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Encyclopedia > Lake Baykal
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Lake Baikal
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The Yenisei River basin, Lake Baikal, and the cities of Dikson, Dudinka, Turukhansk, Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk

Lake Baikal (Russian: О́зеро Байка́л (Ozero Baykal)), a lake in southern Siberia, Russia, between Irkutsk Oblast on the northwest and Buryatia on the southeast, near Irkutsk. At 636 km long and 80 km wide, it is the largest freshwater lake in Asia (31,494 km²) and the deepest lake in the world (1743 m). Its age is estimated at 25-30 million years, making it one of the world's most ancient lakes in geological history. It is unique among large, high-latitude lakes in that its sediments have not been scoured by overriding continental ice sheets. U.S. and Russian studies of sediment cores in the 1990s provide a detailed record of climatic variation over the past 250,000 years. Longer and deeper sediment cores are expected in the near future. If all the sediment were scoured from the lake, it would be 9 km deep.


The lake is completely surrounded by mountains, technically protected as a national park and contains 22 small islands, the largest, Olkhon, being 72 kilometers long. The lake is fed by some 300 inflowing rivers, the six main ones being Selenga, the source of some of Baikal's pollution, Chikoy, Khiloh, Uda, Barguzin and Upper Angara, and is drained through a single outlet, the Angara River.


The bottom of the lake is 1285 m below sea level and is the deepest continental rift on the earth. Its volume — 23,000 km³ — is approximately equal to the total volume of the 5 Great Lakes of North America, or to about 20% of the total fresh water on the earth.


Baikal is a young rift lake, the rift widens about 2 centimeters a year. The fault zone is seismically active: there are hot springs in the area and notable earthquakes every few years.


Few lakes compete with Lake Baikal in biotic diversity. As many as 852 species and 233 varieties of algae and 1550 species and varieties of animals inhabitate the lake; many of them are endemic species. The world-famous Baikal Seal (Phoca sibirica), the only mammal living in the lake, is found throughout the whole area of the lake.


Muted protest about the establishment of a wood pulp and cellulose plant at the south end of the lake, at Baikalsk, first planned in 1957, originated ecological awareness among educated Russians, though not among the Soviet bureaucracy. The plant still pours industrial effluent into Baikal's waters.


Very little was known about Lake Baikal until work began on the Trans-Siberian railway. The scenic loop encircling Lake Baikal required 200 bridges and 33 tunnels. At the same time (18961902) a large hydrogeographical expedition headed by F. Drizhenko produced the first detailed atlas of the contours of Baikal's depths.


External links

  • USGS survey fact sheet on Lake Baikal (http://marine.usgs.gov/fact-sheets/baikal/)
  • World lakes database entry (http://www.ilec.or.jp/database/asi/asi-27.html) for Lake Baikal

  Results from FactBites:
 
lake, body of water. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 (668 words)
Lakes are of particular importance since they act as catchment basins for close to 40% of the landscape, supply drinking water, generate electricity, are used to irrigate fields, and serve as recreational areas.
Flora and fauna in the lake are usually found in three zones: the littoral zone closest to the shallow water shore; the limnetic, in the open, well-lit water away from most vegetation; and the lower profundal zones areas of low oxygen and light.
Lakes are transient features on the earth’s surface and generally disappear in a relatively short period of geologic time by a combination of processes (e.g., erosion of an outlet or climatic changes that bring drier conditions).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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