Lake Traverse

For other uses, see Traverse Lake (disambiguation).
Lake Traverse
Location Traverse County, Minnesota / Roberts County, South Dakota, United States
Coordinates 45°46′09″N 96°38′20″W / 45.76917°N 96.63889°W / 45.76917; -96.63889Coordinates: 45°46′09″N 96°38′20″W / 45.76917°N 96.63889°W / 45.76917; -96.63889
Primary inflows Mustinka River
Primary outflows Bois de Sioux River
Basin countries United States
Surface elevation 976 ft (297 m)

Lake Traverse is the southernmost body of water in the Hudson Bay watershed of North America. It lies along the border between the U.S. states of Minnesota and South Dakota. A low continental divide separates the land at the southern shore of Lake Traverse from the Little Minnesota River, which is part of the Mississippi River System and flows within a mile of the lake near the town of Browns Valley, Minnesota and Wheaton, Minnesota.

Lake Traverse is an Anglicization of Lac Traverse, a French name meaning "across the lake".[1]

Prehistorically, the south end of Lake Traverse was the southern outlet of glacial Lake Agassiz across the Traverse Gap into Glacial River Warren; that river carved the valley now occupied by the present-day Minnesota River.

Lake Traverse is drained at its north end by the northward-flowing Bois de Sioux River, a tributary of the Red River of the North. A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dam at the outflow regulates the lake's level. The Mustinka River flows into the lake just above the dam.

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