Lake Beeac

Lake in Victoria, Australia


title: "Lake Beeac" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["lakes-of-victoria-(state)", "important-bird-areas-of-victoria-(state)", "ramsar-sites-in-australia", "western-district-(victoria)", "endorheic-lakes-of-australia"] description: "Lake in Victoria, Australia" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Beeac" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Lake in Victoria, Australia ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox body of water"]

FieldValue
nameLake Beeac
imageLake Beeac Reflections.JPG
image_size250px
altThe photo shows Lake Beeac and the sky above it. The surface of the water is mirror-like, it reflects the blue sky and the clouds in it.
captionShallow water and the crystallizing of salt reflect the sky beautifully on Lake Beeac
locationWestern District Lakes, Victoria
pushpin_mapAustralia Victoria
pushpin_relief1
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_map_altA map of Victoria, Australia with a mark indicating the location of Lake Beeac
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Victoria
coordinates_footnotes
coords
typeEndorheic, hypersaline
outflowEvaporation
basin_countriesAustralia
date-built
date-flooded
area560 ha
reference
::

| name = Lake Beeac | other_name = | image = Lake Beeac Reflections.JPG | image_size = 250px | alt = The photo shows Lake Beeac and the sky above it. The surface of the water is mirror-like, it reflects the blue sky and the clouds in it. | caption = Shallow water and the crystallizing of salt reflect the sky beautifully on Lake Beeac | image_bathymetry = | alt_bathymetry = | caption_bathymetry = | location = Western District Lakes, Victoria | pushpin_map = Australia Victoria | pushpin_relief = 1 | pushpin_label_position = bottom | pushpin_map_alt = A map of Victoria, Australia with a mark indicating the location of Lake Beeac | pushpin_map_caption = Location in Victoria | coor_pinpoint = | coordinates_footnotes = | coords = | type = Endorheic, hypersaline | inflow = | outflow = Evaporation | catchment = | basin_countries = Australia | date-built = | date-flooded = | agency = | length = | width = | area = 560 ha | depth = | max-depth = | volume = | residence_time = | shore = | elevation = | frozen = | islands = | cities = | reference = Lake Beeac, a hypersaline endorheic lake, is located beside the small town of Beeac in the Lakes and Craters region of the Victorian Volcanic Plains of south-west Victoria, in southeastern Australia. The 560 ha lake is situated about 19 km northeast of Colac, and its high salinity gives it a milky-blue colour. The lake is part of the Ramsar-listed Western District Lakes site, and enjoys international recognition of its wetland values and some protection for its waterbirds.

Wildlife

Despite its extreme salinity, Lake Beeac supports brine shrimp which in turn feed water birds such as the banded stilt and the red-necked avocet. Birds have been known to come from as far as Siberia and China to eat the lake's shrimp. The lake is an important habitat for wetland water-birds. The lake forms part of the Lake Corangamite Complex Important Bird Area, so identified by BirdLife International because it sometimes supports globally important numbers of waterbirds.

History

Between the late 1860s and the 1950s, salt works at Lake Beeac and other nearby lakes produced commercial quantities of salt. The Melbourne spice merchant Henry Berry established a salt works at Lake Cundare, just north of Beeac, in 1868 which produced salt by a boiling and crystallising process. The works produced a fine salt for domestic consumption under the label "Tower of London". Production ceased in 1895.

Lake Beeac was the main lake in the area used for the collecting of naturally crystallised salt during the summer months. This process produced a coarse salt that was sold for agricultural and industrial purposes. Production depended on the weather: during the hot dry summer of 1921, 3000 tonnes were produced, but in a wet summer no salt at all could be collected. Commercial production ceased in 1954, by which time cheaper production elsewhere had made the Lake Beeac salt uneconomical.

References

de:Lake Colac

References

  1. {{Gazetteer of Australia
  2. "An Audit of the Ecological Condition of Australian Rivers". [[Government of Australia]].
  3. {{Cite VICNAMES. 7621. Lake Beeac
  4. "Map of Lake Beeac, VIC". Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia.
  5. "Lake Beeac". Colac... a community website.
  6. "Beeac". [[Shire of Colac Otway.
  7. (2011). "Lake Corangamite Complex". [[BirdLife International]].
  8. Dawn Missen & Anne Trigg, ''Beeac: Winds of Change 1860–2010'', Dawn Missen & Anne Trigg, Colac, 2011, pp. 74–75.
  9. [[Norm Houghton (historian). Norman Houghton]], ''Scrapers and Boilers: Beeac's Lake Salt Trade 1868–1968'', Norman Houghton, Geelong, 2016, pp. 2–16.
  10. Houghton, pp. 22–25.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

lakes-of-victoria-(state)important-bird-areas-of-victoria-(state)ramsar-sites-in-australiawestern-district-(victoria)endorheic-lakes-of-australia