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A lake is often a naturally occurring, relatively large and fixed body of water on or near the Earth's surface. It is localized in a basin or interconnected basins surrounded by dry land.[1] Lakes lie completely on land and are separate from the ocean, although they may be connected with the ocean by rivers. Lakes, like other bodies of water, are part of the water cycle, the processes by which water moves around the Earth. Most lakes are fresh water and account for almost all the world's surface freshwater, but some are salt lakes with salinities even higher than that of seawater. Lakes vary significantly in surface area and volume of water.
Lakes are typically larger and deeper than ponds, which are also water-filled basins on land, although there are no official definitions or scientific criteria distinguishing the two.[2] Lakes are also distinct from lagoons, which are generally shallow tidal pools dammed by sandbars or other material at coastal regions of oceans or large lakes. Most lakes are fed by springs, and both fed and drained by creeks and rivers, but some lakes are endorheic without any outflow, while volcanic lakes are filled directly by precipitation runoffs and do not have any inflow streams.[3]
Natural lakes are generally found in mountainous areas (i.e. alpine lakes), dormant volcanic craters, rift zones and areas with ongoing glaciation. Other lakes are found in depressed landforms or along the courses of mature rivers, where a river channel has widened over a basin formed by eroded floodplains and wetlands. Some lakes are found in caverns underground. Some parts of the world have many lakes formed by the chaotic drainage patterns left over from the last ice age. All lakes are temporary over long periods of time, as they will slowly fill in with sediments or spill out of the basin containing them.
Artificially controlled lakes are known as reservoirs, and are usually constructed for industrial or agricultural use, for hydroelectric power generation, for supplying domestic drinking water, for ecological or recreational purposes, or for other human activities.
Etymology, meaning, and usage of "lake"
[edit]The word lake comes from Middle English lake ('lake, pond, waterway'), from Old English lacu ('pond, pool, stream'), from Proto-Germanic *lakō ('pond, ditch, slow moving stream'), from the Proto-Indo-European root *leǵ- ('to leak, drain'). Cognates include Dutch laak ('lake, pond, ditch'), Middle Low German lāke ('water pooled in a riverbed, puddle') as in: de:Wolfslake, de:Butterlake, Modern Low German Laak ('pool, puddle'), German Lache ('pool, puddle'), and Icelandic lækur ('slow flowing stream'). Also related are the English words leak and leach.
There is considerable uncertainty about defining the difference between lakes and ponds, and neither term has an internationally accepted definition across scientific disciplines or political boundaries.[4] For example, limnologists have defined lakes as water bodies that are simply a larger version of a pond, which can have wave action on the shoreline or where wind-induced turbulence plays a major role in mixing the water column. None of these definitions completely excludes ponds and all are difficult to measure. For this reason, simple size-based definitions are increasingly used to separate ponds and lakes. Definitions for lake range in minimum sizes for a body of water from 2 hectares (5 acres)[5]: 331 [6] to 8 hectares (20 acres).[7] Pioneering animal ecologist Charles Elton regarded lakes as waterbodies of 40 hectares (99 acres) or more.[8] The term lake is also used to describe a feature such as Lake Eyre, which is a dry basin most of the time but may become filled under seasonal conditions of heavy rainfall. In common usage, many lakes bear names ending with the word pond, and a lesser number of names ending with lake are, in quasi-technical fact, ponds. One textbook illustrates this point with the following: "In Newfoundland, for example, almost every lake is called a pond, whereas in Wisconsin, almost every pond is called a lake."[9]
One hydrology book proposes to define the term "lake" as a body of water with the following five characteristics:[4]
- It partially or totally fills one or several basins connected by straits;
- It has essentially the same water level in all parts (except for relatively short-lived variations caused by wind, varying ice cover, large inflows, etc.);
- It does not have regular intrusion of seawater;
- A considerable portion of the sediment suspended in the water is captured by the basins (for this to happen they need to have a sufficiently small inflow-to-volume ratio);
- The area measured at the mean water level exceeds an arbitrarily chosen threshold (for instance, one hectare).
With the exception of criterion 3, the others have been accepted or elaborated upon by other hydrology publications.[10][11]
Distribution
[edit]
The majority of lakes on Earth are freshwater, and most lie in the Northern Hemisphere at higher latitudes.[12] Canada, with a deranged drainage system, has an estimated 31,752 lakes larger than 3 square kilometres (1.2 sq mi) in surface area.[13] The total number of lakes in Canada is unknown but is estimated to be at least 2 million.[14] Finland has 168,000 lakes of 500 square metres (5,400 sq ft) in area, or larger, of which 57,000 are large (10,000 square metres (110,000 sq ft) or larger).[15]
Most lakes have at least one natural outflow in the form of a river or stream, which maintain a lake's average level by allowing the drainage of excess water.[3][16] Some lakes do not have a natural outflow and lose water solely by evaporation or underground seepage, or both. These are termed endorheic lakes.
Many lakes are artificial and are constructed for hydroelectric power generation, aesthetic purposes, recreational purposes, industrial use, agricultural use, or domestic water supply.
The number of lakes on Earth is undetermined because most lakes and ponds are very small and do not appear on maps or satellite imagery.[17][18][19][20] Despite this uncertainty, a large number of studies agree that small ponds are much more abundant than large lakes. For example, one widely cited study estimated that Earth has 304 million lakes and ponds, and that 91% of these are 1 hectare (2.5 acres) or less in area.[17] Despite the overwhelming abundance of ponds, almost all of Earth's lake water is found in fewer than 100 large lakes; this is because lake volume scales superlinearly with lake area.[21]
Extraterrestrial lakes exist on the moon Titan, which orbits the planet Saturn.[22] The shape of lakes on Titan is very similar to those on Earth.[19][23][24] Lakes were formerly present on the surface of Mars, but are now dry lake beds.[18][25][26]
Types
[edit]
In 1957, G. Evelyn Hutchinson published a monograph titled A Treatise on Limnology,[27] which is regarded as a landmark discussion and classification of all major lake types, their origin, morphometric characteristics, and distribution.[28][29][30] Hutchinson presented in his publication a comprehensive analysis of the origin of lakes and proposed what is a widely accepted classification of lakes according to their origin. This classification recognizes 11 major lake types that are divided into 76 subtypes. The 11 major lake types are:[28][29][30]
- tectonic lakes
- volcanic lakes
- glacial lakes
- fluvial lakes
- solution lakes
- landslide lakes
- aeolian lakes
- shoreline lakes
- organic lakes
- anthropogenic lakes
- meteorite (extraterrestrial impact) lakes
Tectonic lakes
[edit]Tectonic lakes are lakes formed by the deformation and resulting lateral and vertical movements of the Earth's crust. These movements include faulting, tilting, folding, and warping. Some of the largest lakes on Earth are rift lakes occupying rift valleys, e.g. Central African Rift lakes and Lake Baikal. Other well-known tectonic lakes, Caspian Sea, the Sea of Aral, and other lakes from the Pontocaspian occupy basins that have been separated from the sea by the tectonic uplift of the sea floor above the ocean level.[27][29][28][30]
Often, the tectonic action of crustal extension has created an alternating series of parallel grabens and horsts that form elongate basins alternating with mountain ranges. Not only does this promote the creation of lakes by the disruption of preexisting drainage networks, it also creates within arid regions endorheic basins that contain salt lakes (also called saline lakes). They form where there is no natural outlet, a high evaporation rate and the drainage surface of the water table has a higher-than-normal salt content. Examples of these salt lakes include Great Salt Lake and the Dead Sea. Another type of tectonic lake caused by faulting is sag ponds.[27][29][28][30]
Volcanic lakes
[edit]
Volcanic lakes are lakes that occupy either local depressions, e.g. craters and maars, or larger basins, e.g. calderas, created by volcanism. Crater lakes are formed in volcanic craters and calderas, which fill up with precipitation more rapidly than they empty via either evaporation, groundwater discharge, or a combination of both. Sometimes the latter are called caldera lakes, although often no distinction is made. An example is Crater Lake in Oregon, in the caldera of Mount Mazama. The caldera was created in a massive volcanic eruption that led to the subsidence of Mount Mazama around 4860 BC. Other volcanic lakes are created when either rivers or streams are dammed by lava flows or volcanic lahars.[27][29][28][30] The basin which is now Malheur Lake, Oregon was created when a lava flow dammed the Malheur River.[31] Among all lake types, volcanic crater lakes most closely approximate a circular shape.[3]
Glacial lakes
[edit]
Glacial lakes are lakes created by the direct action of glaciers and continental ice sheets. A wide variety of glacial processes create enclosed basins. As a result, there are a wide variety of different types of glacial lakes and it is often difficult to define clear-cut distinctions between different types of glacial lakes and lakes influenced by other activities. The general types of glacial lakes that have been recognized are lakes in direct contact with ice, glacially carved rock basins and depressions, morainic and outwash lakes, and glacial drift basins. Glacial lakes are the most numerous lakes in the world. Most lakes in northern Europe and North America have been either influenced or created by the latest, but not last, glaciation, to have covered the region.[27][29][28][30] Glacial lakes include proglacial lakes, subglacial lakes, finger lakes, and epishelf lakes. Epishelf lakes are highly stratified lakes in which a layer of freshwater, derived from ice and snow melt, is dammed behind an ice shelf that is attached to the coastline. They are mostly found in Antarctica.[32]
Fluvial lakes
[edit]Fluvial (or riverine)[33] lakes are lakes produced by running water. These lakes include plunge pool lakes, fluviatile dams and meander lakes.
Oxbow lakes
[edit]
The most common type of fluvial lake is a crescent-shaped lake called an oxbow lake due to the distinctive curved shape. They can form in river valleys as a result of meandering. The slow-moving river forms a sinuous shape as the outer side of bends are eroded away more rapidly than the inner side. Eventually a horseshoe bend is formed and the river cuts through the narrow neck. This new passage then forms the main passage for the river and the ends of the bend become silted up, thus forming a bow-shaped lake.[27][28][29][30] Their crescent shape gives oxbow lakes a higher perimeter to area ratio than other lake types.[3]
Fluviatile dams
[edit]These form where sediment from a tributary blocks the main river.[34]
Lateral lakes
[edit]These form where sediment from the main river blocks a tributary, usually in the form of a levee.[33]
Floodplain lakes
[edit]Lakes formed by other processes responsible for floodplain basin creation. During high floods they are flushed with river water. There are four types: 1. Confluent floodplain lake, 2. Contrafluent-confluent floodplain lake, 3. Contrafluent floodplain lake, 4. Profundal floodplain lake.[35]
Solution lakes
[edit]A solution lake is a lake occupying a basin formed by surface dissolution of bedrock. In areas underlain by soluble bedrock, its solution by precipitation and percolating water commonly produce cavities. These cavities frequently collapse to form sinkholes that form part of the local karst topography. Where groundwater lies near the grounds surface, a sinkhole will be filled water as a solution lake.[27][29] If such a lake consists of a large area of standing water that occupies an extensive closed depression in limestone, it is also called a karst lake. Smaller solution lakes that consist of a body of standing water in a closed depression within a karst region are known as karst ponds.[36] Limestone caves often contain pools of standing water, which are known as underground lakes. Classic examples of solution lakes are abundant in the karst regions at the Dalmatian coast of Croatia and within large parts of Florida.[27]
Landslide lakes
[edit]A landslide lake is created by the blockage of a river valley by either mudflows, rockslides, or screes. Such lakes are most common in mountainous regions. Although landslide lakes may be large and quite deep, they are typically short-lived.[27][28][29][30] An example of a landslide lake is Quake Lake, which formed as a result of the 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake.[37]
Most landslide lakes disappear in the first few months after formation, but a landslide dam can burst suddenly at a later stage and threaten the population downstream when the lake water drains out. In 1911, an earthquake triggered a landslide that blocked a deep valley in the Pamir Mountains region of Tajikistan, forming the Sarez Lake. The Usoi Dam at the base of the valley has remained in place for more than 100 years but the terrain below the lake is in danger of a catastrophic flood if the dam were to fail during a future earthquake.[38]
Tal-y-llyn Lake in north Wales is a landslide lake dating back to the last glaciation in Wales some 20000 years ago.
Aeolian lakes
[edit]Aeolian lakes are produced by wind action. These lakes are found mainly in arid environments, although some aeolian lakes are relict landforms indicative of arid paleoclimates. Aeolian lakes consist of lake basins dammed by wind-blown sand; interdunal lakes that lie between well-oriented sand dunes; and deflation basins formed by wind action under previously arid paleoenvironments. Moses Lake in Washington, United States, was originally a shallow natural lake and an example of a lake basin dammed by wind-blown sand.[27][28][29][30]
China's Badain Jaran Desert is a unique landscape of megadunes and elongated interdunal aeolian lakes, particularly concentrated in the southeastern margin of the desert.[39]
Shoreline lakes
[edit]Shoreline lakes are generally lakes created by blockage of estuaries or by the uneven accretion of beach ridges by longshore and other currents. They include maritime coastal lakes, ordinarily in drowned estuaries; lakes enclosed by two tombolos or spits connecting an island to the mainland; lakes cut off from larger lakes by a bar; or lakes divided by the meeting of two spits.[27][29][28][30]
Organic lakes
[edit]Organic lakes are lakes created by the actions of plants and animals. On the whole they are relatively rare in occurrence and quite small in size. In addition, they typically have ephemeral features relative to the other types of lakes. The basins in which organic lakes occur are associated with beaver dams, coral lakes, or dams formed by vegetation.[29][30]
Peat lakes
[edit]Peat lakes are a form of organic lake. They form where a buildup of partly decomposed plant material in a wet environment leaves the vegetated surface below the water table for a sustained period of time. They are often low in nutrients and mildly acidic, with bottom waters low in dissolved oxygen.[40]
Artificial lakes
[edit]
Artificial lakes or anthropogenic lakes are large waterbodies created by human activity. They can be formed by the intentional damming of rivers and streams, rerouting of water to inundate a previously dry basin, or the deliberate filling of abandoned excavation pits by either precipitation runoff, ground water, or a combination of both.[29][30] Artificial lakes may be used as storage reservoirs that provide drinking water for nearby settlements, to generate hydroelectricity, for flood management, for supplying agriculture or aquaculture, or to provide an aquatic sanctuary for parks and nature reserves.
The Upper Silesian region of southern Poland contains an anthropogenic lake district consisting of more than 4,000 water bodies created by human activity. The diverse origins of these lakes include: reservoirs retained by dams, flooded mines, water bodies formed in subsidence basins and hollows, levee ponds, and residual water bodies following river regulation.[41] Same for the Lusatian Lake District, Germany. In India, Sudarshana Lake is a historical artificial lake located in the semi-arid region of Girnar, Gujarat, originally constructed during the reign of Chandragupta Maurya.[42]
Meteorite (extraterrestrial impact) lakes
[edit]Meteorite lakes, also known as crater lakes (not to be confused with volcanic crater lakes), are created by catastrophic impacts with the Earth by extraterrestrial objects (either meteorites or asteroids).[27][29][30] Examples of meteorite lakes are Lonar Lake in India,[43] Lake El'gygytgyn in northeast Siberia,[44] and the Pingualuit crater lake in Quebec, Canada.[45] As in the cases of El'gygytgyn and Pingualuit, meteorite lakes can contain unique and scientifically valuable sedimentary deposits associated with long records of paleoclimatic changes.[44][45]
Other classification methods
[edit]

In addition to the mode of origin, lakes have been named and classified according to various other important factors such as thermal stratification, oxygen saturation, seasonal variations in lake volume and water level, salinity of the water mass, relative seasonal permanence, degree of outflow, and so on. The names used by the lay public and in the scientific community for different types of lakes are often informally derived from the morphology of the lakes' physical characteristics or other factors. Also, different cultures and regions of the world have their own popular nomenclature.
