Kathleen Lake
Kathleen Lake is a lake in Yukon, Canada, located south of the town of Haines Junction within Kluane National Park and Reserve. Located at Haines Highway Kilometre 219.7. It hosts a day-use area, a boat launch, a campground, and several hiking trails, including the challenging 3.1 mi ascent to King's Throne, a natural, glacially-formed amphitheater overlooking the lake.
Kathleen Lake is characterized by exceptionally clear waters and the presence of kokanee salmon, a landlocked population of sockeye living and reproducing solely in freshwater bodies. Located at an elivation of it is the largest lake wholly within the national park's boundaries, with an area of, a maximum depth of and an average depth of.
Kathleen Lake was named for a girl from Berwickshire County, Scotland, left behind by William "Scotty" Hume, a North-West Mounted Police constable stationed on the Dalton Trail from 1900 to 1902.