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Pigs Eye Lake

Coordinates: 44°55′N 93°1.5′W / 44.917°N 93.0250°W / 44.917; -93.0250
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(Redirected from Pig's Eye Lake)
Pigs Eye Lake
Location of the lake in Minnesota.
Location of the lake in Minnesota.
Pigs Eye Lake
LocationRamsey County, Minnesota
Coordinates44°55′N 93°1.5′W / 44.917°N 93.0250°W / 44.917; -93.0250
Typelake

Pigs Eye Lake is a riverine wetland that covers 628 acres in Ramsey County, in the U.S. state of Minnesota.[1] The Mdewakanton Village of Kaposia was located on the northern end until 1837 when the village was moved across the Mississippi to what is now South St. Paul. The 1930 construction of lock and dam #2 in Hastings down river, is responsible for its size and depth. The wetland is part of what the Army Corps of Engineers has designated as pond 2 of the upper Mississippi waterway. It is south of downtown St Paul on the east side of the river. Battle Creek enters the wetland from the northeast. In the 1960s the Army Corps of Engineers dredged two channels into it. One, out of the southwest corner, went due west out to the main river channel. The second went due south for barge traffic. Along that south channel the Army Corps created an industrial park with spoils from dredging the main channel. That portion of the industrial park has moorings for several barges at a time. In planning for the future the Army Corps built a levee defining the north side of the industrial park thereby creating an area for future dredging spoils.

Ramsey County Parks has requested that the County Commissioners approve the Army Corps of Engineers putting 400,000 cubic yards of river dredgings into the wetland to create islands.[2]

Pigs Eye Lake was named after Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant, an early pioneer who had one eye that had been injured.[3]

The 100 acres of Pigs eye island that separates the wetland from the main barge channel is home to a large Heron rookery.[4] Prior to Army Corps depositing the dredging in the 60's the wetland's eastern side had large Yellow-headed blackbird and Red-winged blackbird populations that are now gone.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Pigs Eye Lake
  2. ^ St. Paul activists question $16 Millio Project to put islands in pigseye Lake, Tad Vezner, Pioneer Press, 4 August 2019
  3. ^ Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: Their Origin and Historic Significance. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 442.
  4. ^ Pigs eye Rookery SNA, MDept of Natural Resources, dnr.state.mn.us