By thermal stratification
[edit]One important method of lake classification is on the basis of thermal stratification, which has a major influence on the animal and plant life inhabiting a lake, and the fate and distribution of dissolved and suspended material in the lake. For example, the thermal stratification, as well as the degree and frequency of mixing, has a strong control over the distribution of oxygen within the lake.
Professor F.-A. Forel,[46] also referred to as the "Father of limnology", was the first scientist to classify lakes according to their thermal stratification.[47] His system of classification was later modified and improved upon by Hutchinson and Löffler.[48] As the density of water varies with temperature, with a maximum at +4 degrees Celsius, thermal stratification is an important physical characteristic of a lake that controls the fauna and flora, sedimentation, chemistry, and other aspects of individual lakes. First, the colder, denser water typically forms a layer near the bottom, which is called the hypolimnion. Second, normally overlying the hypolimnion is a transition zone known as the metalimnion. Finally, overlying the metalimnion is a surface layer of warmer water with a lower density, called the epilimnion. This typical stratification sequence can vary widely, depending on the specific lake or the time of year, or a combination of both.[29][47][48] The classification of lakes by thermal stratification presupposes lakes with sufficient depth to form a hypolimnion; accordingly, very shallow lakes are excluded from this classification system.[29][48]
Based upon their thermal stratification, lakes are classified as either holomictic, with a uniform temperature and density from top to bottom at a given time of year, or meromictic, with layers of water of different temperature and density that do not intermix. The deepest layer of water in a meromictic lake does not contain any dissolved oxygen so there are no living aerobic organisms. Consequently, the layers of sediment at the bottom of a meromictic lake remain relatively undisturbed, which allows for the development of lacustrine deposits. In a holomictic lake, the uniformity of temperature and density allows the lake waters to completely mix. Based upon thermal stratification and frequency of turnover, holomictic lakes are divided into amictic lakes, cold monomictic lakes, dimictic lakes, warm monomictic lakes, polymictic lakes, and oligomictic lakes.[29][48]
Lake stratification does not always result from a variation in density because of thermal gradients. Stratification can also result from a density variation caused by gradients in salinity. In this case, the hypolimnion and epilimnion are separated not by a thermocline but by a halocline, which is sometimes referred to as a chemocline.[29][48]
By seasonal variations in water level and volume
[edit]Lakes are informally classified and named according to the seasonal variation in their lake level and volume. Some of the names include:
- Ephemeral lake is a short-lived lake or pond.[49] If it fills with water and dries up (disappears) seasonally it is known as an intermittent lake[50] They often fill poljes.[51]
- Dry lake is a popular name for an ephemeral lake that contains water only intermediately at irregular and infrequent intervals.[36][52]
- Perennial lake is a lake that has water in its basin throughout the year and is not subject to extreme fluctuations in level.[36][49]
- Playa lake is a typically shallow, intermittent lake that covers or occupies a playa either in wet seasons or in especially wet years but subsequently drying up in an arid or semiarid region.[36][52]
- Vlei is a name used in South Africa for a shallow lake which varies considerably in level with the seasons.[53]
By water chemistry
[edit]Lakes may be informally classified and named according to the general chemistry of their water mass. Using this classification method, the lake types include:
- An acid lake contains water with a below-neutral pH of less than 6.5. A lake is considered to be highly acidic if its pH drops below 5.5, leading to biological consequences. Such lakes include: acidic pit lakes occupying abandoned mines and excavations; naturally acidic lakes of igneous and metamorphic landscapes; peat bogs in northern regions; crater lakes of active and dormant volcanoes; and lakes acidified by acid rain.[54][55][56]
- A salt lake, also known as a saline lake or brine lake, is an inland body of water situated in an arid or semiarid region, with no outlet to the sea, containing a high concentration of dissolved neutral salts (principally sodium chloride). Examples include the Great Salt Lake in Utah, and the Dead Sea in southwestern Asia.[36][52]
- An alkali sink, also known as an alkali flat or salt flat, is a shallow saline feature that can be found in low-lying areas of arid regions and in groundwater discharge zones. These features are typically classified as dry lakes, or playas, because they are periodically flooded by rain or flood events and then dry up during drier intervals, leaving accumulations of brines and evaporitic minerals.[36][52]
- A salt pan is a small shallow natural depression in which water accumulates and evaporates, leaving a salt deposit, or the shallow lake of brackish water that occupies a salt pan. (The term "salt pan" comes from open-pan salt making, a method of extracting salt from brine using large open pans.)[36]
- A saline pan is another name for an ephemeral acid saline lake which precipitates a bottom crust that is subsequently modified during subaerial exposure.[36]
Composed of other liquids
[edit]Paleolakes
[edit]A paleolake (also palaeolake) is a lake that existed in the past when hydrological conditions were different.[28] Quaternary paleolakes can often be identified on the basis of relict lacustrine landforms, such as relict lake plains and coastal landforms that form recognizable relict shorelines called paleoshorelines. Paleolakes can also be recognized by characteristic sedimentary deposits that accumulated in them and any fossils that might be contained in these sediments. The paleoshorelines and sedimentary deposits of paleolakes provide evidence for prehistoric hydrological changes during the times that they existed.[28][59]
There are two types of paleolake:
- A former lake is a paleolake that no longer exists. Such lakes include prehistoric lakes and those that have permanently dried up, often as the result of either evaporation or human intervention. An example of a former lake is Owens Lake in California, United States. Former lakes are a common feature of the Basin and Range area of southwestern North America.[60]
- A shrunken lake is a paleolake that still exists but has considerably decreased in size over geological time. An example of a shrunken lake is Lake Agassiz, which once covered much of central North America. Two notable remnants of Lake Agassiz are Lake Winnipeg and Lake Winnipegosis.[60]
Paleolakes are of scientific and economic importance. For example, Quaternary paleolakes in semidesert basins are important for two reasons: they played an extremely significant, if transient, role in shaping the floors and piedmonts of many basins; and their sediments contain enormous quantities of geologic and paleontologic information concerning past environments.[61] In addition, the organic-rich deposits of pre-Quaternary paleolakes are important either for the thick deposits of oil shale and shale gas contained in them, or as source rocks of petroleum and natural gas. Although of significantly less economic importance, strata deposited along the shore of paleolakes sometimes contain coal seams.[62][63]
Characteristics
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2020) |



Lakes have numerous features in addition to lake type, such as drainage basin (also known as catchment area), inflow and outflow, nutrient content, dissolved oxygen, pollutants, pH, and sedimentation.
Changes in the level of a lake are controlled by the difference between the input and output compared to the total volume of the lake. Significant input sources are precipitation onto the lake, runoff carried by streams and channels from the lake's catchment area, groundwater channels and aquifers, and artificial sources from outside the catchment area. Output sources are evaporation from the lake, surface and groundwater flows, and any extraction of lake water by humans. As climate conditions and human water requirements vary, these will create fluctuations in the lake level.
Lakes can be also categorized on the basis of their richness in nutrients, which typically affect plant growth. Nutrient-poor lakes are said to be oligotrophic and are generally clear, having a low concentration of plant life. Mesotrophic lakes have good clarity and an average level of nutrients. Eutrophic lakes are enriched with nutrients, resulting in good plant growth and possible algal blooms. Hypertrophic lakes are bodies of water that have been excessively enriched with nutrients. These lakes typically have poor clarity and are subject to devastating algal blooms. Lakes typically reach this condition due to human activities, such as heavy use of fertilizers in the lake catchment area. Such lakes are of little use to humans and have a poor ecosystem due to decreased dissolved oxygen.
Due to the unusual relationship between water's temperature and its density, lakes form layers called thermoclines, layers of drastically varying temperature relative to depth. Fresh water is most dense at about 4 degrees Celsius (39.2 °F) at sea level. When the temperature of the water at the surface of a lake reaches the same temperature as deeper water, as it does during the cooler months in temperate climates, the water in the lake can mix, bringing oxygen-starved water up from the depths and bringing oxygen down to decomposing sediments. Deep temperate lakes can maintain a reservoir of cold water year-round, which allows some cities to tap that reservoir for deep lake water cooling.
Since the surface water of deep tropical lakes never reaches the temperature of maximum density, there is no process that makes the water mix. The deeper layer becomes oxygen starved and can become saturated with carbon dioxide, or other gases such as sulfur dioxide if there is even a trace of volcanic activity. Exceptional events, such as earthquakes or landslides, can cause mixing which rapidly brings the deep layers up to the surface and release a vast cloud of gas which lay trapped in solution in the colder water at the bottom of the lake. This is called a limnic eruption. An example is the disaster at Lake Nyos in Cameroon. The amount of gas that can be dissolved in water is directly related to pressure. As deep water surfaces, the pressure drops and a vast amount of gas comes out of solution. Under these circumstances carbon dioxide is hazardous because it is heavier than air and displaces it, so it may flow down a river valley to human settlements and cause mass asphyxiation.
The material at the bottom of a lake, or lake bed, may be composed of a wide variety of inorganics, such as silt or sand, and organic material, such as decaying plant or animal matter. The composition of the lake bed has a significant impact on the flora and fauna found within the lake's environs by contributing to the amounts and the types of nutrients available.
A paired (black and white) layer of the varved lake sediments correspond to a year. During winter, when organisms die, carbon is deposited down, resulting to a black layer. At the same year, during summer, only few organic materials are deposited, resulting to a white layer at the lake bed. These are commonly used to track past paleontological events.
Natural lakes provide a microcosm of living and nonliving elements that are relatively independent of their surrounding environments. Therefore, lake organisms can often be studied in isolation from the lake's surroundings.[65]
Limnology
[edit]Limnology is the study of inland bodies of water and related ecosystems. Limnology divides lakes into three zones: the littoral zone, a sloped area close to land; the photic or open-water zone, where sunlight is abundant; and the deep-water profundal or benthic zone, where little sunlight can reach. The depth to which light can penetrate depends on the turbidity of the water, which is determined by the density and size of suspended particles. A particle will be in suspension if its weight is less than the random turbidity forces acting upon it. These particles can be sedimentary or biological in origin (including algae and detritus) and are responsible for the color of the water. Decaying plant matter, for instance, may account for a yellow or brown color, while algae may cause a greenish coloration. In very shallow water bodies, iron oxides make the water reddish brown. Bottom-dwelling detritivorous fish stir the mud in search of food and can be the cause of turbid waters. Piscivorous fish contribute to turbidity by eating plant-eating (planktonivorous) fish, thus increasing the amount of algae (see aquatic trophic cascade).
The light depth or transparency is measured using a Secchi disk, a 20-cm (8 in) disk with alternating white and black quadrants. The depth at which the disk is no longer visible is the Secchi depth, a measure of transparency. The Secchi disk is commonly used to test for eutrophication. For a detailed look at these processes, see lentic ecosystems.
A lake moderates the surrounding region's temperature and climate because water has a very high specific heat capacity (4,186 J·kg−1·K−1). In the daytime a lake can cool the land beside it with local winds, resulting in a sea breeze; in the night it can warm it with a land breeze.
Biological properties
[edit]
Lake zones:
- Epilittoral: The zone that is entirely above the lake's normal water level and never submerged by lake water
- Littoral: The zone that encompasses the small area above the normal water level (which is sometimes submerged when the lake's water level increases), reaching to the deepest part of the lake that still allows for submerged macrophytic growth
- Littoriprofundal: Transition zone commonly aligned with stratified lakes' metalimnions – too deep for macrophytes but includes photosynthetic algae and bacteria
- Profundal: Sedimentary zone containing no vegetation
Algal community types:
- Epipelic: Algae that grow on sediments
- Epilithic: Algae that grow on rocks
- Epipsammic: Algae that grow on (or within) sand
- Epiphytic: Algae that grow on macrophytes
- Epizooic: Algae that grow on living animals
- Metaphyton: Algae present in the littoral zone, not in a state of suspension nor attached to a substratum (such as a macrophyte)[66]
Disappearance
[edit]

The lake may be infilled with deposited sediment and gradually become a wetland such as a swamp or marsh. Large water plants, typically reeds, accelerate this closing process significantly because they partially decompose to form peat soils that fill the shallows. Conversely, peat soils in a marsh can naturally burn and reverse this process to recreate a shallow lake resulting in a dynamic equilibrium between marsh and lake.[67] This is significant since wildfire has been largely suppressed in the developed world over the past century. This has artificially converted many shallow lakes into emergent marshes. Turbid lakes and lakes with many plant-eating fish tend to disappear more slowly. A "disappearing" lake (barely noticeable on a human timescale) typically has extensive plant mats at the water's edge. These become a new habitat for other plants, like peat moss when conditions are right, and animals, many of which are very rare. Gradually, the lake closes and young peat may form, forming a fen. In lowland river valleys where a river can meander, the presence of peat is explained by the infilling of historical oxbow lakes. In the final stages of succession, trees can grow in, eventually turning the wetland into a forest.
Some lakes can disappear seasonally. These are called intermittent lakes, ephemeral lakes, or seasonal lakes and can be found in karstic terrain. A prime example of an intermittent lake is Lake Cerknica in Slovenia or Lag Prau Pulte in Graubünden. Other intermittent lakes are only the result of above-average precipitation in a closed, or endorheic basin, usually filling dry lake beds. This can occur in some of the driest places on earth, like Death Valley. This occurred in the spring of 2005, after unusually heavy rains.[68] The lake did not last into the summer, and was quickly evaporated (see photos to right). A more commonly filled lake of this type is Sevier Lake of west-central Utah.
Sometimes a lake will disappear quickly. On 3 June 2005, in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Russia, a lake called Lake Beloye vanished in a matter of minutes. News sources reported that government officials theorized that this strange phenomenon may have been caused by a shift in the soil underneath the lake that allowed its water to drain through channels leading to the Oka River.[69]
The presence of ground permafrost is important to the persistence of some lakes. Thawing permafrost may explain the shrinking or disappearance of hundreds of large Arctic lakes across western Siberia. The idea here is that rising air and soil temperatures thaw permafrost, allowing the lakes to drain away into the ground.[70]
Some lakes disappear because of human development factors. The shrinking Aral Sea is described as being "murdered" by the diversion for irrigation of the rivers feeding it.[citation needed] Between 1990 and 2020, more than half of the world's large lakes decreased in size, in part due to climate change.[71]
Extraterrestrial lakes
[edit]
Only one astronomical body other than Earth is known to harbor large lakes: Saturn's largest moon, Titan. Photographs and spectroscopic analysis by the Cassini–Huygens spacecraft show liquid ethane on the surface, which is thought to be mixed with liquid methane. The largest lake on Titan is Kraken Mare which, at an estimated 400,000 km2,[72] is roughly five times the size of Lake Superior (~80,000 km2) and nearly the size of all five Great Lakes of North America combined.[73] The second largest Titanean lake, Ligeia Mare, is almost twice the size of Lake Superior, at an estimated 150,000 km2.[74]
Jupiter's large moon Io is volcanically active, leading to the accumulation of sulfur deposits on the surface. Some photographs taken during the Galileo mission appear to show lakes of liquid sulfur in volcanic caldera, though these are more analogous to lakes of lava than of water on Earth.[75]
The planet Mars has only one confirmed lake which is underground and near the south pole.[76] Although the surface of Mars is too cold and has too little atmospheric pressure to permit permanent surface water, geologic evidence appears to confirm that ancient lakes once formed on the surface.[77][78]
There are dark basaltic plains on the Moon, similar to lunar maria but smaller, which are called lacus (singular lacus, Latin for "lake") because they were thought by early astronomers to be lakes of water.
Notable lakes on Earth
[edit]
- The largest lake by surface area is Caspian Sea, which is despite its name is considered a lake from the point of view of geography.[79] Its surface area is 143,000 sq. mi./371,000 km2.
- The second largest lake by surface area, and the largest freshwater lake by surface area, is Lake Michigan-Huron, which is hydrologically a single lake. Its surface area is 45,300 sq. mi./117,400 km2. For those who consider Lake Michigan-Huron to be separate lakes, and Caspian Sea to be a sea, Lake Superior would be the largest lake at 82,100 km2 (31,700 square miles)
- Lake Baikal is the deepest lake in the world, located in Siberia, with a bottom at 1,637 metres (5,371 ft). Its mean depth is also the greatest in the world (749 metres (2,457 ft)). It is also the world's largest freshwater lake by volume (23,600 cubic kilometres (5,700 cu mi), but much smaller than the Caspian Sea at 78,200 cubic kilometres (18,800 cu mi)), and the second longest (about 630 kilometres (390 mi) from tip to tip).
- The world's oldest lake is Lake Baikal, followed by Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. Lake Maracaibo is considered by some to be the second-oldest lake on Earth, but since it lies at sea level and nowadays is a contiguous body of water with the sea, others consider that it has turned into a small bay.
- The longest lake is Lake Tanganyika, with a length of about 660 kilometres (410 mi) (measured along the lake's center line).
It is also the third largest by volume, the second oldest, and the second deepest (1,470 metres (4,820 ft)) in the world, after Lake Baikal. - The world's highest lake, if size is not a criterion, may be the crater lake of Ojos del Salado, at 6,390 metres (20,965 ft).[80]
- The highest large (greater than 250 square kilometres (97 sq mi)) lake in the world is the 290 square kilometres (110 sq mi)[citation needed] Pumoyong Tso (Pumuoyong Tso[citation needed]), in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, at 28°34′N 90°24′E / 28.567°N 90.400°E, 5,018 metres (16,463 ft) above sea level.[81]
- The world's highest commercially navigable lake is Lake Titicaca in Peru and Bolivia at 3,812 m (12,507 ft). It is also the largest lake in South America.
- The world's lowest lake is the Dead Sea, bordered by Jordan to the east and Israel and Palestine to the west, at 418 metres (1,371 ft) below sea level. It is also one of the lakes with highest salt concentration.
- Lake Michigan–Huron has the longest lake coastline in the world: about 5,250 kilometres (3,260 mi), excluding the coastline of its many inner islands. Even if it is considered two lakes, Lake Huron alone would still have the longest coastline in the world at 2,980 kilometres (1,850 mi).
- The largest island in a lake is Manitoulin Island in Lake Michigan-Huron, with a surface area of 2,766 square kilometres (1,068 sq mi). Lake Manitou, on Manitoulin Island, is the largest lake on an island in a lake.
- The largest lake on an island is Nettilling Lake on Baffin Island, with an area of 5,542 square kilometres (2,140 sq mi) and a maximum length of 123 kilometres (76 mi).[82]
- The largest lake in the world that drains naturally in two directions is Wollaston Lake.
- Lake Toba on the island of Sumatra is in what is probably the largest resurgent caldera on Earth.
- The largest lake completely within the boundaries of a single city is Lake Wanapitei in the city of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. Before the current city boundaries came into effect in 2001, this status was held by Lake Ramsey, also in Sudbury.
- Lake Enriquillo in Dominican Republic is the only saltwater lake in the world inhabited by crocodiles.
- Lake Bernard, Ontario, Canada, claims to be the largest lake in the world with no islands.
- Lake Saimaa in both South Savo and South Karelia, Finland, forms the much larger Saimaa basin, which have more shorelines per unit of area than anywhere else in the world, with the total length being nearly 15,000 kilometres (9,300 mi).[83]
- The largest lake in one country is Lake Michigan, in the United States. However, it is sometimes considered part of Lake Michigan-Huron, making the record go to Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories, in Canada, the largest lake within one jurisdiction.
- The largest lake on an island in a lake on an island is Crater Lake on Vulcano Island in Lake Taal on the island of Luzon, The Philippines.
- The northernmost named lake on Earth is Upper Dumbell Lake in the Qikiqtaaluk Region of Nunavut, Canada at a latitude of 82°28'N. It is 5.2 kilometres (3.2 mi) southwest of Alert, the northernmost settlement in the world. There are also several small lakes north of Upper Dumbell Lake, but they are all unnamed and only appear on very detailed maps.
- There are only 20 ancient lakes - those over a million years old
Largest by continent
[edit]The largest lakes (surface area) by continent are:
- Australia – Lake Eyre (salt lake)
- Africa – Lake Victoria, also the third-largest freshwater lake on Earth. It is one of the Great Lakes of Africa.
- Antarctica – Lake Vostok (subglacial)
- Asia – Lake Baikal (if the Caspian Sea is considered a lake, it is the largest in Eurasia, but is divided between the two geographic continents)
- Oceania – Lake Eyre when filled; the largest permanent (and freshwater) lake in Oceania is Lake Taupō.
- Europe – Lake Ladoga, followed by Lake Onega, both in northwestern Russia.
- North America – Lake Michigan–Huron, which is hydrologically a single lake. However, lakes Huron and Michigan are usually considered separate lakes, in which case Lake Superior would be the largest.[60]
- South America – Lake Titicaca, which is also the highest navigable body of water on Earth at 3,812 metres (12,507 ft) above sea level. (The much larger – and older – Lake Maracaibo is perceived by some to no longer be genuinely a lake, but a lagoon.[citation needed])
See also
[edit]- Deep water source cooling – Air cooling method
- Great Lakes – Group of lakes in North America
- Lake monster – Lake-dwelling creature in myth and folklore
- Liman – Russian term for an estuary lagoon formed by a sandbar at a river's mouth
- List of lakes
- List of lakes by area
- List of lakes by depth
- List of lakes of the United States
- List of largest lakes of Europe
- Loch – Irish and Scottish Gaelic word for a lake or sea inlet
- Mere (lake) – Shallow lake, pond, or wetland
- Open and closed lakes – Major subdivisions of lakes, for a description of the difference between exorheic and endorheic lakes
- River mouth – End of a river where it flows into a larger body of water
- Slough (hydrology) – Type of wetland
- Tarn – Mountain lake or pool in a glacial cirque
Notes
[edit]- ^ The Caspian Sea is generally regarded by geographers, biologists and limnologists as a huge inland salt lake. However, the Caspian's large size means that for some purposes it is better modeled as a sea. Geologically, the Caspian, Black and Mediterranean seas are remnants of the ancient Tethys Ocean. Politically, the distinction between a sea and a lake may affect how the Caspian is treated by international law.[citation needed]
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- ^ Ojos del Salado 6893m. andes.org.uk
- ^ "China wetlands" (PDF). Ramsar Wetlands International. p. 77. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
- ^ Largest island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island. elbruz.org
- ^ Hämäläinen, Arto (November 2001). "Saimaa – Finland's largest lake". Virtual Finland. Archived from the original on 14 February 2008.
External links
[edit]Etymology and Definition
Etymology
The English word "lake" derives from the Old English term lacu, which referred to a broad stream, pool, or pond, ultimately borrowed from Latin lacus meaning a basin, pond, or lake.[6] This Latin root entered Proto-West Germanic as laku before appearing in Old English around the 9th century, reflecting early influences from Roman terminology on water bodies.[7] In Romance languages, the evolution remained closer to the Latin original, with French lac and Italian lago both descending directly from lacus, where the latter developed a intervocalic /g/ sound through phonetic shifts in Vulgar Latin.[8] Germanic languages, however, often retained native terms alongside such borrowings; for instance, Old English also used mere for larger lakes or seas, derived from Proto-Germanic mari, emphasizing expansive bodies of water in poetic and compound forms like mereflōd (sea-flood).[9] Ancient texts show further linguistic distinctions, such as in Greek where limnē denoted marshy lakes or pools, often contrasted with broader inland seas like the term for the Dead Sea (hē Limnē tēs Asphaltidos), highlighting a focus on standing, shore-adjacent waters rather than saline expanses. These variations illustrate how terms for lakes evolved to capture regional hydrological concepts, influencing modern nomenclature across Indo-European languages.Definition and Distinctions
A lake is defined in limnology as a body of standing fresh or saline water occupying a natural basin or depression within continental boundaries, surrounded by land and not part of the oceanic system.[10] This distinguishes lakes as inland features where water accumulates from surface runoff, precipitation, and groundwater, forming relatively stable ecosystems with minimal flow compared to rivers or streams.[1] Key criteria for identifying a lake include its enclosure by land on all sides, permanence (typically lasting through seasons without drying completely), and sufficient size and depth to support distinct ecological zones, such as the littoral (shallow nearshore) and limnetic (open water) areas.[10] Size thresholds vary by classification system but often emphasize surface area and depth over rigid cutoffs; for instance, some limnological studies consider water bodies greater than 0.1 km² as lakes, while depth exceeding 2-5 meters allows for thermal stratification, a hallmark of lacustrine systems.[11] Permanence is assessed by the presence of year-round water levels, excluding ephemeral pools that dry seasonally.[1] Lakes are distinguished from ponds primarily by scale and ecological complexity: ponds are smaller (often under 5 hectares) and shallower (typically less than 5 meters), lacking the stratification and wave action common in lakes, though no universal size boundary exists and the terms can overlap regionally.[11] Unlike reservoirs, which are artificial impoundments created by damming rivers for water storage, flood control, or hydropower, lakes form naturally through geological processes and exhibit more stable water levels without engineered inflows and outflows.[1] Wetlands, by contrast, are shallower (generally under 2-2.5 meters) and dominated by emergent vegetation covering more than 30% of the surface, supporting saturated soils rather than open water bodies.[11] Seas differ fundamentally as saline water bodies connected to oceans, subject to tides and marine influences, whereas lakes remain isolated from oceanic circulation and are predominantly freshwater, though some endorheic lakes like the Dead Sea are hypersaline.[10] Legal and cultural definitions of lakes exhibit variations across regions, reflecting practical needs like resource management and environmental regulation. In the United States, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) classifies lakes as natural inland waters exceeding 8 hectares in area or 2.5 meters in depth, often excluding smaller features as wetlands for conservation purposes.[11] European standards, such as those in the Waterbase database, adopt lower thresholds (e.g., over 0.02 hectares), incorporating a broader range of standing waters into lake inventories for ecological monitoring under directives like the Water Framework Directive.[11] These differences can influence property rights, pollution controls, and biodiversity assessments, with cultural naming conventions sometimes prioritizing local perceptions over scientific metrics—such as calling larger ponds "lakes" in rural traditions.[11]Distribution
Global Patterns
Lakes are unevenly distributed across the globe, with an estimated 304 million natural lakes larger than 0.1 hectares covering approximately 4.2 million km² of Earth's land surface.[12] Over 90% of these lakes are located north of 30°N latitude, predominantly in the Northern Hemisphere, reflecting patterns shaped by past geological processes such as glaciation.[13] High concentrations occur in glaciated northern regions, including Canada with over 2 million lakes, Finland with 187,888 lakes larger than 0.5 hectares, and Siberia, where the majority of Russia's approximately 2.75 million lakes are situated.[14][15][16] At a continental scale, North America hosts the highest number of lakes, with over 922,000 documented in databases for those exceeding 10 hectares, driven by extensive post-glacial landscapes. In contrast, Asia dominates in total lake surface area, encompassing vast bodies like the Caspian Sea and numerous highland lakes that contribute significantly to global freshwater extent. Mapping efforts, such as the HydroLAKES database compiled in 2016 and updated through 2023, provide comprehensive geospatial data on 1.4 million lakes and reservoirs larger than 10 hectares worldwide, totaling 2.67 million km² in surface area and enabling detailed analysis of these global patterns across biomes from boreal forests to tundra. These distributions highlight denser lake occurrences in high-latitude and temperate biomes of the Northern Hemisphere, with sparser presence in arid and tropical regions of the Southern Hemisphere.Influencing Factors
The distribution and prevalence of lakes worldwide are shaped by a complex interplay of geological, climatic, and topographic processes that create and sustain depressions capable of holding water. These factors determine not only where lakes form but also their longevity and characteristics, with regional variations reflecting local environmental conditions.[1] In high-latitude regions, glacial scouring emerges as a dominant geological influence, where advancing ice sheets erode bedrock and deposit materials to form extensive basins. During Pleistocene glaciations, ice dynamics deepened valleys and carved out depressions through abrasive action and plucking, leaving behind a legacy of numerous lakes upon ice retreat. This process is particularly evident in northern mid- to high-latitudes, where it accounts for the highest global concentration of lakes by number and surface area.[17][18][19] Tectonic activity plays a crucial role in rift zones, where extensional forces fracture the Earth's crust to generate fault-bounded basins that accumulate water. In the East African Rift, for instance, ongoing divergence along boundary faults and accommodation zones has produced deep, elongated depressions hosting some of the world's largest lakes, with seismic evidence indicating continued subsidence and basin evolution. These tectonic settings facilitate lake formation by creating closed topographic lows amid surrounding highlands.[20][21][22] Climatic factors, particularly the balance between precipitation and evaporation, critically govern lake persistence by influencing water inflows and losses. In regions with high precipitation relative to evaporation—such as humid temperate zones—lakes maintain stable levels through surplus runoff and direct rainfall, whereas arid or semi-arid areas experience shrinkage or desiccation when evaporation exceeds inputs. Hydrologic models demonstrate that this ratio directly correlates with lake-to-basin area proportions, with closed-basin lakes being especially sensitive to shifts in moisture regimes driven by temperature and atmospheric circulation.[23][24][25] Topographic depressions arise from erosional processes or tectonic uplift, providing the fundamental containers for lake development. Differential erosion by rivers, waves, or wind hollows out basins in softer substrates, while isostatic rebound or orogenic uplift following glacial unloading elevates and isolates preexisting lows, trapping water in endorheic systems. Geomorphic studies highlight how these features, often compounded by underlying lithology, control lake morphology and distribution across varied terrains.[26][27][28]Types by Origin
Tectonic Lakes
Tectonic lakes form through the deformation of the Earth's crust driven by internal forces, including faulting, folding, and subsidence, which generate depressions capable of accumulating water. These basins commonly develop as grabens—down-dropped blocks between parallel faults—or half-grabens along rift zones where continental plates diverge. Such processes are integral to plate tectonics, creating elongated troughs that contrast with the more localized collapses seen in volcanic lake formation.[29] These lakes exhibit distinctive characteristics, including great depth and linear shapes that reflect their tectonic origins, often making them among the largest and most ancient freshwater bodies on Earth. Lake Tanganyika, situated in the western branch of the East African Rift System, exemplifies this as the world's longest freshwater lake, stretching 673 km with a maximum depth of 1,470 m and an average depth of 570 m; it occupies a series of half-grabens formed by extensional faulting.[30][31] Similarly, Lake Baikal in Siberia, the deepest lake globally at 1,640 m, lies within an active rift zone and holds about 20% of the world's unfrozen freshwater.[29] Linked to ongoing plate boundary dynamics, tectonic lakes date back tens of millions of years, with Lake Baikal estimated at 25–30 million years old based on rift initiation and sediment records.[32] Their long-term persistence stems from continuous tectonic activity, such as subsidence and faulting, which deepens basins and resists complete infilling by sediments, allowing these lakes to endure far longer than many other types.[29][31]Volcanic Lakes
Volcanic lakes originate from volcanic activity, primarily through the collapse of magma chambers after explosive eruptions, forming large calderas, or via phreatomagmatic explosions that create smaller maars. In caldera formation, the evacuation of vast amounts of magma leads to structural collapse, resulting in broad, basin-like depressions that accumulate water from precipitation, groundwater, or hydrothermal sources. Maars, in contrast, form from shallow explosions where rising magma interacts with groundwater or surface water, ejecting material and leaving shallow, wide craters. Additionally, some volcanic lakes develop behind natural dams created by lava flows blocking valleys or rivers.[33][34] These lakes often exhibit distinct chemical characteristics influenced by ongoing volcanic processes, including acidic waters with pH values as low as 0.1 due to the dissolution of magmatic gases such as sulfur dioxide (SO₂), which forms sulfuric acid upon reacting with water. High sulfur content is common, contributing to turquoise or milky appearances in some cases, and can lead to meromictic stratification where deeper layers remain isolated and gas-saturated. Volcanic activity can cause abrupt changes in lake chemistry or level, such as rapid acidification during eruptions or degassing events.[35][36] Prominent examples include Crater Lake in Oregon, USA, a caldera lake formed approximately 7,700 years ago by the collapse of Mount Mazama following a massive eruption; it reaches a maximum depth of 594 meters, making it the deepest lake in the United States. Another is Lake Toba in Indonesia, the world's largest volcanic lake, occupying a supervolcano caldera measuring about 100 kilometers long and 30 kilometers wide, formed around 74,000 years ago during one of Earth's most explosive eruptions. Maars like Lake Nyos in Cameroon exemplify smaller volcanic lakes, with depths up to 210 meters and notable for their potential for gas accumulation.[33][37][34] Volcanic lakes pose significant hazards due to their association with active volcanism, including lahars—mudflows triggered when eruption debris mixes with lake water, potentially traveling far downstream and endangering communities. Gas emissions, particularly carbon dioxide (CO₂) and hydrogen sulfide (H₂S), can accumulate in stratified waters, leading to limnic eruptions where sudden overturn releases toxic clouds, as occurred at Lake Nyos in 1986, killing over 1,700 people. Acidic outflows from these lakes can also corrode infrastructure and harm ecosystems.[38][39]Glacial Lakes
Glacial lakes form primarily through processes associated with glacial activity, including erosion, deposition, and meltwater accumulation. One common mechanism is the scouring of bedrock basins by advancing glaciers, which deepen and widen pre-existing valleys or create new depressions through abrasive action. These scoured basins often fill with water after glacial retreat, as seen in the Finger Lakes region of New York, where multiple parallel lakes occupy elongated, U-shaped valleys carved during the Pleistocene epoch.[40] Another formation type involves moraine-dammed lakes, where terminal or recessional moraines—piles of glacial debris—act as natural barriers impounding meltwater in valleys. For instance, Jackson Lake in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, is impounded behind a lateral moraine from the Teton Glacier.[41] Proglacial lakes develop in front of retreating glaciers, often in overdeepened basins or behind temporary ice and debris dams, and can lead to sudden releases of water through outburst floods.[42] These lakes are predominantly found in regions that experienced extensive glaciation during the Pleistocene, such as northern North America, Europe, and parts of Asia, with many persisting as post-glacial features after the Last Glacial Maximum around 20,000 years ago. The basins they occupy typically exhibit steep sides, irregular depths, and surrounding glacial landforms like drumlins or eskers, reflecting the ice's erosional and depositional legacy. Post-Pleistocene warming has stabilized most of these lakes, but ongoing climate change is promoting the formation of new ones in high-latitude and alpine areas through glacier retreat.[17] Prominent examples include the Great Lakes of North America, which occupy vast scoured basins excavated by the Laurentide Ice Sheet; their combined surface area totals approximately 245,000 km², making them the largest group of freshwater lakes by area globally. These lakes formed iteratively over multiple glacial advances, with final configurations established around 10,000 years ago. Smaller-scale examples, such as the Finger Lakes, illustrate localized scouring, with depths exceeding 300 meters in some basins due to subglacial meltwater erosion under high pressure.[17][40] A key characteristic of many glacial lakes, particularly proglacial and moraine-dammed types, is their potential instability, as dams composed of unconsolidated sediment or ice can fail catastrophically. Such failures trigger glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs), known as jökulhlaups in Icelandic terminology, releasing enormous volumes of water—up to thousands of cubic kilometers—in hours or days. The repeated outbursts from Glacial Lake Missoula in Montana, which drained through an ice dam approximately 40 times between 15,000 and 13,000 years ago, carved the Channeled Scablands in Washington State and exemplify this hazard. Modern monitoring focuses on rapidly expanding lakes in glaciated regions to mitigate risks from GLOFs.[42]Fluvial Lakes
Fluvial lakes are inland bodies of standing water primarily formed through the erosional and depositional actions of rivers, especially within floodplains where meandering channels migrate laterally over time. These lakes arise from the dynamic interplay of river flow, sediment transport, and channel avulsion, distinguishing them from lakes created by other geological forces like glaciation or tectonics. The formation process typically involves the abandonment of river segments, leading to isolated water bodies that remain connected to the hydrological system of the parent river during flood events. The classic subtype of fluvial lakes is the oxbow lake, which develops when a meandering river erodes through the narrow neck of a pronounced bend, creating a shortcut channel and isolating the former loop as a crescent-shaped lake. This cutoff can occur via neck cutoffs, where the main channel breaches the meander neck directly, or chute cutoffs, where a secondary channel erodes across a point bar, accelerating the abandonment. As the river migrates, it leaves behind meander scrolls—low ridges and shallow depressions formed by successive phases of deposition and erosion on the inner banks of bends—contributing to the topographic complexity of the floodplain and occasionally enclosing smaller lake features. Floodplain expansions further enhance lake formation by widening the active channel belt, where avulsions or shifts in river course abandon broader segments that pond water from overbank flows or groundwater seepage. Fluvial lakes exhibit distinct characteristics shaped by their riverine origins, including shallow depths typically ranging from 1 to 5 meters, which facilitate rapid mixing and high productivity but also promote infilling over time. Water levels are highly dynamic, fluctuating with seasonal river discharges and flood pulses that can temporarily reconnect the lakes to the main channel, allowing exchange of water, nutrients, and biota. High sediment input from the river, particularly fine silts and clays during overbank flooding, leads to aggradation rates that often exceed 1 cm per year in active systems, gradually reducing lake volume and altering their morphology unless counterbalanced by erosion or vegetation stabilization. Examples of fluvial lakes abound in large alluvial systems, such as the numerous oxbows in the Mississippi River Delta and Alluvial Valley, where meander cutoffs have created hundreds of lakes like those along the Yazoo and Sunflower Rivers, supporting diverse aquatic ecosystems amid ongoing sediment deposition. In East Africa, Lake Chala exemplifies a tectonic-fluvial hybrid, where a rift-related basin is augmented by fluvial inputs from surrounding rivers, enhancing its depositional record through episodic sediment delivery. Anabranch lakes, a less common subtype, emerge in multi-thread river systems where the main channel divides into parallel distributaries, forming shallow, interconnected ponds in the intervening lowlands that capture sediment and floodwaters. While some fluvial lakes occupy valleys initially carved by glacial action, their primary features stem from post-glacial river processes.Karst Lakes
Karst lakes develop in landscapes underlain by soluble rocks, predominantly limestone and dolomite, where chemical dissolution by slightly acidic water creates depressions such as sinkholes (dolines) and large flat-bottomed basins known as poljes.[43][44] These features form through the gradual erosion of bedrock, leading to subsurface voids and conduits that eventually collapse or enlarge to hold water.[45] Water accumulation in these depressions often occurs via the emergence of groundwater from karst springs or the infiltration of surface runoff, resulting in lakes like meres or turloughs that represent localized groundwater discharge points.[46][47] These lakes typically exhibit clear, pristine water due to filtration through the karst bedrock, with water levels that fluctuate significantly in response to aquifer dynamics and seasonal precipitation.[48][47] Many karst lakes are oligotrophic, characterized by low nutrient concentrations that limit biological productivity and maintain high water transparency.[49] Prominent examples include the Plitvice Lakes in Croatia, a cascading system of 16 terraced lakes formed in a karst canyon through ongoing tufa deposition and groundwater inflow within a limestone-dolomite terrain.[50][51] Another is Lake Cerknica in Slovenia, an intermittent karst lake in the Cerknica Polje depression that expands to over 28 square kilometers during wet periods but largely dries up in summer due to subsurface drainage.[52][53] The hydrology of karst lakes is governed by underlying aquifers featuring extensive networks of fractures and conduits that enable rapid recharge from precipitation or surface streams and correspondingly quick discharge through springs.[46] This high permeability in the epikarst zone facilitates faster water transmission compared to non-karst systems, often resulting in turbulent flow and vulnerability to rapid changes in water quality.[54][55]Landslide Lakes
Landslide lakes, also known as barrier or dammed lakes, form when a landslide deposits a large volume of debris—such as rock, soil, or mud—across a river valley, creating a temporary or semi-permanent barrier that impounds upstream water flow. This mass-wasting event typically occurs in steep, narrow valleys where the debris quickly blocks the channel, leading to rapid lake formation within hours to days as water accumulates behind the dam. Such dams are often heterogeneous in composition, consisting of poorly sorted materials that lack the engineered stability of artificial structures.[56][57] These lakes exhibit distinct characteristics, including high instability due to the loose, unconsolidated nature of the landslide debris, which can erode or seep under hydrostatic pressure from the rising water level. They are frequently sediment-laden, with turbid waters carrying fine particles and coarser materials from the dam itself, which can alter downstream ecosystems and river morphology. Unlike more stable tectonic or glacial lakes, landslide dams often have irregular shorelines and variable depths, with the lake basin deepening over time as the barrier settles. Tectonic events like earthquakes can trigger the initial landslides, exacerbating the formation process in seismically active regions.[58][59][56] Notable examples illustrate the range from long-lived to ephemeral landslide lakes. Lake Waikaremoana in New Zealand's North Island was created around 2,200 years ago when a massive blockslide of fractured sandstone and siltstone, exceeding 1.3 cubic kilometers in volume, dammed the Waikaretāheke River gorge, forming a lake that now covers about 55 square kilometers. In a more recent and transient case, the February 7, 2021, rock and ice avalanche near Chamoli in Uttarakhand, India, generated a temporary lake in the Rishiganga River valley by depositing debris that blocked the channel; this lake persisted briefly before partial breaching contributed to downstream flooding.[60][61][62] The foremost hazard of landslide lakes is the risk of catastrophic dam failure, often termed a landslide dam outburst flood (LDOF), which can unleash a torrent of water and debris traveling at high speeds downstream, devastating communities, infrastructure, and agriculture. Such failures occur when overtopping, piping through the dam, or foundation erosion compromises the barrier, with historical events demonstrating flood waves propagating tens of kilometers and causing significant loss of life. Monitoring and early warning systems are critical in vulnerable mountainous areas to mitigate these risks.[57][56][59]Aeolian Lakes
Aeolian lakes form through wind-driven processes in arid and semi-arid regions, primarily via deflation, where persistent winds erode unconsolidated sediments to create shallow basins known as playas or pans.[63] These depressions develop in areas with sparse vegetation and loose, fine-grained materials, allowing wind to remove particles and lower the land surface until a resistant layer, such as clay or calcrete, halts further erosion.[63] Another mechanism involves dune damming, where transverse or longitudinal sand dunes accumulate and impound seasonal runoff or groundwater, forming temporary water bodies behind the barriers.[64] This process is prevalent in endorheic basins where drainage is internal, and wind activity dominates due to low rainfall and high wind velocities. These lakes exhibit ephemeral characteristics, filling sporadically with rainwater or infrequent floods but rapidly desiccating under intense evaporation that far exceeds input.[65] Upon drying, they develop saline crusts from evaporating brines, often rich in sodium chloride, gypsum, or other minerals leached from surrounding soils, leading to hypersaline conditions when wet.[66] The floors typically consist of expansive, flat clay pans that crack into polygons during desiccation, supporting minimal vegetation except for salt-tolerant species around the margins.[65] Water levels may vary seasonally, with brief inundation following monsoonal rains before complete evaporation in prolonged dry periods.[66] Prominent examples occur in arid zones like the Southern High Plains of North America, where tens of thousands of wind-deflated pans dot the landscape, and western Australia, hosting numerous small deflation basins.[63] A notable case is Lake Eyre in South Australia, the world's largest ephemeral playa lake, spanning approximately 9,500 km² when fully inundated, though it remains mostly dry due to the region's extreme aridity with annual rainfall below 125 mm and evaporation rates exceeding 2,000 mm.[67] These features underscore the linkage between aeolian lakes and hyper-arid climates, where evaporation drives their transient nature and salt accumulation.[63]Shoreline Lakes
Shoreline lakes form primarily through the action of waves and currents along coastal or ancient shorelines, where depositional features such as barrier spits, bars, or islands enclose shallow basins, creating isolated or semi-isolated water bodies. These processes often result in barrier lagoons, where sediment accumulation parallel to the coast traps water behind elongated sand ridges, separating it from the open sea or larger water bodies. In regions affected by post-glacial isostatic rebound, the uplift of land following ice sheet retreat can further shape these features by altering shoreline positions and exposing ancient lake margins, leading to the persistence of remnant lakes in subsided basins.[68][69] These lakes are characteristically shallow, with depths rarely exceeding a few meters, and often exhibit brackish conditions due to periodic marine influence or evaporation in closed systems. Their hydrology is highly sensitive to sea level fluctuations, which can breach barriers during rises or expand lake extents during falls, promoting sediment infilling and shifts in water volume. In ancient shoreline contexts, such as pluvial lake remnants, eustatic changes and climatic drying contribute to hypersaline states over time.[70][71] A prominent example is the Great Salt Lake in Utah, a remnant of the Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, which once covered much of the Great Basin and left prominent ancient shorelines etched into the landscape through wave erosion and deposition. This lake's basin was enclosed by tectonic and depositional barriers, with its current form influenced by post-glacial adjustments and aridity that concentrated salts. Dynamics in shoreline lakes often involve salinity gradients, where freshwater inflows from rivers or groundwater create zones of mixing with seawater or evaporative brines, supporting unique ecological transitions from marine to limnetic communities.[70][71][72]Organic Lakes
Organic lakes form primarily through the accumulation of organic materials that create barriers or depressions capable of holding water. Peat bogs, composed of partially decayed plant matter like sphagnum moss, can dam shallow basins or infill depressions, leading to the development of small, shallow water bodies.[73] In other cases, biogenic reefs or mats formed by algae and aquatic plants in shallow coastal or inland areas trap water and sediment, contributing to lake formation.[74] These lakes exhibit distinct chemical and physical properties, often being acidic with pH values below 5 due to the release of organic acids from decomposing vegetation.[75] They are typically dystrophic, characterized by high levels of dissolved organic matter and humic substances that color the water brown or tea-like, low dissolved oxygen concentrations, especially in deeper layers, and sediments dominated by undecomposed organic detritus rather than mineral particles.[76] Many such lakes are meromictic, with persistent stratification that prevents full mixing and maintains anoxic bottom waters.[77] Notable examples occur in boreal forest regions, where peat lakes develop within extensive mire systems; in Sweden, these are prevalent in the country's vast peatland landscapes covering about 16% of the land area.[78] Meromictic organic lakes, such as Organic Lake in Antarctica's Vestfold Hills, illustrate hypersaline variants formed in post-glacial depressions with heavy organic loading from surrounding microbial mats.[77] Ecologically, the elevated humic content in organic lakes severely restricts light penetration to depths often less than 1 meter, limiting algal photosynthesis and primary production while favoring heterotrophic bacteria that decompose allochthonous organic inputs.[79] This results in low biodiversity, with communities adapted to acidic, nutrient-poor conditions, including acid-tolerant algae and microbes specialized in humic substance utilization.[76]Artificial Lakes
Artificial lakes, also known as reservoirs, are bodies of water intentionally created by humans through the construction of dams across rivers or streams, or by excavating depressions in the ground for purposes such as mining or direct water storage.[80][81] Damming involves building barriers that impound water, forming elongated basins that follow the river's course, while excavation methods, often associated with open-pit mining, result in pit lakes that fill naturally with groundwater, precipitation, or diverted surface water after mining ceases.[82] These formations contrast with natural lakes by their engineered design, which prioritizes functionality over ecological mimicry. Key characteristics of artificial lakes include highly controlled hydrology, where water levels, inflows, and outflows are regulated by dams and valves to meet operational demands, unlike the more variable regimes of natural lakes.[83] They also serve as effective sediment traps, capturing upstream silt and debris that settle in the still waters, which accelerates reservoir infilling and leads to rapid aging—often reducing storage capacity within decades due to sedimentation rates far exceeding those in natural systems.[84] This controlled environment can alter downstream ecosystems but enables precise management of water resources. Artificial lakes are primarily constructed for multiple practical purposes, including hydropower generation, irrigation for agriculture, and flood control by storing excess water during peak flows.[85][86] For instance, hydropower reservoirs harness the potential energy of impounded water to produce electricity, while irrigation-focused ones release water to sustain crops in arid regions, and flood-control structures mitigate downstream inundation risks.[87] Prominent examples include Lake Mead in the United States, formed by the completion of Hoover Dam on the Colorado River in 1935, which holds over 31 million acre-feet of water at full capacity and supports regional water supply and power generation.[88][89] Another is the Three Gorges Reservoir in China, created by the world's largest dam on the Yangtze River, with a storage volume of approximately 39.3 cubic kilometers, serving as the planet's biggest reservoir by capacity for flood mitigation, navigation, and hydroelectric output exceeding 22 gigawatts.[90][91]Impact Crater Lakes
Impact crater lakes form when meteorites or asteroids collide with Earth's surface at hypervelocity, excavating a bowl-shaped depression known as an astrobleme.[92] The immense energy of the impact—often exceeding millions of megatons of TNT—vaporizes and melts target rocks, creating a transient cavity that collapses to form a circular basin typically 10 to 100 kilometers in diameter.[93] Diagnostic evidence for this extraterrestrial origin includes shocked minerals, such as quartz grains exhibiting planar deformation features (PDFs) or transformed into high-pressure polymorphs like coesite and stishovite, which form only under the extreme pressures (5–50 GPa) and temperatures generated during impacts.[92] These features distinguish impact craters from other geological structures, like volcanic calderas. These lakes often exhibit deep, symmetrical morphologies with steep walls and flat floors, reflecting the rebound of the central crater floor to form an uplifted core in larger examples.[93] Their geochemistry is distinctive due to impact melt rocks and breccias, which may contain elevated siderophile elements (e.g., iridium, nickel) from the extraterrestrial projectile and anomalous isotopic signatures from shocked materials.[94] Suevite, a chaotic breccia with glass and shocked clasts, commonly lines the basin, influencing lake water chemistry through dissolution and contributing to meromictic stratification in some cases.[93] Prominent examples include Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana, a 10.5 km-diameter crater lake formed by an iron meteorite impact approximately 1.07 million years ago, with a central uplift rising about 200 m beneath the lake floor and evidence of shocked quartz in rim rocks.[93] The Clearwater Lakes in Quebec, Canada, occupy two adjacent but independently formed craters: the western lake (36 km diameter) from a Permian impact ~286 Ma ago, and the eastern (26 km diameter) from an Ordovician event ~460–470 Ma ago, their circular shapes contrasting with surrounding irregular glacial lakes.[94] Ages of impact crater lakes are determined primarily through radiometric dating of impact-produced materials, such as ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar analysis of melt rocks or glasses, which reset isotopic clocks at the time of shock heating, or U-Pb dating of zircon grains in ejecta.[95] Crater morphology, including rim erosion and infill depth, provides relative age constraints, while stratigraphic relations with dated volcanic or sedimentary layers offer corroboration.[96]Other Classifications
Thermal Stratification
Thermal stratification in lakes refers to the formation of distinct layers of water at different temperatures, primarily driven by differences in water density, which inhibits vertical mixing.[97] This process typically occurs during warmer seasons when solar heating warms the surface waters, creating a stable layering that affects oxygen distribution and ecological dynamics throughout the water column.[98] In temperate lakes during summer, the water column divides into three main layers: the epilimnion, a warm upper layer well-mixed by wind; the metalimnion or thermocline, a transitional zone of rapid temperature decline; and the hypolimnion, a colder, denser bottom layer isolated from surface influences.[99] The thermocline acts as a barrier to mixing, preventing the exchange of heat, oxygen, and nutrients between the epilimnion and hypolimnion.[100] In winter, many temperate lakes undergo inverse stratification under ice cover, with cooler surface waters overlying warmer bottom layers, until spring warming triggers complete overturn.[10] Lakes are classified by their mixing regimes based on the extent and frequency of circulation. Holomictic lakes experience full vertical mixing at least once per year, allowing seasonal turnover of the entire water column.[101] Within holomictic lakes, dimictic types, common in temperate regions, mix twice annually—once in spring and once in fall—due to temperature-driven density changes.[102] Monomictic lakes mix once per year; cold monomictic lakes, found in subpolar areas, circulate in summer, while warm monomictic lakes in tropical or subtropical zones mix in winter.[103] Meromictic lakes, by contrast, exhibit partial mixing, with a persistent lower layer that rarely circulates, often due to salinity gradients reinforcing thermal barriers, though temperature remains the primary driver.[104] Several factors influence the development and persistence of thermal stratification. Latitude determines seasonal temperature variability, with temperate lakes showing pronounced dimictic patterns, whereas tropical lakes often remain monomictic with weaker or seasonal stratification due to consistently warm temperatures.[105] Lake depth plays a key role; deeper lakes (>10-15 meters) stratify more readily as the hypolimnion remains insulated, while shallow lakes may polymix frequently under wind action.[106] Wind exposure affects mixing intensity, with sheltered basins promoting stronger stratification and exposed ones enhancing circulation to erode the thermocline.[107] Surface area also modulates thermocline depth, as larger lakes absorb more heat but experience greater wind fetch for mixing.[108] Thermal stratification significantly impacts lake ecosystems by altering nutrient cycling and oxygen availability. During stratification, nutrients like phosphorus and nitrogen sink to the hypolimnion, accumulating there and fueling algal blooms in the epilimnion upon fall turnover when mixing resumes.[109] In the hypolimnion, limited oxygen replenishment leads to anoxia, especially in productive lakes, where organic matter decomposition consumes available oxygen, creating hypoxic zones that stress fish and benthic organisms.[110] This anoxic condition exacerbates internal nutrient loading by releasing sediment-bound phosphorus under low-oxygen conditions, perpetuating eutrophication cycles.[111] Such processes can establish chemical gradients, including reduced oxygen and increased nutrient concentrations in deeper layers.[112]Salinity and Chemistry
Lakes are classified based on their salinity, which is the total concentration of dissolved salts, typically measured in grams per liter (g/L). Freshwater lakes have salinity below 0.5 g/L, supporting diverse aquatic life similar to rivers and oceans.[113] Brackish lakes range from 0.5 to 30 g/L, representing a transitional zone where freshwater mixes with saline inputs, often limiting biodiversity to salt-tolerant species.[113] Saline lakes exceed 30 g/L, while hypersaline lakes surpass 50 g/L and can reach extreme levels, such as the Dead Sea's approximately 340 g/L, where only specialized extremophiles survive.[114] The chemical composition of lakes varies significantly, influenced by pH and dominant ions, which determine habitability and ecological roles. Alkaline lakes, or soda lakes, have pH values above 9, dominated by sodium (Na⁺) and bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) ions due to high evaporation in arid regions with carbonate-rich inflows.[115] Acidic lakes, often associated with volcanic activity, feature low pH (below 5) and elevated sulfate (SO₄²⁻) or chloride (Cl⁻) from geothermal sources. Major ions in most lakes include Na⁺, Cl⁻, HCO₃⁻, calcium (Ca²⁺), and magnesium (Mg²⁺), with proportions reflecting geological inputs; for instance, chloride-rich lakes derive ions from evaporative concentration of seawater-like inflows.[116] Salinity and chemistry arise primarily from evaporation in closed basins, where water loss concentrates dissolved solids without outlet dilution, contrasting open basins that maintain lower salinity through river outflows.[117] Inflow geology further shapes ion profiles: carbonate bedrock yields HCO₃⁻-dominated waters, while evaporite deposits contribute Na⁺ and Cl⁻.[118] The Caspian Sea exemplifies a saline lake with 12 g/L salinity from Volga River dilution in a nearly closed basin.[119] Mono Lake, an alkaline hypersaline example at ~85 g/L and pH 9.8, forms in a closed volcanic basin with sodium carbonate inflows.[120] These properties profoundly affect lake habitability, as high salinity disrupts osmosis in most organisms, while pH extremes alter nutrient availability and toxicity.[121]Seasonal Variations
Lakes display distinct patterns of seasonal variations in water levels and volume, influenced by regional climate regimes. Perennial lakes, such as those in temperate zones with reliable groundwater and river inflows, maintain relatively stable levels year-round, with fluctuations typically under 1 meter, ensuring continuous aquatic habitats. In contrast, intermittent lakes, common in arid and semi-arid regions, undergo pronounced cycles, filling during wet periods and often drying completely or shrinking to isolated pools in dry seasons, which can disrupt ecosystems but promote nutrient cycling upon refilling.[122] In monsoonal and tropical areas, many lakes exhibit a flood-pulse pattern, characterized by rapid rises in water levels during intense rainy seasons—often exceeding several meters—followed by gradual declines as floodwaters recede, fostering dynamic biodiversity through periodic inundation of surrounding floodplains.[123] This pattern is evident in systems like those in the Amazon basin, where seasonal pulsing supports both perennial and intermittent water bodies by renewing water and sediments.[124] The main drivers of these seasonal fluctuations are precipitation, evaporation rates, and snowmelt contributions. In regions with distinct wet-dry cycles, such as the Sahel, heavy seasonal rains and river inflows dominate level rises, while high evaporation during dry periods leads to declines; for instance, Lake Chad's water level varies by approximately 1 meter annually, peaking after the June-October wet season.[125] In higher latitudes, spring snowmelt provides a critical pulse of inflow, as seen in the Great Lakes, where it accounts for much of the annual 0.2-0.6 meter rise before summer evaporation reverses the trend.[126] African Great Lakes, like Malawi and Tanganyika, show amplified variations of 1-2 meters per year due to bimodal rainfall and intense evaporation, highlighting the interplay of these factors.[127] These dynamics are measured through the water balance equation, which quantifies changes in lake storage as the difference between inputs and outputs: where is the change in storage (reflected in level and volume), is direct precipitation, is inflows from rivers and snowmelt, is evaporation, and is outflows via rivers or groundwater.[128] Seasonal monitoring of these components, often via satellite altimetry and gauging stations, reveals how imbalances drive short-term cycles, such as the 1-2 meter annual swings in African rift valley lakes. Evaporation in dry seasons can briefly concentrate chemicals, altering salinity before dilution by wet-season inflows.[127]Non-Aqueous Lakes
Non-aqueous lakes are bodies of standing liquid composed of substances other than water, typically hydrocarbons in viscous or semi-liquid forms. On Earth, these are exceedingly rare and limited to specific geological settings where petroleum-derived materials accumulate. The most prominent examples include asphalt lakes, which form from the seepage and trapping of bitumen-rich hydrocarbons from underlying reservoirs.[129] Pitch Lake in Trinidad and Tobago represents one of the world's largest natural asphalt deposits, spanning approximately 40 hectares with an estimated depth of up to 76 meters and containing around 10 million tons of bitumen. This lake consists primarily of asphalt, a dense, viscous mixture of heavy hydrocarbons that behaves as a non-aqueous solvent, slowly flowing under geological pressures despite its semi-solid state. Similarly, Lake Bermudez (also known as Guanoco Lake) in Venezuela covers about 445 hectares, making it the largest such feature by surface area, with depths ranging from 1.5 to 2 meters and underlying reserves of natural asphalt estimated at over 6 million tons.[129][130][130] These lakes form through the geological trapping of organic hydrocarbons, often via deep faults linked to tectonic processes like subduction under the Caribbean Plate, allowing petroleum seepages to pool in surface depressions over millennia. Hydrocarbon seeps, such as those in the La Brea Tar Pits in California or McKittrick in the same state, contribute to similar accumulations but are typically smaller and more pit-like than full lakes. The rarity of non-aqueous lakes on Earth stems from the volatility of lighter hydrocarbons like methane and ethane, which exist as gases under terrestrial temperatures and pressures, confining stable liquid bodies to heavier, polymerized forms like asphalt in tectonically active regions.[131][132] As analogs, extraterrestrial hydrocarbon lakes on Saturn's moon Titan feature stable bodies of liquid methane and ethane, enabled by the moon's frigid surface temperatures around -180°C, mirroring aqueous lake dynamics but with non-polar solvents.[133]Physical Characteristics
Morphology and Basin
Lake basins exhibit diverse morphologies shaped by their geological origins, influencing their overall form, depth, and shoreline characteristics. Tectonic basins, formed by crustal movements such as faulting, often result in elongated or irregular shapes aligned with fault lines, as seen in rift valley lakes like Lake Tanganyika, which stretches over 670 kilometers in length.[134] Glacial basins, carved by ice action, typically display irregular contours from scouring and moraine deposits, exemplified by kettle lakes that mirror the uneven blocks of melting ice.[135] In contrast, crater basins, created by volcanic or impact events, tend to be circular due to the symmetric nature of the depressions, such as Crater Lake in Oregon, which occupies a near-perfect caldera.[58] Key morphometric parameters quantify lake basin structure, including surface area, maximum and mean depths, and volume, often derived from bathymetric surveys that map underwater topography. Surface areas range widely, from small ponds under 1 hectare to vast bodies like Lake Superior at 82,100 square kilometers, while maximum depths can exceed 1,600 meters in tectonic examples like Lake Baikal.[58] Mean depths and volumes, calculated by integrating bathymetric data with surface area, provide insights into water storage; for instance, Lake Baikal holds about 23,600 cubic kilometers, representing roughly 20% of the world's unfrozen surface freshwater.[136] These metrics highlight how basin geometry affects ecological and hydrological processes, with deeper basins more prone to thermal stratification.[58] Shoreline features of lakes are molded by sediment dynamics and wave energy, including deltas where rivers deposit load upon entering the basin, forming fan-shaped lobes as water velocity decreases. Beaches develop along exposed margins through wave redistribution of sediments, creating sandy or gravelly zones. Fetch, the unobstructed distance across the lake surface over which wind generates waves, significantly influences wave height and erosion; longer fetches in elongated basins like Lake Michigan can produce waves up to 9 meters during storms.[138] Over geological timescales, lake basins evolve through sediment infilling, where terrigenous and biogenic materials accumulate, progressively shallowing the basin and altering its morphology. This process, driven by erosion from surrounding catchments and internal deposition, can transform deep lakes into marshes or dry flats, as observed in ancient basins like Eocene Lake Gosiute, where volcaniclastic sediments filled subbasins over millions of years.[139] Rates of infilling vary with sediment supply and basin size, often leading to a lifespan of thousands to millions of years before complete terrestrialization.[140]Hydrology and Water Balance
The hydrology of lakes encompasses the dynamic processes governing water inputs, outputs, and internal storage, ensuring the maintenance of lake levels over time. Key inputs include direct precipitation falling on the lake surface and inflows from tributary rivers, streams, and groundwater seepage into the lake basin. Outputs consist of evaporation from the lake surface, surface outflows through outlet rivers, and potential groundwater discharge away from the lake. These components interact to form the overall water balance, which is critical for understanding lake sustainability and response to climatic variations.[141] The fundamental water balance equation for a lake is expressed as: where represents precipitation over the lake area, denotes total inflows (surface and groundwater), is evaporation, is total outflows (surface and groundwater), and is the change in lake storage over a given period. This equation, derived from the principle of mass conservation, quantifies how inputs and outputs influence lake volume; under steady-state conditions, , meaning inflows exactly match losses. For instance, in the Great Lakes, precipitation and upstream inflows dominate inputs, while evaporation and downstream outflows are primary losses, with groundwater playing a minor role in the overall balance.[142][141] A key metric in lake hydrology is water residence time, defined as the average duration water remains in the lake before exiting via outflows, calculated as the lake volume divided by the total outflow rate (). Residence times vary widely depending on lake size, inflow-outflow dynamics, and climate; short times (e.g., months to years) occur in high-flow riverine lakes, while long times indicate stable, isolated systems. Lake Baikal, the world's deepest lake, exemplifies a long residence time of approximately 330 years, reflecting its large volume and limited outflow relative to inputs from surrounding rivers.[143] Lakes are classified hydrologically as closed-basin (endorheic) or draining (exorheic), which profoundly affects their water balance. In endorheic lakes, such as the Great Salt Lake, there are no surface outlets, so outputs are dominated by evaporation and potential subsurface groundwater loss, with the balance equation simplifying to (where is net groundwater outflow); this often leads to higher salinity due to concentrated solutes. Exorheic lakes, like those in the Great Lakes system, feature prominent surface outflows to rivers, allowing excess water to drain to oceans and maintaining fresher conditions, though evaporation remains a significant loss. Groundwater interactions further modulate the balance: "gaining" lakes receive net inflow from aquifers, enhancing storage, while "losing" lakes discharge water to groundwater, which can be pronounced in closed basins and contribute to ephemeral drying during droughts.[144][145][146]Temperature Regimes
In temperate lakes, seasonal temperature profiles typically begin in spring with surface waters warming from near 0°C to 4°C, the temperature of maximum density for freshwater, allowing denser water to sink and promote mixing.[98] As summer progresses, solar heating warms the surface layer above 4°C, creating a stable profile where warmer water overlies cooler depths around 4°C.[98] In winter, surface cooling below 4°C leads to less dense water remaining at the top, eventually forming ice cover when temperatures reach 0°C, while the deeper waters maintain approximately 4°C, insulating the lake bottom from freezing.[98] These profiles contribute to thermal stratification patterns, with inverse stratification under ice where the warmest water (4°C) resides at the bottom.[98] Regional variations in temperature regimes reflect latitudinal differences. In tropical lakes, surface temperatures remain consistently above 4°C year-round, with minimal seasonal fluctuations and no ice cover, supporting continuous or winter-only circulation.[147] Temperate lakes exhibit pronounced seasonal cycles, with surface temperatures fluctuating above and below 4°C, leading to two periods of full circulation (spring and fall) and ice formation in winter.[147] Polar lakes maintain surface temperatures at or below 4°C throughout the year, often remaining ice-covered for extended periods, with circulation limited to brief summer windows; permafrost in surrounding soils further stabilizes cold bottom temperatures near 0°C.[147] The heat budget of a lake governs these regimes through balanced inputs and outputs. Primary heat gains occur via absorption of shortwave solar radiation at the surface and conduction of sensible heat from the atmosphere, while longwave sky radiation also contributes.[98] Losses include convective heat transfer to the air, evaporative cooling from surface water vaporization, and back-radiation to the atmosphere, with evaporation often accounting for a significant portion of heat export in warmer conditions.[98][148] These processes drive overall warming or cooling, influencing evaporation rates and, in turn, the lake's water balance.[148] Local anomalies disrupt uniform profiles through dynamic processes. Seiches, oscillatory waves often triggered by wind or pressure changes, can cause internal movements along density gradients, leading to temporary shifts in temperature-depth distributions, such as cooler water rising in one basin area while warming another.[149] Upwelling events, driven by persistent winds, bring colder, deeper waters to the surface, creating localized cold anomalies; for instance, in Lake Tahoe, spring upwelling along the west shore elevates nearshore temperatures variably by several degrees.[149]Limnology and Ecology
Physical Limnology
Physical limnology examines the mechanical and optical properties of lake waters, emphasizing non-biological processes that govern water movement and light penetration. These dynamics shape lake habitats by influencing mixing, sediment distribution, and shoreline stability, with wind serving as the primary forcing agent in most inland systems. Lake circulation arises mainly from wind stress on the surface, creating currents that interact with basin geometry and the Earth's rotation. In large lakes of the Northern Hemisphere, persistent winds induce counterclockwise gyres through the Coriolis effect, where surface waters diverge leeward and converge windward, leading to basin-scale setups and set-downs of water levels. Seiches, or standing waves, form when wind-driven tilts in the water surface relax, oscillating with periods proportional to basin length and inversely to the square root of mean depth; for instance, Lake Erie's primary seiche has a period of about 14 hours and amplitudes up to 5 meters during storms. Langmuir cells, helical counter-rotating vortices aligned parallel to the wind direction, develop under steady winds exceeding 2-3 m/s and promote vertical exchange with ascent speeds of 1-2 cm/s, often visible as windrows of surface debris. Sedimentation in lakes involves the gravitational settling of suspended particles from inflows, resuspension, and atmospheric deposition, which accumulate on the lake bed to form stratified deposits. Particle settling rates depend on grain size, water density, and turbulence, with finer silts and clays dominating in deeper, calmer profundal zones while coarser sands settle near shores. In meromictic or seasonally stratified lakes, annual alternations of coarse summer sediments and fine winter layers produce varves, thin couplets serving as paleoclimate records; Elk Lake in Minnesota exemplifies this, where varves consist of dark winter clay-organic laminae overlain by light summer carbonate layers, preserving over 10,000 years of environmental history. Optical properties of lake water are quantified by transparency measures, which reflect the attenuation of light by suspended matter. Secchi depth, the maximum depth at which a standardized white disk remains visible, typically ranges from less than 1 meter in turbid systems to over 20 meters in clear oligotrophic lakes, providing a simple proxy for the vertical extent of the photic zone. Turbidity, arising physically from scattering and absorption by non-living particulates like mineral sediments or detritus, reduces Secchi depth and is measured in nephelometric turbidity units (NTUs), with values above 5 NTU indicating significant light obstruction in many temperate lakes. Wind-generated waves propagate across lake surfaces, with energy dissipation driving shoreline erosion through sediment transport and undercutting. Wave height and period scale with fetch—the unobstructed distance over water—and wind speed, enabling larger waves in elongated basins like Lake Michigan, where fetches exceed 300 km and generate heights up to 5-6 meters during gales. This wave action abrades cohesive banks, mobilizing clays and silts via longshore currents and swash, which exacerbates recession rates in fetch-exposed areas; for example, unprotected shorelines on inland lakes can erode at 0.3-1 meter per year under prevailing winds of 5-10 m/s. Temperature gradients may briefly modulate mixing depths during stratification, but wind remains the dominant control on these surface processes.Chemical Limnology
Chemical limnology examines the composition and dynamics of dissolved substances in lakes, including key parameters such as pH, dissolved oxygen (DO), and nutrients like nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), which govern water quality and ecosystem function. Lake pH typically ranges from 6 to 9, influenced by geological factors, atmospheric inputs, and biological activity; values above 8.5 can mobilize phosphorus from sediments, exacerbating nutrient availability. Dissolved oxygen concentrations vary with depth and season, often exceeding 8 mg/L in surface waters of oligotrophic lakes but dropping below 2 mg/L in hypolimnetic zones of eutrophic systems due to organic matter decomposition. Phosphorus is the primary limiting nutrient in most freshwater lakes, with total phosphorus (TP) concentrations below 0.01 mg/L characterizing oligotrophic conditions and above 0.1 mg/L indicating eutrophication risks, as established by EPA nutrient criteria. Nitrogen, while less limiting, contributes to eutrophication when TP is sufficient, with thresholds around 0.3-0.7 mg/L total N for mesotrophic to eutrophic transitions.[150][151][152] Biogeochemical cycles in lakes regulate the transformation and flux of these elements, with the carbon cycle driven by photosynthesis, which fixes atmospheric CO₂ into organic matter during daylight hours in the epilimnion, and respiration, which releases CO₂ through microbial decomposition of organics, often rendering many lakes net heterotrophic. In stratified lakes, carbon remineralization in anoxic hypolimnia leads to methane production and enhanced greenhouse gas emissions. The nitrogen cycle involves biological nitrogen fixation by diazotrophic bacteria converting N₂ to bioavailable forms like ammonium, primarily in surface waters, and denitrification in oxygen-depleted sediments, where nitrate is reduced to N₂ gas, removing fixed nitrogen from the system and preventing excessive accumulation. These processes maintain nutrient balances but can be disrupted by external loadings, altering lake trophic status from oligotrophic (nutrient-poor, high transparency) to hypereutrophic (nutrient-rich, frequent algal blooms and low DO). Acid deposition from industrial emissions lowers pH in sensitive lakes, increasing solubility of heavy metals like aluminum, mercury, and lead, which serve as key pollution indicators through elevated concentrations in sediments and water (e.g., mercury >1 μg/L signaling contamination risks).[153][154][152] Analysis of lake chemistry relies on standardized water sampling methods, such as depth-integrated collections using Van Dorn samplers or integrated tubes to capture representative profiles, followed by laboratory assays for parameters like TP via colorimetric methods or DO via Winkler titration. Stable isotope tracing enhances understanding of nutrient sources and pathways; for instance, δ¹⁵N signatures distinguish anthropogenic nitrogen inputs (e.g., fertilizers at -2 to +3‰) from natural fixation (+0 to +2‰), while δ¹³C isotopes track carbon origins between autochthonous production and allochthonous terrestrial inputs. These techniques, often deployed in monitoring programs, provide quantitative insights into pollution dynamics and cycle efficiencies without invasive sampling. Salinity, measured as total dissolved solids, briefly classifies lakes as freshwater (<0.5 g/L TDS) or saline, influencing chemical parameter interpretations.[150][155][156]Biological Communities
Lakes support diverse biological communities structured by depth-based zonation, which influences light availability, oxygen levels, and habitat types. The littoral zone, extending from the shoreline to the depth where light penetrates sufficiently for photosynthesis (typically up to 5-10 meters in clear lakes), hosts rooted macrophytes such as emergent plants and submerged aquatics that provide habitat and oxygen for invertebrates like insects, snails, and crustaceans.[157] Beyond this, the limnetic zone comprises the open, photic waters where floating plankton dominate, while the profundal zone in deeper lakes features low-light, often hypoxic sediments supporting benthic organisms such as bacteria, worms, and detritivores adapted to decomposition processes.[158] Key biotic groups in lakes include primary producers like phytoplankton, which form the base of the food web and consist mainly of diatoms (silica-shelled algae) and cyanobacteria (photosynthetic bacteria) that thrive in nutrient-rich surface waters.[159] Zooplankton, such as copepods (small crustaceans), graze on phytoplankton and serve as intermediaries, with calanoid copepods being prevalent in freshwater habitats due to their efficient filter-feeding adaptations.[160] Nekton, including fish, occupy higher trophic levels; salmonids like trout and char are common in cold, oligotrophic lakes, where they migrate or reside in oxygenated waters for feeding and spawning.[161] Organisms in specialized lake types exhibit remarkable adaptations. In meromictic lakes, where stable stratification prevents full mixing, microbes in the anoxic monimolimnion layer, such as sulfate-reducing bacteria, thrive via chemosynthesis and tolerate extreme sulfide concentrations.[162] Ancient lakes foster high endemism, with over 240 cichlid fish species in Lake Tanganyika uniquely adapted to niche-specific diets, colors, and behaviors through evolutionary radiation over millions of years.[163] The lake food chain begins with primary production by phytoplankton, converting sunlight and nutrients like phosphorus into biomass, which supports herbivorous zooplankton that, in turn, sustain planktivorous fish and apex predators such as piscivorous salmonids.[164] This nutrient-driven progression underscores the reliance of higher trophic levels on basal producers.[159]Ecosystem Dynamics
Lake ecosystems exhibit dynamic interactions driven by productivity, trophic structures, and responses to environmental changes, which collectively determine their stability and function. Gross primary production (GPP) in lakes represents the total energy fixed by photosynthetic organisms, primarily phytoplankton, and serves as the foundation for energy transfer through the ecosystem. In nutrient-poor lakes, light availability often emerges as the primary limiting factor for GPP, as reduced water transparency and depth constrain the photic zone where photosynthesis occurs.[165] Conversely, in nutrient-rich systems, phosphorus and nitrogen become key limiters, fueling excessive algal growth that can shift the balance toward heterotrophy.[166] These factors interact with lake morphology, such as depth and basin shape, to modulate overall productivity levels, with shallower lakes typically supporting higher GPP due to greater light penetration.[167] Trophic webs in lakes facilitate energy flow from primary producers to higher consumers, often modeled through network analyses that highlight efficiencies and bottlenecks in biomass transfer. Energy flow models, such as those based on Ecopath or stable isotope tracing, reveal how pelagic and benthic pathways interconnect, with efficiency varying from 10-20% between trophic levels due to respiration and detrital losses.[168] Keystone species play a pivotal role in structuring these webs; for instance, the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) in the Great Lakes acts as a mid-trophic level predator that influences zooplankton dynamics and supports piscivorous fish populations, thereby altering overall energy partitioning.[169] Such species can amplify or dampen energy flows, as seen in models where alewife dominance shifts the web toward greater pelagic reliance.[170] Ecological succession in lakes often progresses from oligotrophic states—characterized by low nutrient levels and clear water—to eutrophic conditions dominated by high biomass and oxygen depletion, driven by natural sediment accumulation or anthropogenic nutrient inputs. Eutrophication accelerates this shift, leading to algal blooms and hypoxic zones, while oligotrophication can reverse it through nutrient reduction efforts or biological invasions.[171] The invasion of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha), for example, has induced oligotrophication in many North American lakes by filtering phytoplankton and enhancing water clarity, thereby reducing GPP and restructuring benthic-pelagic couplings.[172] In European lakes, similar invasions have promoted shifts toward more oligotrophic-like conditions, though with variable long-term outcomes depending on invasion intensity.[173] Resilience in lake ecosystems refers to their capacity to absorb perturbations and maintain core functions, often mediated by biodiversity and biogeochemical buffers. Acidification, a major perturbation from atmospheric sulfur deposition, reduces pH and disrupts ion balances, leading to biodiversity loss and altered trophic interactions in sensitive softwater lakes.[174] Recovery trajectories post-acidification show lagged responses, with food web structures regaining complexity over decades through recolonization and reduced stressors, though some lakes exhibit persistent legacy effects like elevated aluminum levels.[175] Overall resilience is enhanced by antecedent conditions, such as buffering capacity, but global analyses indicate declining resilience in nearly half of large lakes due to compounded climate and pollution pressures.[176]Paleolakes
Identification and Evidence
Paleolakes are identified through a combination of geological, geomorphological, and stratigraphic evidence preserved in the rock record, which distinguishes lacustrine environments from fluvial or marine deposits. Key indicators include fine-grained sedimentary layers, biogenic remains, and erosional features that reflect prolonged water bodies. These features are often corroborated by dating techniques to establish timelines and environmental contexts.[177] Sedimentary layers, particularly lacustrine deposits such as silts, clays, and varves, provide primary evidence of ancient lakes by exhibiting characteristic low-energy deposition patterns, including horizontal lamination and minimal sorting. These deposits form in lake basins where suspended sediments settle slowly, creating thick sequences that can be mapped via well logs or outcrop exposures. For instance, in the San Luis Valley of Colorado, the Alamosa Formation's "blue clays" serve as aquitards, indicating a vast early Pleistocene lake that covered much of the basin.[177] Fossils embedded in these lacustrine sediments further confirm paleolake presence, as they often include aquatic or semi-aquatic organisms adapted to freshwater environments. Vertebrate fossils, such as fish or amphibians, along with plant remains, are common in such deposits and help delineate lake margins or depths. In the Alamosa Formation, abundant Irvingtonian-age vertebrate fossils at sites like Hansen Bluff verify the lacustrine setting and provide biostratigraphic correlation.[177] Similarly, the body-fossil record in Mesozoic lacustrine basins highlights biases toward well-preserved Lagerstätten but underscores the role of these remains in reconstructing ancient lake ecosystems. Paleoshorelines, manifested as strandlines, beach ridges, or spits, offer geomorphic evidence of fluctuating lake levels through wave-eroded platforms and sediment accumulations. These features are typically coarser-grained than basin sediments and align with former water elevations, often tilted due to isostatic rebound. Dating of such shorelines, using cosmogenic nuclides like ³He, has established maximum lake stands, as seen in the 439 ± 6 ka spits at Saddleback Mountain in the San Luis Valley.[177] Dating methods are essential for chronostratigraphy, with radiocarbon (¹⁴C) applied to organic materials in sediments, such as plant fragments or peat, to date wet phases in paleolake sequences. Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) ¹⁴C on terrestrial macrofossils from dune slacks in Belgium yielded calibrated ages for Allerød interstadials around 13,800–12,500 cal BP, confirming episodic lake formation.[178] Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dates the last exposure of quartz grains in shoreline or basin sands, providing burial ages independent of organics; in the same Belgian sites, OSL ages of ~16.3 ± 1.1 ka marked late Pleniglacial depositions.[178] Pollen analysis complements these by reconstructing surrounding vegetation, where assemblages of aquatic or riparian taxa indicate lake proximity; for example, Poaceae-dominated pollen in Bolivian Altiplano cores signals paleolake margins during the late Pleistocene.[179] Remote sensing enhances identification of dry paleolake basins through satellite-derived topographic and spectral data, revealing subtle features like paleo-shorelines in arid regions. Elevation models from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) and optical imagery from Landsat 8 highlight sand spits and ridges formed by ancient waves. In the Bodélé Depression of Chad, these methods delineate the ~7,000-year-old extent of Lake Mega-Chad, which spanned over 400,000 km², far exceeding the modern lake.[180] A prominent example is glacial Lake Agassiz in post-glacial North America, identified via multiple strandlines (e.g., Herman, Campbell) that form beach ridges 5–25 feet high across the Red River Valley. These tilted features, rising northward due to isostatic rebound, along with thick varved sediments up to 46 meters, confirm the lake's ~5,000-year duration from ~13,000 years ago, with rebound rates initially at 33–39 feet per century.[181]Geological Significance
Paleolakes serve as critical archives for reconstructing past climate variability through isotopic proxies preserved in their sediments, offering insights into precipitation patterns and hydrological balances over millennia. Stable oxygen isotopes (δ¹⁸O) in lacustrine carbonates and ostracods primarily reflect changes in precipitation-evaporation ratios, with lower values indicating wetter conditions and higher values signaling aridity. For instance, in Mono Lake, California, δ¹⁸O records from sediment cores reveal five major hydrologic oscillations between A.D. 1700 and 1941, correlating with Pacific Decadal Oscillation phases and demonstrating salinity increases during droughts, such as reaching ~98 g L⁻¹ by A.D. 1980 due to reduced inflow. Similarly, in the Chew Bahir Basin of the East African Rift, δ¹⁸O data from a 200,000-year core identify wet-dry cycles driven by orbital precession, with the African Humid Period (14–5 ka) showing 20–30% higher precipitation and expanded lake extents.[182][183] The formation and evolution of paleolake basins provide key evidence for tectonic processes, particularly in rift settings where subsidence and faulting control basin morphology and sedimentation. In the East African Rift System, half-graben structures like the Chew Bahir Basin illustrate how tectonic activity influenced lake development, with alternating sand and clay layers reflecting fluctuating water levels tied to rift dynamics over 617,000 years. These basins trace rift propagation and extension, as seen in the southern Ethiopian rift where faulting episodes created sub-basins that amplified climatic signals through "amplifier lakes." Such tectonic-lacustrine interactions highlight how rifting enhanced landscape heterogeneity, facilitating environmental shifts that impacted regional geology.[184][182] Fossil records from paleolakes document the evolution of aquatic biodiversity, revealing diversification events and migration pathways for freshwater ecosystems. During the Mesozoic Lacustrine Revolution (mid-Jurassic to mid-Cretaceous), paleolakes hosted the radiation of teleost fishes, aquatic insects, and macrophytes, with trace fossils like those in the Madygen Formation (Kyrgyzstan) indicating increased infaunalization and trophic complexity in stable, long-lived basins. Body fossils from sites such as Las Hoyas (Spain, Early Cretaceous) preserve diverse assemblages of odonatans, heteropterans, and algae, evidencing shifts from detritivore- to herbivore-dominated food webs and serving as corridors for faunal dispersal across continents. In the East African Rift, paleolake sediments yield vertebrate fossils illustrating aquatic community responses to environmental changes, underscoring lakes as hotspots for evolutionary innovation.[185][184] Paleolakes also illuminate human prehistory by preserving sites where early hominins interacted with dynamic aquatic environments. At Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, paleo-Lake Olduvai's saline-alkaline margins (fluctuating on Milankovitch cycles) attracted hominins to spring-fed wetlands, as evidenced by the FLK North site (1.818–1.803 Ma) with dense bone and Oldowan tool assemblages spanning ~15,000–22,000 years of wet-dry shifts. These lake-margin habitats provided freshwater and resources, linking climatic instability to early tool use and scavenging behaviors in Homo habilis and Paranthropus boisei. More recently, paleolake Otero in New Mexico has been linked to human footprints dated to the Last Glacial Maximum (~21,000–23,000 years ago), providing evidence of early human activity in the Americas associated with ancient lake systems.[186] In the Gobi Desert, ancient lakes and wetlands from ~8,000 years ago supported early human habitation, demonstrating paleolakes' importance in arid environments.[187] The Hominin Sites and Paleolakes Drilling Project further connects such basins to broader evolutionary patterns, with cores from Olduvai and nearby areas revealing how paleolake persistence influenced hominin dispersal and adaptation over 2 million years.[188][184]Changes and Disappearance
Natural Processes
Lakes naturally vanish or transform through a variety of geological and climatic processes that alter their basins over timescales ranging from centuries to millennia. These endogenous mechanisms include sediment infilling, excessive evaporation, and breaching of natural dams, each contributing to the reduction in water volume and eventual disappearance without external human influence. Such processes reflect the dynamic equilibrium between water input, storage, and loss in lacustrine systems. Infilling occurs primarily through the gradual accumulation of sediments and organic materials within the lake basin, reducing its depth and volume over extended periods. Allochthonous sediments, transported from surrounding catchments via rivers and wind, settle in the still waters of the lake, while autochthonous materials, such as algal remains and precipitated minerals, form from within the water column. This process can lead to a complete filling of the basin, transforming the lake into a wetland or terrestrial landscape. In regions like Poland's Wielkopolska district, historical analyses of 25 lakes over more than 50 years revealed an average volume loss of 9.9%, attributed largely to sediment deposition that outpaced area shrinkage. Tectonic uplift exacerbates infilling by elevating the basin floor relative to inflow, isolating it from drainage and promoting sediment trapping; in tectonic lakes, post-uplift extinction is often ensured by overfill once uplift ceases, with sediment supply overwhelming water retention. For instance, the eastern Nihewan Basin in China experienced paleolake disappearance around 340,000 years ago due to ongoing tectonic-driven infilling. In arid climates, evaporation exceeds precipitation and inflow, causing lakes to shrink and ultimately dry up, often leaving behind flat, salt-encrusted depressions known as playas. These endorheic basins, common in desert regions, receive water episodically from storms or groundwater but lose it rapidly through surface evaporation, concentrating salts and forming crusts that seal the surface. Playas represent the terminal stage of lake desiccation, where episodic flooding creates temporary shallow lakes that evaporate between wet periods. In the Mojave Desert, perennial lakes that existed during wetter Pleistocene conditions dried approximately 8,000 years ago as aridity intensified, leaving features like Soda Lake as expansive dry flats. Breaching happens when natural dams—formed by landslides, glaciers, or moraines—fail, releasing impounded water in sudden outbursts that drain the lake. Landslide dams, often triggered by earthquakes or heavy rainfall, block valleys and create upstream lakes; failure typically occurs via overtopping erosion, with many breaching shortly after formation. Glacial dams, including ice or moraine types, fail through subglacial tunneling, melting, or wave-induced overtopping, leading to rapid drainage. In steep mountainous areas, neoglacial moraine-dammed lakes are particularly prone to breaching from avalanches or ice-core melting. Such events can empty a lake in hours, reshaping downstream landscapes. The Aral Sea provides an example of partial natural drying prior to modern interventions, with historical records indicating fluctuations of at least 20 meters in surface level driven by climatic and tectonic variations over millennia. Before the 20th century, the sea experienced regression and transgression phases due to natural shifts in river inflow and basin dynamics, highlighting its vulnerability to endogenous processes.Human Impacts
Human activities have significantly altered lake systems through water diversions and modifications to nutrient inputs. Upstream diversions of river inflows, such as those along the Colorado River, have reduced water levels in reservoirs like Lake Mead by prioritizing agricultural and urban use, leading to chronic low inflows that exacerbate water scarcity.[189] Agricultural runoff introduces excess nutrients, particularly phosphorus and nitrogen, causing eutrophication in many lakes; this process stimulates algal blooms that deplete oxygen and disrupt aquatic ecosystems.[190] Human-induced sediment increases from land-use changes, such as deforestation and farming, also accelerate natural infilling processes in lakes, shortening their lifespan.[191] Pollution from industrial sources introduces persistent contaminants into lakes, including heavy metals and organic compounds that accumulate in sediments and bioaccumulate in food webs.[192] Emerging threats like plastic debris, including microplastics, enter lakes via wastewater and surface runoff, affecting water quality and wildlife; studies show widespread presence in global lake systems, with high concentrations in areas like the Great Lakes.[193] Remediation efforts, such as dredging, target these contaminated sediments by physically removing polluted materials from lake bottoms, thereby reducing risks to human health and ecosystems, as demonstrated in Superfund site cleanups.[194] The construction of dams fragments lake-connected riverine habitats, blocking migratory pathways for fish species and isolating populations.[195] This habitat fragmentation disrupts spawning and foraging behaviors, contributing to declines in native fish biodiversity; for instance, barriers across U.S. rivers prevent upstream access for anadromous species, altering community structures in impounded lakes.[196] A notable example of successful mitigation is Lake Erie's recovery following phosphorus control measures implemented in the 1970s under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. These efforts reduced point-source phosphorus loads from wastewater treatment plants by over 80%, curbing eutrophication and restoring water clarity and fish populations by the 1980s.[197] However, since the 1990s, harmful algal blooms have periodically returned due to non-point source nutrient pollution from agriculture and warmer temperatures, requiring ongoing mitigation efforts; as of 2025, blooms remain a seasonal concern with mild-to-moderate severity forecasted.[198]Climate Change Effects
Climate change is profoundly altering lake systems worldwide through elevated temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns, leading to significant hydrological, chemical, and ecological disruptions. Increased evaporation driven by higher air temperatures has contributed to widespread declines in lake volumes, with a 2023 study analyzing satellite data from 1992 to 2020 revealing that 43% of the world's largest natural lakes have experienced significant net water storage losses, primarily attributable to climate warming, increased evaporative demand, and human water consumption.[199] In permafrost-dominated regions, thawing soils beneath Arctic and subarctic lakes release substantial methane, a potent greenhouse gas; for instance, observations from the Lena River Delta indicate rising methane emissions during early summer months linked to permafrost degradation and warmer conditions. These changes exacerbate global warming in a feedback loop, as methane emissions from thermokarst lakes can account for up to 15% of regional Arctic greenhouse gas outputs. Warmer lake surface waters, which have risen globally by an average of 0.3–0.5°C per decade since the 1980s, are reducing ice cover duration and intensity, particularly in temperate and boreal lakes, resulting in shorter winter ice seasons by 1–2 weeks per decade in many cases. This reduction in ice cover allows greater light penetration and heat absorption, intensifying thermal stratification where warmer surface layers resist mixing with deeper, cooler waters, a trend projected to extend stratification periods by 10–60 days by the end of the century depending on emission scenarios and lake location. Enhanced stratification promotes hypoxic conditions and nutrient trapping, fostering harmful algal blooms (HABs) in nutrient-rich lakes; for example, warmer temperatures and prolonged stratification have been associated with a 20–200% increase in HAB frequency in U.S. freshwater systems since the 1990s. Projections from the IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) highlight severe risks for tropical lakes, where accelerated warming—expected to exceed 2°C by mid-century under moderate emissions—will strengthen year-round stratification, potentially eliminating seasonal turnover in many systems and disrupting oxygen and nutrient cycling essential for aquatic life. Seasonal variations in lake conditions are also amplified under climate change, with more extreme wet-dry cycles altering recharge rates and exacerbating water level fluctuations. Notable examples illustrate these impacts: on the Tibetan Plateau, southern rift valley lakes such as those in the Yarlung Zangbo basin have shrunk by up to 20% in area since the 1990s due to decreased precipitation and heightened evaporation outweighing glacier melt contributions in drier subregions. Similarly, the Great Lakes in North America have warmed by approximately 2–3°C in surface temperatures since 1970, with Lake Superior exhibiting a 2.5°C rise from 1979 to 2006 alone, correlating with reduced ice cover and increased evaporation losses.Human Interactions
Cultural and Recreational Uses
Lakes have held profound cultural significance across human societies, often revered as sacred sites in indigenous mythologies and spiritual practices. For instance, Lake Titicaca in the Andes is central to Inca lore, where it is regarded as the birthplace of the sun god Inti and the creator deity Viracocha, who emerged from its waters to form the world. Similarly, Crater Lake in Oregon has been a sacred place for Klamath, Modoc, and Yana tribes, symbolizing spiritual purification and serving as a site for shamanistic quests and origin legends.[200] In Native American traditions more broadly, lakes embody life-giving forces and are home to divine beings, such as the Water Babies in Washoe mythology at Lake Tahoe, who demand respect to ensure harmony with nature.[201] These beliefs underscore lakes' roles as portals to the spiritual realm, influencing rituals and community identities for millennia.[202] Beyond mythology, lakes have inspired extensive artistic and literary works, capturing their serene beauty and symbolic depth. In literature, Henry David Thoreau's Walden (1854) immortalizes Walden Pond as a metaphor for self-reliance and harmony with nature, drawing from his two-year sojourn by its shores to critique industrial society.[203] Painters of the Hudson River School, such as Thomas Cole in Lake with Dead Trees (Catskill) (1825), depicted lakes as emblems of the sublime American wilderness, evoking awe and the transient beauty of the natural world.[204] Albert Bierstadt's Lake Lucerne (c. 1858) further exemplifies this tradition, using luminous sketches from the Swiss Alps to convey the majestic scale of alpine lakes, which influenced Romantic perceptions of untouched landscapes.[205] These representations not only aestheticized lakes but also reinforced their cultural value as sources of inspiration and reflection. Historically, lakes attracted early human settlements due to their reliable resources, fostering the development of complex societies. Archaeological evidence from the Great Lakes region indicates that Paleoindian groups occupied sites around post-glacial lakes as early as 10,000 years ago, exploiting fish, waterfowl, and freshwater for sustenance and trade.[206] At Yellowstone Lake, Late Archaic peoples intensified use between 3,000 and 1,500 years ago, establishing seasonal camps for fishing and tool-making that supported larger populations.[207] Woodland Indian cultures in the region adapted farming and hunting practices to lake environs, creating enduring village networks that integrated aquatic resources into daily life.[208] Such proximity to lakes facilitated cultural exchanges and technological innovations, shaping regional histories. Recreational pursuits around lakes provide essential leisure opportunities, including boating, fishing, and swimming, which promote physical health and social bonding. In the United States, national parks facilitate these activities through managed access, with millions annually engaging in watersports on lakes to enjoy scenic vistas and wildlife.[209] The Lake District in England exemplifies tourism's draw, attracting approximately 17.7 million visitors in 2024 for hiking, sailing, and angling amid Wordsworth-inspired landscapes, generating substantial economic benefits through accommodations and local services.[210] These uses highlight lakes' role in fostering outdoor recreation while supporting community well-being. Conflicts over lakes often arise from tensions between indigenous rights and modern development, as traditional custodians advocate for cultural preservation against encroachment. At Pyramid Lake in Nevada, Paiute tribes have litigated for Winters Doctrine water rights since the early 20th century, challenging upstream diversions that diminish sacred fisheries and ceremonial sites.[211] Similarly, Navajo communities contest Colorado River basin developments, asserting treaty-based claims to maintain spiritual connections to ancestral waters amid drought and infrastructure projects.[212] These disputes emphasize the need for equitable governance that honors indigenous stewardship.Economic Exploitation
Lakes provide essential freshwater resources for drinking water supply and irrigation, particularly in regions facing water scarcity. In Egypt, Lake Nasser functions as the country's primary freshwater reservoir, storing up to 158 billion cubic meters of Nile water and releasing 55.5 billion cubic meters annually to support irrigation for agriculture, which constitutes the backbone of the national economy.[213] Additionally, treated water from Lake Nasser contributes to domestic drinking supplies, underscoring its role in public health and urban development.[213] Globally, large lakes like the Great Lakes supply potable water to over 40 million people in the United States and Canada, enabling cost-effective treatment and distribution systems that bolster municipal economies.[214] Hydropower harnessed from lake reservoirs represents a major energy resource, with global generation accounting for 14.3% of total electricity production in 2024.[215] Reservoir-based facilities, which impound water to create artificial lakes, dominate this sector and provide reliable baseload power while supporting flood control and water storage for downstream uses.[216] Commercial fisheries in lakes yield substantial economic output through wild capture and aquaculture. Lake Victoria, shared by Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, produced 1.48 million tonnes of fish in 2021, primarily Nile perch and dagaa, generating beach-level value exceeding USD 1.14 million and fueling export revenues that sustain local livelihoods.[217] Aquaculture in lakes, such as cage farming of tilapia and salmonids, enhances yields and contributes to global seafood production valued at billions annually, promoting food security and rural employment.[218] Mining operations target lake minerals and shoreline materials for industrial applications. The Dead Sea supports extensive extraction of salt, potash, and bromine via solar evaporation of hypersaline brine, establishing it as a leading global supplier since 1931 and driving significant export income.[219] Aggregates like sand and gravel are quarried from lake shores for construction, integrating into the broader natural aggregates sector that generates nearly $40 billion in annual U.S. sales alone and supports infrastructure development worldwide.[220] Economic valuation of lake ecosystem services employs meta-analysis and geospatial models to quantify benefits like water provisioning and fisheries support. A global synthesis estimates these services at USD 1.3–5.1 trillion annually, drawing from hedonic pricing and contingent valuation methods applied to over 700 worldwide observations.[221] Such models highlight synergies between services, aiding policy decisions on resource allocation without overexploiting natural capital.[222]Conservation Efforts
Conservation efforts for lakes emphasize integrated watershed management to address pollution, habitat loss, and biodiversity decline resulting from human activities and climate variability. Watershed management involves coordinated actions across entire drainage basins to improve water quality, such as reducing nutrient runoff through agricultural best practices and stormwater controls, as implemented by programs like those of the U.S. Natural Resources Conservation Service. Protected areas play a crucial role, with many lakes designated under the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, which promotes the conservation and wise use of wetlands through local, national, and international cooperation, covering over 2,500 sites worldwide as of 2024. Invasive species control is another key approach, targeting non-native organisms that disrupt aquatic ecosystems; for instance, global assessments highlight the need for monitoring and eradication in protected areas to mitigate negative biotic and abiotic impacts. At the international level, frameworks like the UNECE Water Convention, adopted in 1992 and open globally since 2016, facilitate cooperation on shared transboundary waters, requiring parties to prevent pollution and promote sustainable management of international lakes and rivers. Restoration projects exemplify these efforts, such as the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan in Florida, authorized by U.S. Congress in 2000, which aims to restore natural water flows to the Everglades ecosystem, including connected lakes, by storing and treating excess water from Lake Okeechobee to reduce nutrient pollution and enhance habitat connectivity. Challenges in lake conservation often arise from transboundary disputes, particularly in shared systems like those in the Mekong River Basin, where upstream dam construction by countries including China has led to concerns over altered flows, reduced sediment delivery, and impacts on downstream lakes and fisheries, complicating cooperative management under the Mekong River Commission. Despite these hurdles, successes demonstrate effective strategies; in Lake Simcoe, Canada, the 2009 Lake Simcoe Protection Plan has achieved a 50% reduction in phosphorus from sewage treatment plants since implementation, leading to decreased algal blooms and improved water quality through targeted nutrient management.Extraterrestrial Lakes
Occurrence on Other Worlds
Extraterrestrial lakes, distinct from Earth's water-based bodies, have been identified or inferred on several solar system objects through spacecraft observations, primarily involving hydrocarbons on Titan and subsurface water oceans on icy moons. These features arise under extreme conditions, such as cryogenic temperatures and tidal heating, and provide insights into diverse planetary geologies. Confirmed surface lakes exist on Saturn's moon Titan, while subsurface liquid water is strongly evidenced on Jupiter's moon Europa and Saturn's moon Enceladus, with paleolakes indicated on ancient Mars.[223][224] On Titan, stable lakes and seas of liquid methane and ethane occupy the northern polar region, with the largest being Kraken Mare, spanning over 400,000 km²—comparable in scale to the Caspian Sea on Earth. These were first confirmed in 2007 by NASA's Cassini spacecraft using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging, which penetrated Titan's thick haze to map dark, smooth features indicative of liquid surfaces, and visual and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIMS) data, which detected specular reflections and absorption signatures consistent with hydrocarbon compositions. The Huygens probe, which landed on Titan in 2005 as part of the Cassini-Huygens mission, provided contextual imagery of the moon's surface, revealing pebbled terrain and drainage channels that suggest past or ongoing hydrological processes involving these non-aqueous liquids. Smaller lakes, such as those in the Ontario Lacus region in the south, exhibit seasonal variations, with some drying and reforming due to Titan's methane cycle driven by orbital eccentricity.[225][226][223] Jupiter's moon Europa harbors a vast subsurface ocean of salty liquid water beneath a 10-30 km thick icy crust, estimated to contain more than twice the volume of all Earth's oceans combined. This ocean's existence was inferred from Galileo's magnetometer data in the 1990s, which detected an induced magnetic field signaling a conductive, salty layer beneath the ice, and corroborated by surface observations of chaotic terrains and non-impact fractures suggesting ice shell-ocean interactions. Cassini and Hubble observations later identified potential water vapor plumes erupting from the surface, further implying exchange between the ocean and exterior. On Saturn's moon Enceladus, geysers erupting from south polar fissures provide direct evidence of a regional or global subsurface ocean of liquid water, discovered by Cassini in 2005 through imaging and spectrometry of water vapor plumes containing salts, silica nanoparticles, and molecular hydrogen—indicating hydrothermal activity at the ocean floor. The plumes, reaching heights of up to 500 km, originate from cryovolcanic vents driven by tidal heating.[224][227][228] Paleolakes on Mars, remnants of an ancient wetter climate during the Noachian and Hesperian periods (over 3 billion years ago), are evidenced by orbital imagery from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Curiosity rover data showing deltaic sediments, shoreline features, and evaporite deposits in craters like Gale and Jezero. These transient water bodies, now dry, filled impact basins and outflow channels, with approximately 500 identified sites.[229] Earth analogs aid in interpreting these features: the Antarctic Dry Valleys, with their ice-covered lakes and hyper-arid sediments, serve as models for Mars' paleolakes, preserving microbial signatures in cold, desiccated environments similar to those inferred on early Mars; for Titan's hydrocarbon lakes, Antarctic perennially ice-covered lakes provide analogs for cryogenic liquid stability and shoreline processes under low temperatures. Detection of extraterrestrial lakes relies on remote sensing techniques, including radar altimetry for bathymetry (e.g., Cassini's measurements of Kraken Mare depths exceeding 100 m), multispectral spectroscopy for compositional analysis, and plume sampling via flybys. Geological conditions enabling these lakes include cryovolcanism—eruptive processes involving volatile ices like water-ammonia on Enceladus and possible methane on Titan—and cryoseisms, icequakes that may fracture surfaces and facilitate liquid upwelling on these moons.[230][231][232]Scientific Importance
Extraterrestrial lakes play a pivotal role in astrobiology by providing environments where liquid solvents could support prebiotic chemistry and potentially habitable conditions. On Saturn's moon Titan, the hydrocarbon lakes, such as those filled with methane and ethane, host complex organic molecules that mimic early Earth's prebiotic processes, including the formation of potential cell membrane analogs like vinyl cyanide detected in the atmosphere.[233] Recent models propose mechanisms for protocell-like structures emerging naturally in these cryogenic liquids, driven by atmospheric composition and surface interactions.[234] Similarly, Jupiter's moon Europa harbors a vast subsurface ocean beneath its icy crust, estimated to contain twice the volume of Earth's oceans, with habitability assessments focusing on chemical energy sources from water-rock interactions and potential nutrient delivery via hydrothermal vents.[235] Models indicate that radioactive decay in Europa's rocky mantle could sustain microbial life in this ocean, analogous to deep-sea ecosystems on Earth.[236] These lakes offer critical insights into planetary processes by serving as analogs to Earth's climate and geology. Titan's active methanological cycle, involving evaporation, cloud formation, and precipitation of hydrocarbons—and potentially wave activity shaping lake shores, as suggested by 2024 analyses of Cassini data—parallels Earth's water cycle but operates at extreme cold temperatures, providing a natural laboratory for understanding volatile-driven surface evolution on other worlds.[237] This cycle shapes dune fields, river channels, and lake basins, revealing how organic-rich atmospheres influence geomorphology without liquid water. On Mars, recurring slope lineae (RSL)—seasonal dark streaks on slopes—have been interpreted through recent analyses as potentially involving briny subsurface aquifers recharging surface flows, informing models of transient liquid activity in arid environments.[238] Ongoing and planned missions underscore the scientific value of these lakes. NASA's Dragonfly rotorcraft-lander, scheduled for launch in July 2028, will investigate Titan's surface chemistry and prebiotic potential by hopping across diverse terrains, including near organic-rich dunes and possible former lake sites.[239] For Europa, conceptual lander missions are under development to sample the icy surface for biosignatures ejected from the subsurface ocean, building on the Europa Clipper orbiter—which launched in October 2024 and is en route—with findings expected in the early 2030s.[240] These efforts, combined with orbital observations of Martian RSL, aim to test hypotheses about liquid stability and habitability across the solar system.Notable Lakes
Largest by Surface Area
The Caspian Sea is the world's largest lake by surface area, covering approximately 378,000 km² across Asia and Europe, and it is a saline endorheic basin with no outflow to the ocean, leading to higher salinity from evaporation.[241][242] Among freshwater lakes, Lake Superior ranks first at about 82,000 km² in North America, functioning as an exorheic system that drains northward through interconnected rivers.[241][243] Lake Victoria follows as the third-largest overall and the largest in Africa, spanning roughly 67,000 km² in a tropical rift valley setting.[241] Surface area measurements for these lakes are often derived from satellite imagery and global databases, accounting for variations due to seasonal water levels and shoreline definitions; endorheic lakes like the Caspian tend to fluctuate more dramatically with precipitation and evaporation balances compared to exorheic ones like Superior.[241] The following table summarizes the top 10 largest lakes by surface area, highlighting continental distribution and salinity:| Rank | Lake Name | Surface Area (km²) | Continent | Salinity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Caspian Sea | 378,119 | Asia/Europe | Saline |
| 2 | Lake Superior | 81,936 | North America | Freshwater |
| 3 | Lake Victoria | 67,075 | Africa | Freshwater |
| 4 | Lake Huron | 59,757 | North America | Freshwater |
| 5 | Lake Michigan | 57,399 | North America | Freshwater |
| 6 | Lake Tanganyika | 32,821 | Africa | Freshwater |
| 7 | Lake Baikal | 31,925 | Asia | Freshwater |
| 8 | Great Bear Lake | 30,530 | North America | Freshwater |
| 9 | Lake Malawi | 29,252 | Africa | Freshwater |
| 10 | Great Slave Lake | 28,568 | North America | Freshwater |
Largest by Volume
Lake volume, calculated as the product of surface area and mean depth, serves as a key metric for assessing a lake's capacity to store water, with deeper lakes generally holding greater volumes due to their bathymetric profiles. Among the world's largest lakes by volume, tectonic processes play a dominant role in forming the deepest basins, which enable substantial water retention. These rift valleys, such as those in the East African Rift System and the Baikal Rift Zone, result from crustal extension and subsidence, creating elongated, profound depressions that accumulate vast quantities of water over geological timescales.[246][247] The uppermost ranks are occupied by freshwater lakes renowned for their exceptional depths. Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, tops the list with a volume of 23,615 km³, representing approximately 20% of the planet's unfrozen surface freshwater.[248][249] Lake Tanganyika, straddling the borders of Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, and Zambia, follows with 18,900 km³, making it Africa's largest reservoir by volume and the second globally among freshwater bodies.[250] Third is Lake Superior in North America, shared by Canada and the United States, containing 12,100 km³—more water than the other four Great Lakes combined.[251]| Rank | Lake | Location | Volume (km³) | Maximum Depth (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Baikal | Russia | 23,615 | 1,642 |
| 2 | Tanganyika | Tanzania, DRC, Burundi, Zambia | 18,900 | 1,470 |
| 3 | Superior | Canada, USA | 12,100 | 406 |
Deepest and Most Unique
Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, holds the record as the world's deepest lake, reaching a maximum depth of 1,642 meters, as measured by the Hydrographic Service of the Central Administration of Navigation and Oceanography through bathymetric sounding techniques.[256] This depth was verified during systematic expeditions that employed echo-sounding methods to map the lake's rift valley floor.[257] Lake Tanganyika in East Africa ranks second globally at 1,471 meters deep, confirmed by international limnological surveys using sonar profiling.[258] The Caspian Sea, often classified as a lake due to its endorheic basin, achieves a maximum depth of 1,025 meters in its southern basin, determined through oceanographic expeditions with multibeam sonar.[259] Among unique lakes, Tanganyika also stands out as the longest freshwater body at 673 kilometers, stretching along the East African Rift.[260] The highest known lake is the crater lake on Ojos del Salado volcano in the Andes, situated at 6,390 meters elevation on the mountain's eastern flank, observed during mountaineering expeditions.[261] Meromictic lakes, which maintain permanent stratification without mixing, include Lake Cadagno in the Swiss Alps, where the lower anoxic layer accumulates sulfur compounds due to sub-lacustrine springs and supports dense populations of phototrophic sulfur bacteria.[262][263] Distinctive oddities highlight lakes' extreme conditions: Lake Hillier in Western Australia appears bubblegum pink from high concentrations of the salt-tolerant alga Dunaliella salina, which produces carotenoid pigments in hypersaline waters.[264] Frying Pan Lake in New Zealand's Waimangu Volcanic Rift Valley is a geothermal hot spring reaching near-boiling temperatures up to 100°C, formed post-1886 eruption and verified as the world's largest by surface area through bathymetric surveys.[265] These depths often correlate with substantial water volumes, underscoring the lakes' hydrological significance.[258] All records stem from verified expeditions and sonar-based measurements to ensure accuracy.[256]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/lac#French
- https://science.[nasa](/page/NASA).gov/resource/how-a-delta-forms-where-river-meets-lake/
