Lake Hazen


Lake Hazen is often called the northernmost lake of Canada, in the northern part of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, but detailed maps show several smaller lakes up to more than farther north on Canada's northernmost island. Turnabout Lake is immediately northeast of the northern end of Hazen lake. Still further north are the Upper and Lower Lakes, with Upper Dumbell Lake southwest of Alert, Canada's northernmost settlement on the coast of Lincoln Sea, Arctic Ocean.
The northeastern end of Lake Hazen is southwest of Alert. Lake Hazen is the largest lake north of the Arctic Circle by volume. By surface area, it is third largest, after Lake Taymyr in Russia and Lake Inari in Finland. Lake Hazen is long and up to wide, with an area of. It stretches in a southwest-northeast direction from to. The lake is up to deep and has an estimated volume of 51.4 km3. The shoreline is long and above sea level. It has several islands, the largest of them being Johns Island, which is long and less than wide, also extending in a southwest-northeast direction like the lake itself. Other islands include Gatter Island, Clay Island, Whisler Island, and Dyas Island. The lake is covered by ice about ten months a year. It is fed by glaciers from the surrounding Eureka Uplands—Palaeozoic rocks north of the lake, rising up to above sea level—and drained by long Ruggles River, which flows into Chandler Fjord on the northern east coast of Ellesmere Land. The lake is flanked by the Arctic Cordillera.
The area around the lake is a thermal oasis within a polar desert, with summer temperatures up to.
The lake is part of Quttinirpaaq National Park.
Artifacts of Thule civilization were discovered near Lake Hazen in 2004. Thule preceded the Inuit. In 1882, Adolphus Greely discovered the lake during his 1881–1883 expedition. Greely's base camp for the exploration was Fort Conger at the northeastern shore of Ellesmere Island, at, which was established as part of the first International Polar Year. Greely named the lake in honour of General William Babcock Hazen, who had organized the expedition. Camp Hazen was established on the northern shore of the lake in 1957 during the International Geophysical Year, and has been used by various scientific parties since then.
Lake Hazen is populated by two morphotypes of Arctic char, a larger and a smaller. Studies in the 1990s indicated neither char morphotype is anadromous, but Inuit traditional knowledge states otherwise.

Named Inflows

All named rivers and creeks are listed in a clockwise manner, starting in the south:
At the southwestern end :
On the northwest coast :
At the northeast end :
On the southeast coast :
Hikers can start their hiking trips at Lake Hazen itself, or from Tanquary Fiord warden station at Tanquary Fiord Airport southwest of the lake.