Lough Mask (Irish: Loch Measca)[2] is a limestone lake of about 83 km2 (32 sq mi)[1] in Counties Mayo and Galway, Ireland, north of Lough Corrib. Lough Mask is the middle of the three lakes, which empty into the Corrib River, through Galway, into Galway Bay. Lough Carra flows into Lough Mask, which discharges through the Cong Canal and underground passages in the limestone bedrock of the district. The flows from the underground passages and the Cong Canal come together at the village of Cong to form the River Cong which flows into Lough Corrib.[3]
Lough Mask is the fourth largest lake, by area, in Ireland and the sixth largest lake in the island of Ireland. The eastern half of Lough Mask is shallow and contains many islands. The other half (Upper Lough Mask) is much deeper, sinking to a long trench with depths in excess of 50 metres.[4]
Lough Mask has a mean depth of 15 m (49 ft), and a maximum depth of 58 m (190 ft).[5] Its water volume of 1.3 km3 (1.1 million acre⋅ft)[6] is the largest in the Republic of Ireland and the second largest on the island of Ireland (after Lough Neagh).
The "Lough Mask Murders" of 1882 were a notorious incident in the Land War in which a grandfather and grandson acting as bailiffs were killed by tenant farmers and their bodies dumped in the lake.[7]
Legend
According to local legend, a banshee haunts Bly Island, a small island in the lough. There have also been rumored sightings of a banshee around the shore of the lough as well as other forms of paranormal activity.[citation needed]
Fishing and recreation
The lake is popular for its trout fishing. The World Cup Trout Fly Fishing Championship takes place annually on Lough Mask at Cushlough Bay near Ballinrobe.[8]
Petersburg Outdoor Education Center is situated on the shore of the lough, close to Bly Island. The center uses the lake for numerous water sports including kayaking, canoeing and sailing.
Other
"Loch Measca" was taken as the pen-name of Séan Seoighe (John Joyce) in Eachtra múinteóra an Irish-language memoir published in 1929.[citation needed]
^ Drew, D. P. and Daly, D., Groundwater and Karstification in Mid-Galway, South Mayo and North Clare, Geological Survey of Ireland, Report Series 93/3, Dublin, 1993. Pages 21, 22, 23.
^The Bathymetry and Origin of the Larger Lakes of Ireland Author(s): J. K. Charlesworth
^MAYO COUNTY COUNCIL TOORMAKEADY
WASTE WATER DISCHARGE Page 8 [1]
^MAYO COUNTY COUNCIL TOO
URMAKEADY
WASTE WATER DISCHARGE Page 12 [2]
^Simonsen, Mary Lydon (18 June 2017). A Murderer's Country: Joyce County, Galway, During Ireland's Land War (1879–1882). Quail Creek Publishing. ISBN9780692910610.