Lake Enriquillo Information
Lake Enriquillo (Spanish: Lago Enriquillo) is a lake in the Dominican Republic and is the largest lake and lowest point in the Caribbean and the lowest point on any ocean island.[1]
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The lake
Lake Enriquillo is one of only a few saltwater lakes in the world inhabited by crocodiles. Lake Enriquillo is located in a rift valley formed by the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault that extends 79 miles (127 km) from Port-au-Prince Bay in Haiti in the west, to near Neiba Bay in the Dominican Republic in the east. This fault was responsible for the catastrophic 2010 Haiti earthquake. The lake is named after Enriquillo, a Taíno cacique who rebelled against the Spaniards in the early 16th century, and hid in the mountains North of the lake.
South shore of Lake Enriquillo, looking northward to the Sierra de Neiba mountains; Independencia Province, Dominican Republic.The rift valley is a former marine strait, and was created around 1 million years ago when the water level fell and the strait was filled in by sediments of the Yaque del Sur River. The lake is 9 to 12 miles (15 to 20 km) wide. Known as the Cul-de-Sac Depression in Haiti and the Hoya de Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic, parts of the rift valley are below sea level and are covered by large salt lakes.
Lake Enriquillo covers an area of 102 square miles (265 km²) and is the lowest point in the Caribbean falling 129 feet (39 m) below sea level. Its drainage basin includes 10 minor river systems. The rivers that rise in the Neiba Mountains to the north (lower center and lower right of the image) are perennial. Those rivers that rise in the Baoruco Mountains to the south (upper center and upper left of the image) are intermittent.
Lake Enriquillo has no outlet. The lake's water level varies because of a combination of storm-driven precipitation events and the region's high evaporation rate. Salinity in the lake can vary between 33 ppt to over 100 ppt. Tremors in the region are common. Just above the right center of the image, the other large salt lake in the rift valley, Etang Saumâtre located in the country of Haiti, is visible.
The lake contains 3 islands: Isla Barbarita, Islita, and Isla Cabritos. The last one is the largest of all and contains a National Park famous for its crocodiles and flamingos. When water levels drop as a result of dry spells, the islands are usually linked to each other by sandbars.
The region has a hot, semiarid climate with an average annual rainfall of about 24 inches. Plants that thrive in arid places, like the cactus, can be found here.
Flooding trend
During the late 2000s, the lake has increased its surface area dramatically. Records for 2004 show the lake to be 164 square kilometers; measurements from 2011 put the area at 350 km². This rise in level has affected hundres of nearby residents in townships that bordered the lake, with abundant loss of agricultural land which, even if the waters recede, will probably be rendered useless due to the lake's salinity damaging the qualities of the once-arable soil.[2]
Reasons for the flooding are being debated on, but must be a combination of several including increase in rainfall in the region in recent years, increase of sediments going into the lake from run-off due to deforestantion that are contributing to raising the lakebed, and milder temperatures which are reducing the surface evaporation rate.[3]
Footnotes
- ^ Baker, Christopher P.; Gilles Mingasson (2008). Dominican Republic. National Geographic Books. p. 190. http://books.google.com/books?id=toEFe48MD1IC&pg=PA190&lpg=PA190&dq=&source=bl&ots=g8OAevPLoN&sig=3M05xw9v9VFf-eXjVDZhqLztjvw&hl=en&ei=m-Q7S4WCLtCztgfU--2MCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=39&ved=0CH8Q6AEwJg.
- ^ Ramírez, Mariana (2012). La vida después del agua. Diario Libre. http://www.diariolibre.com/destacada/2012/01/16/i318627_actualidad-lago-enriquillo.html.
- ^ Ramírez, Mariana (2012). La vida después del agua. Diario Libre. http://www.diariolibre.com/destacada/2012/01/16/i318627_actualidad-lago-enriquillo.html.
References
- Buck et al.. Physical and chemical properties of hypersaline Lago Enriquillo, Dominican Republic (2005).
- Van Der Helm, Rien. Reis-handboek Dominicaanse Republiek (Elmar, 1991).
External links
Categories:
- Lakes of the Dominican Republic
- Endorheic lakes
- Rift lakes
- Biosphere reserves of the Dominican Republic
- Lowest points
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