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Dabusun Lake

Dabusun or Dabuxun Lake, alternately known as Dabasun Nor, is a lake beside the town Qarhan, just north of Golmud in the Haixi Prefecture of Qinghai Province in northwestern China. Fed by the main course of the Golmud River, it is the largest present-day lake in the Qarhan Playa. Like the other lakes of the surrounding Qaidam Basin, it is extremely saline, with 307–338 grams of salt per liter of water (2.5 lb/gallon).

Dabusun Lake
  • 达布逊湖 (Chinese)
  • ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨ ᠨᠠᠭᠤᠷ (Mongolian)
Dabusun Lake (2006)
Dabusun Lake
LocationGolmud City
Haixi Prefecture
Qinghai Province
China
Coordinates37°01′27″N 95°08′20″E / 37.024081°N 95.1389253°E / 37.024081; 95.1389253
TypeEndorheic saline lake
Primary inflowsGolmud River
Basin countriesChina
Max. length30 km (19 mi)
Max. width4–7.5 km (2–5 mi)
Surface area184–334 km2 (71–129 sq mi)
Average depth0.5–1.02 m (1 ft 8 in – 3 ft 4 in)
Max. depth1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Surface elevation2,675 m (8,776 ft)
Dabusun Lake
A map of Dabusun Lake in the central Qarhan Playa (1975)
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese達布遜鹽湖
Simplified Chinese达布逊盐湖
PostalDabasun Nor
Literal meaningDabusun Salt Lake
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDábùxùn Yánhú
Wade–GilesTa²-pu⁴-hsün⁴ Yen²-hu²
Mongolian name
Mongolian script(ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ) ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨ ᠨᠠᠭᠤᠷ
Transcriptions
SASM/GNC(J̌egün) Dabusun Naɣur
Former names
The Sanhu Depression in 2014, with Dabusun in the southeast (ESA)
Mongolian name
Mongolian scriptᠳᠠᠯᠠᠢ ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨ
Transcriptions
SASM/GNCDalai Dabusun

Name edit

Dabusun[1][2] or Dabasun Nor[3][4] is a romanization of its Mongolian name, which means simply "Salt Lake".[5] In Mongolian, the name is sometimes designated "eastern", to distinguish it from West Dabusun Lake.[5] It is sometimes misspelled Dabsun[6] or Dabsan.[7][8] It was formerly known as the Dalai Dabasun,[9] meaning "Sea" or "Ocean of Salt".

Dabuxun[6] is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese name 達布遜 (Dábùxùn), a transcription into characters of the Mongolian name.

Geography edit

Dabusun lies in the Dabusun subbasin in the central Qarhan Playa.[10] It is one of the many saltwater lakes in the endorheic Qaidam Basin,[6] bound by the Qilian Mountains to the north, the Altun to the west, and the Kunlun to the south.[11] Lying at an elevation of 2,675 m (8,776 ft) above sea level, it has a mean annual temperature of 0.1 °C (32.2 °F) despite lying on the same latitude as Greece, Algeria, and Virginia in the United States.[7] Dabasun is the largest present lake in the Qarhan Playa.[6] It is fed by the main course of the Golmud River from the south and, to a lesser extent, by mineral springs[2] from the north.[12] In Qaidam's hyperarid climate, there is generally only 28–40 mm (1–2 in) of annual rainfall but about 3,000 mm (120 in) of annual evaporation.[7] Its area is thus variable by season and year,[13] usually 184–334 km2 (71–129 sq mi) but increasing in the wetter winter and spring and decreasing through the summer and fall. The lake is elongated, stretching from the northwest to the southeast. Its length is usually about 30 km (19 mi) east to west, and its width is usually about 4–7.5 km (2–5 mi) north to south. The maximum depth is 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in), and the average depth varies from 0.5 to 1.02 m (1 ft 8 in to 3 ft 4 in).

