Lake Origins - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lake Origins

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Non-geologically formed lakes Beavers dam up streams, ... The water is dammed at the outlet by a low barrier of glacial debris called a moraine. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lake Origins


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

2
  • Most lake basins are created by gradual events.
  • glacial activity
  • deformation of the earths crust

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

4
Lake districts
  • Lakes formed in one geographic area are generally
    created by some common natural event.
  • 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
  • Beavers dam up streams, shallow but extensive
    lakes.
  • Humans create artificial lakes
  • damming rivers and streams
  • irrigation
  • water storage
  • hydroelectric power generation

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

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

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Tectonic formation
  • The size of the lake depends on the magnitude of
    the faulting and the amount of silting over the
    years since formation.
  • Uplift of portions of sea floor created Lake
    Okeechobee, Florida
  • area 1840 km2, the second largest surface area
    of freshwater lake in the United States.

12
  • Rift lakes One great fault forms a series of
    lakes.
  • 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).
  • Best known Crater Lake, Oregon 10 km across,
    gt600 meters deep.
  • Lava flows may dam a valley to form a lake
  • Snag Lake, in Mount Lassen National Park, CA.
  • 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.
  • Most of the worlds 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.
  • 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
    amphitheatergt
  • 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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Cirque lake
24
Glacial moraines may dam a stream and form a lake.
Moraine 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
30
Kettle lakes
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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