No monsters or mobsters found, but divers struck gold

STATELINE, Nevada — They found no trace of a mythical sea monster, no sign of mobsters in concrete shoes or long-lost treasure chests.

But scuba divers who spent a year cleaning up Lake Tahoe’s entire 72-mile shoreline have come away with what they hope will prove much more valuable: tons and tons of trash.

In addition to removing 25,000 pounds of underwater litter since last May, divers and volunteers have been meticulously sorting and logging the types and GPS locations of the waste.

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The dozens of dives that concluded this week were part of a first-of-its-kind effort to learn more about the source and potential harm caused by plastics and other pollutants in the storied alpine lake on the California-Nevada line.

Clean Up The Lake diver Colin West shows debris found in the lake from an initial dive in 2020, at Lake Tahoe, Nev.
Debris and garbage collected during the year-long Lake Tahoe cleanup are displayed.
Tires are seen in the foreground of Lake Tahoe, Nev., in May, 1972. From  1972 - 1977, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's program, DOCUMERICA, documented subjects of “environmental concern.”in May, 1972, at Lake Tahoe.

It’s also taken organizers on a journey through the history, folklore and development of the lake atop the Sierra Nevada that holds enough water to cover all of California 14 inches deep.

Diamond rings, plastic owls and shipwreck planks

The Washoe Tribe fished the turquoise-blue Tahoe for centuries before westward expansion in the mid-1800s brought railroads, timber barons and eventually Gatsby-like decadence to what became a playground for the rich and famous.


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