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Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and...

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rque lakes in the rockies •Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake outflow that maintains the lake level after the glacier has receded. •Drainage in Moraine lake was further impeded by a large landslide across the outflow •Most cirque lakes are
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Page 1: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Cirque lakes in the rockies

•Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake outflow that maintains the lake level after the glacier has receded.

•Drainage in Moraine lake was further impeded by a large landslide across the outflow

•Most cirque lakes are fishless unless stocked

Page 2: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.
Page 3: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

•Large blocks of ice left behind in moraines and till mounds as glaciers melt and grow “stagnant”. •As they gradually melt, they leave behind a depression in the till that fills by seepage •Many of the small pothole lakes in Alberta are kettle lakes.

Pothole or kettle lake formed in glacial --usually small < 30 ha, but can be quite deep--10-40 m. Watersheds are very small.

Page 4: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Polygon ponds form along the Arctic coastal lowlands.

Form in the summer as wedges of ice melt within the permafrost to form smallpolygonal basins (around 50 m across) that fill up with surface water.

See Fig. 6.2 in your text

Polygonal ponds near the Lena River, Russia

Another type of basin associated with ice melting.

Page 5: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Most of the large and old lakes in the world are Tectonic lakes

Many occupy ancient basins called grabens—formed by large geological faults

Rocks before faulting

Lake in a symmetrical graben

Lake in a tilted graben

Page 6: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Lake Baikal—one of the most famous tectonic lakes in the world, has existed for over 20 million years

Page 7: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.
Page 8: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Crater Lake, Oregon -589 m deep and possibly the clearest lake in the world, Transparency up to 90 m.Thermocline very deep for its size No rooted plants. Mud doesn’t accumulate on the bottom till > 90 m depth

Some of the most spectacular tectonic lakes are formed in volcanic craters.

Why is this lake so different from most lakes?

Page 9: Cirque lakes in the rockies Glaciers in headwater valleys tend to scour out a bowl shaped basin and the excavated material forms a moraine at the lake.

Physical features of lakes that determine habitat characteristics

•inflow from the watershed/Catchment

•Water residence time

•Morphometry, Mean depth and volume

•Thermal stratification and physical mixing

•wind./currents/wave action

•Sediment deposition

•Light extinction


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