Endorheic lake: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:LakeBadwater crop.jpg|thumb|230px|left|Death Valley, Spring 2005: [[ephemeral]] [[Lake Badwater]] in the flooded [[Badwater Basin]]]] |
[[Image:LakeBadwater crop.jpg|thumb|230px|left|Death Valley, Spring 2005: [[ephemeral]] [[Lake Badwater]] in the flooded [[Badwater Basin]]]] |
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|fontsize=80% |title=Geographic sinks |title_fnt= |tstyle= |title_bg= |qalign= |qstyle= |quoted= |
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{{technical|date=November 2017}} |
{{technical|date=November 2017}} |
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Depending on losses, precipitation, and [[Inflow (hydrology)|inflow]] (e.g., a spring, a tributary, or flooding); the [[Hydrology|temporal result]] of a lake in a sink may be a persistent [[lake]], an [[Lake#How lakes disappear|intermittent lake]], a [[Dry lake|playa]] lake (temporarily covered with water), or an [[ephemeral]] lake. |
Depending on losses, precipitation, and [[Inflow (hydrology)|inflow]] (e.g., a spring, a tributary, or flooding); the [[Hydrology|temporal result]] of a lake in a sink may be a persistent [[lake]], an [[Lake#How lakes disappear|intermittent lake]], a [[Dry lake|playa]] lake (temporarily covered with water), or an [[ephemeral]] lake. |
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== List of geographic sinks== |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
Revision as of 23:44, 7 December 2017
This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(November 2017) |
A geographic sink is a depression within an endorheic basin where water collects with no visible outlet. Instead of discharging, the collected water is lost due to evaporation and/or penetration (water sinking underground, e.g., to become groundwater in an aquifer). If the sink has karstic terrain, water will sink at a higher rate than the surface evaporation, and conversely if the lakebed or sink bed has a layer of soil that is largely impervious to water (hardpan), evaporation will predominate. Since dry lakes in sinks with hardpan have little penetration, they require more severe aridity/heat to eliminate collected water at a comparable rate as for a similar sink with appreciable penetration.
Depending on losses, precipitation, and inflow (e.g., a spring, a tributary, or flooding); the temporal result of a lake in a sink may be a persistent lake, an intermittent lake, a playa lake (temporarily covered with water), or an ephemeral lake.
List of geographic sinks
- Mediterranean Sink during the Messinian Event
- Red Sea when blocked off by the Perim volcano
- Africa: Afar Depression
- USA: Carson Sink
- USA: Humboldt Sink
- USA: Quinn River Sink
- USA: Salton Sink