全文を読む



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