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Instead, management of the school trust lands and investment of the school trust funds was vested in a board of three ex officio "Commissioners of Public Lands" which, in accordance with Article X, Section 7 of the Wisconsin State Constitution, are the duly elected Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and Attorney General. Wisconsin's "land ...
White Ash Lake is located in Apple River, Polk County, Wisconsin. White Ash Lake is a 116 acres (0.47 km 2) lake, and has a maximum depth of 9 feet (2.7 m). The lake clarity is low. The fish found in White Ash Lake are panfish, largemouth bass and Northern Pike. [1] Visitors can access the lake through public boat landings. [2]
Some Wisconsin residents are planning to submit a petition to the Department of Natural Resources to create a "home lake" rule for wake boats.
A group of Wisconsin citizens recently filed a petition with the Department of Natural Resources in an effort to require wake boats to stay on a single waterbody or prove they were decontaminated ...
There are seven public lands and parks on or near the lake: Sunset Park, Daycholah Lookout, Dodge County Park, Hattie Sherwood Park, Deacon Mills Park, Friday Club Park, and Playground Park. The lake has three beaches: Hattie Sherwood Beach, Dodge Country Park Beach, and Sunset County Park. There are eight public access boat landings on Green Lake.
Grindstone Lake is a large freshwater lake located in north central Wisconsin in the Town of Bass Lake, Sawyer County, United States, in township 40 north, ranges 8 and 9 west. The lake is roughly oval shaped being approximately three miles in length east to west and two miles (3 km) north to south.
The Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary is a national marine sanctuary [2] administered by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), an agency of the United States Department of Commerce; NOAA co-manages the sanctuary jointly with the State of Wisconsin. It is located in Lake Michigan along the coast of Wisconsin.
Through the Bureau of Natural Heritage Conservation, citizens can help care for Wisconsin’s public lands and native landscapes. Citizens can also help scientists monitor Wisconsin's plants, animals, water, weather, and soils, or become a volunteer instructor to help and influence other resource users. [26]