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Puyehue Lake ( Spanish pronunciation: [puˈjewe] ), ( Mapudungun : puye , "small fish" and hue , "place" ) is an Andean piedmont lake on the border of Los Lagos Region with Los Ríos Region of Chile .

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5-524: The Gol-Gol River is the main tributary of Puyehue Lake in southern Chile . Gol-Gol River runs in an east-west direction between the volcanoes Puyehue-Cordón Caulle and Casablanca . Its catchment areas covers the whole area between these massifs from the Cardenal Antonio Samoré Pass to Puyehue Lake. This Los Lagos Region location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to

10-581: A river in Chile is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Puyehue Lake Puyehue is a lake of glacial origin. Several times during the Pleistocene glaciations , the lake depression was occupied by a large glacial lobe of the Patagonian Ice Sheet , which formed a series of moraines along its western shore. The lake has an east–west elongated shape with Fresia Island in

15-579: A time meltwater from the Rupanco glacier flowed north into Puyehue Lake. The 2011 Puyehue Volcano eruption polluted the Golgol River , a source of the lake, killing fish. Pyroclastic material reached Puyehue Lake through river transport, which resulted in the deposition of a layer of volcanic ash at the bottom of the lake. In the 16th century the lake was known to the Spanish as Llobén , from

20-610: The existence of the Little Ice Age in the Southern Hemisphere . A longer sediment core from the same site was used to reconstruct the evolution of the lake and its drainage basin during the last 18,000 years. At the time the glacier occupying the Puyhue basin had retreated during deglaciation as to calv at a proglacial Puyehue Lake the glacier at Rupanco basin (40°49' S) was at its maximum extent. For

25-540: The middle and two minor peninsulas pointing toward the island, one from the north and one from the south. The lake has a remarkably smooth shoreline, with only one inlet of significance: Futacullín Bay on the south. Entre Lagos at the western end is the only town on the lake. As with most other lakes of southern Chile , Puyehue Lake acts as a sediment trap for material from the Andes. Sediment cores taken from Puyehue Lake in 2001 and 2002 have been interpreted as supporting

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