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Sarez Lake

Coordinates: 38°12′06″N 72°45′27″E / 38.20167°N 72.75750°E / 38.20167; 72.75750
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Sarez Lake
Coordinates38°12′06″N 72°45′27″E / 38.20167°N 72.75750°E / 38.20167; 72.75750
Primary inflowsMurghab River
Primary outflowsMurghab River
Basin countriesTajikistan
Max. length55.8 km
Max. width3.3 km
Surface area79.7 km²
Average depth201.8 m
Max. depth505 m
Water volume16.074 km³
Shore length1162 km
Surface elevation3,263 m
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Sarez Lake is a lake in Rushon district of Gorno-Badakhshan province, Tajikistan. Length about 55.8 km, depth few hundred meters, water surface elevation about 3,263 m over sea level and volume of water is more than 16 km³. The mountains around come up more than 2,416 m over the lake level.

The lake formed in 1911, after a great earthquake, when the Murghab River was blocked by a big landslide. Scientists believe that the landslide dam formed by the earthquake, known as the Usoi Dam, is unstable given local seismicity, and that the terrain below the lake is in danger of catastrophic flood if the dam were to fail during a future earthquake.[1]

Shadau Lake is a small water body southwest of the Usoi Dam and west of Sarez Lake.[2]

How Sarez Lake was formed

The formation of Sarez Lake is described in the book by Middleton and Thomas:[3]

The earthquake, estimated at 6.5-7.0 on the Richter scale, occurred about midnight, 5-6 February, 1911 (old style). Deaths were estimated at 302. The landslide was 2.2 million cubic meters and formed the Usoi Dam which is 3km long and 550m high, the tallest natural dam in the world. Usoi was a village buried under the landslide. It was not until April 1914 that the lake rose high enough to begin flowing over the dam. The lake reached its current level in 1920. The area was so isolated and the destruction of mountain tracks so complete that it took six weeks before word reached the Russian posts at Murghab and Khorog.

In 1968 a landslide caused two meter high waves in the lake. A 1997 conference in Dushanbe concluded that the dam was unstable and might collapse if there were another powerful earthquake. A 2004 study by the World Bank held that the dam was stable. The principal danger seems to be a partially detached mass of rock of about 3 cubic kilometers that could break loose and fall into the lake. Since the valley below the dam is so narrow, any flood would be very destructive.

Notes

  1. ^ Bolt, B.A., W.L. Horn, G.A. Macdonald and R.F. Scott, (1975) Geological hazards: earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanoes, avalanches, landslides, floods Springer-Verlag, New York, ISBN 0-387-06948-8
  2. ^ Shadau Lake on 1:110'000 map
  3. ^ Robert Middleton and Huw Thomas, Tajikistan and the High Pamirs, Odyssey, 2008, ISBN 9622177735, ISBN 978-9622177734