60 ° 46' 33.726" N,
150 ° 17' 12.264" W
Kenai Peninsula
266 ft (81.08 m)
on Kenai Peninsula, 2.3 mi. SE of King Lake and 36 mi. NE of Kenai, Cook Inlet Low. 1.5 mile long.
HistoryNamed about 1963 by officials of Kenai National Moose Range, probably for the Willow Ptarmigan or Snow Grouse (Lagopus lagopus lagopus), which breeds in northern Alaska and winters only as far south as Sitka and the Aleutian Island (Pearson, 1944, pt. 2 p. 20).
Angler Lake, Antler Lake, Arrow Lake, Aspen Lake, Barbara Lake, Bear Lake, Beck Lake, Bedlam Lake, Bedlam Lake, Bedlam Lakes, Birch Tree Lake, Bird Lake, Lake Bratlie, Brood Lake, Browse Lake, Buteo Lake, Campsite Lake, Channel Lake, Coyote Lake, Crooked Lake, Dipper Lake, East Forest Lake, Eider Lake, Embryo Lake, Falcon Lake, Lake Frank, Gene Lake, Grouse Lake, Ilerum Lake, Jay Lake, Jigsaw Lake, Kakoon Lake, Kenaitze Lake, King Lake, Kraenberi Lake, Kuguyuk Lake, Lonesome Lake, Lower Tangerra Lake, Lynx Lake, Moon Lake, Moose Lake, Moose Pasture Lake, Mull Lake, Muskrat Lake, Neckshortka Lake, Nekutak Lake, Norak Lake, Nuthatch Lake, Odd Lake, Olsjold Lake, Pad Lake, Pepper Lake, Phalarope Lake, Rabbit Foot Lake, Red Squirrel Lake, Rifle Lake, Scenic Lake, Shoepac Lake, Snowshoe Lake, Sportfish Lake, Taiga Lake, Takukak Lake, Tangerra Lake, Tangerra Lake, Tine Lake, Trapper Joe Lake, Trigger Lake, Trumpeter Lake, Twig Lake, Two Island Lake, Ursus Lake, Vixen Lake, Vogel Lake, Warbler Lake, Wild Lake, Wilderness Lake, Wonder Lake, Woods Lake, Wren Lake,
Streams: