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Lake Origins Water bodies may be classified by their origin. n Gradual or catastrophic geological events form and/or destroy lakes, streams, wetlands and.

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Presentation on theme: "Lake Origins Water bodies may be classified by their origin. n Gradual or catastrophic geological events form and/or destroy lakes, streams, wetlands and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lake Origins Water bodies may be classified by their origin. n Gradual or catastrophic geological events form and/or destroy lakes, streams, wetlands and estuaries. n Lakes are ephemeral in a geologic sense. The rate of aging can be measured.

2 Most lake basins are created by gradual events. n glacial activity n deformation of the earth’s crust

3 Rapid catastrophic geologic events n earthquakes n landslides (Mount St, Helens eruption triggered massive mudslides expanding Spirit Lake) n volcanic eruptions

4 Lake districts n Lakes formed in one geographic area are generally created by some common natural event. n In a lake district the lakes have similar characteristics  but their water quality,  basin morphometry and biological productivity may differ.

5 Minnesota

6 Non-geologically formed lakes n Beavers dam up streams, shallow but extensive lakes. n Humans create artificial lakes  damming rivers and streams  irrigation  water storage  hydroelectric power generation

7 Tectonically formed lakes Shifts in the earth’s crust  uplifting of mountains  breaking and displacement of rock strata  cause part of a valley to sink  creating a depression that fills with water. n Faulting: Lakes may be associated with the movement of a single fault.  depressions formed by tilting.

8 n Grabens are lakes associated with the movement of multiple faults.  Lake Tahoe: depressed area between adjacent faults.

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11 Tectonic formation n The size of the lake depends on the magnitude of the faulting and the amount of silting over the years since formation. n Uplift of portions of sea floor created Lake Okeechobee, Florida  area = 1840 km 2, the second largest surface area of freshwater lake in the United States.

12 Rift lakes: One great fault forms a series of lakes. n In eastern Africa=  Lakes Malawi, Tanganyika, Edward, Albert, and Turkana, and now marine Red Sea.

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15 Volcanically formed lakes Worldwide distribution Calderas (broad craterlike basin of a volcano, formed by an explosion or by collapse of the cone). n Best known = Crater Lake, Oregon: 10 km across, >600 meters deep. Lava flows may dam a valley to form a lake:  Snag Lake, in Mount Lassen National Park, CA. n Differential cooling of lava forms lake basins:  Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park.

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19 Glacially formed lakes Glacial activity has been the most important lake- creating force over the last few millennia. n Most of the world’s lake basins, including the Great Lakes,  were formed during the Pleistocene Era  when glaciers covered much of the earth.  Lakes filled with water as glaciers melted and shrunk. n Famous lake districts:  Great lakes, Wisconsin (land of a 1,000 lakes)  English and Scottish, Ontario, Canada  Scandinavian and Alpine Lakes (in general)

20 Quebec

21 Cirque lake (French cirque, meaning semicircle or amphitheater> Glacial rock-basin lake. Usually found at the head of glaciated valleys where the valley abuts the steep slope of a mountain. Deepest near the cliff and shallow near the outlet. The water is dammed at the outlet by a low barrier of glacial debris called a moraine.

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23 Cirque lake

24 Moraine Lake Glacial moraines may dam a stream and form a lake.

25 Glacial valley lake

26 Rock is eroded by the slow downhill movement of the glacier aided by continual freezing and thawing activity that fractures the rock. A series of valley-rock-basin lakes like the beads on a rosary are called paternoster lakes.

27 Blocks of ice trapped in a glacial moraine, melts and a kettle lake is formed. Kettle lakes: are very steep sided, may be meromictic (the bottom water never mixes with surface water, because of their small surface-to- volume ratio and the wind fetch is small. Walden Pond in Massachusetts

28 Kettle Lake

29 Kettle lakes

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31 Oxbow and scroll lakes are small lakes formed in the flood plains of rivers. Oxbow: formed when the loop of a meandering river is cut off by silt deposition. Found in the flood plains of almost any river worldwide.

32 Oxbow formation, erosion through meander neck

33 Scroll lakes: a former river channel has moved as a result of sediment deposition at a bend. Flood plain lakes are connected to the river during high floods, and become a great habitat for fish.

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