Geology edit

Although the northern springs contribute much less volume, their waters carry far greater concentrations of solutes and are important to the chemical composition of the lake.[14] Below, the alternating beds of mud and halite extend at least 40 m (130 ft) in some places.[6] In addition to common salt, it also has an abundance of carnallite[1] (potassium magnesium chloride) in an area of 2 km × 35 km (1 mi × 22 mi) and magnesium sulfate. The known beds are exposed at the surface or buried by 3–4 m (10–13 ft) of sedimentation.[6]

History edit

Paleoclimatologists believe that between 770,000 and 30,000 years ago Dabusun formed part of a much larger Qarhan Lake, which alternated nine times between being a fresh- and saltwater lake.[15] Pollen studies suggest that the area of the lake bed which now underlies Dabusun was raised around 700 m (2,300 ft) in just the last 500,000 years.[16] Tectonic activity also varied sedimentation in the lake by shifting its tributaries and basins, although it remained in the Qarhan Playa during this period.[17] At around 30,000 years ago, this great freshwater lake spread over at least 25,000 km2 (9,700 sq mi) with a surface 50–60 m (160–200 ft) above the present levels of its successors. It was cut off and became saline again around 30,000 years ago and began precipitating salts about 25,000 years ago.[18] It has been shrinking in size by evaporation for most of that time,[9] although it was only about 42 km (26 mi) in circumference in the mid-19th century, when it was visited by the Polono-Russian explorer Przhevalsky.[9][a]

Until the recent commercial exploitation of the salts and other minerals, the district has remained largely unpopulated, as the salt deposits made it difficult for the nomads of northwestern China to use the area for their herds.[9] The area's potassium deposits were accidentally discovered in 1957[20] and exploratory wells found the Yanhu Gas Field north of the lake the next year.[21]

Transportation edit

The lake lies just west of the G3011 Liuge Expressway. It is also serviced by the Dabusun and Qarhan railway stations on the Qingzang Railway.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Note that Przhevalsky's text (but not map) confused the name of this lake with Djaratai Dabas,[9] which lay in Alxa[19] to the northeast.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Casas & al. (1992).
  2. ^ a b Lowenstein & al. (1994), p. 20.
  3. ^ Geogr. Journ. (1908), p. 442.
  4. ^ Stanford (1917), p. 21.
  5. ^ a b Jia (2019).
  6. ^ a b c d e f Garrett (1996), p. 177.
  7. ^ a b c Yu & al. (2001), p. 62.
  8. ^ Zhang & al. (1990).
  9. ^ a b c d e Ward (1878), p. 250.
  10. ^ Du & al. (2018), pp. 2–3.
  11. ^ Casas & al. (1992), p. 882.
  12. ^ Spencer & al. (1990), pp. 397–399.
  13. ^ Zhou & al. (2016), pp. 4 & 6.
  14. ^ Spencer & al. (1990), pp. 398–399.
  15. ^ Huang & al. (1997), p. 277.
  16. ^ Jiang & al. (2000), pp. 96 & 106.
  17. ^ Kong & al. (2018), §2.
  18. ^ Zheng (1997), p. 149.
  19. ^ Ward (1878), p. 251.
  20. ^ Shan (2010).
  21. ^ Yang & al. (2012), p. 33.

Bibliography edit

  • "The Monthly Record", The Geographical Journal, 31 (4): 438–451, 1908, JSTOR 1777861.
  • Casas, Enrique; et al. (1992), "Carnallite Mineralization in the Nonmarine, Qaidam Basin, China: Evidence for the Early Diagenetic Origin of Potash Evaporites", SEPM Journal of Sedimentary Research, 62 (5): 881–898, doi:10.1306/D4267A05-2B26-11D7-8648000102C1865D.
  • Du, Yongsheng; et al. (2019), "Evaluation of boron isotopes in halite as an indicator of the salinity of Qarhan paleolake water in the eastern Qaidam Basin, western China", Geoscience Frontiers, 10: 253–262, Bibcode:2019AGUFM.V33C0255D, doi:10.1016/j.gsf.2018.02.016.
  • Garrett, Donald Everett (1996), Potash: Deposits, Processing, Properties, and Uses, London: Chapman & Hall, ISBN 9789400915459.
  • Jia Xiru (20 February 2019), "Qīnghǎi Měnggǔyǔ Dìmíng de Jǐge Tèsè 青海蒙古語地名的幾個特色 [Several Characteristics of Mongolian Placenames in Qinghai]", Xuěhuā Xīnwén 雪花新闻 [Snowflake News] (in Chinese).
  • Dexin, J. (2000), "Quaternary Palynofloras and Paleoclimate of the Qaidam Basin, Qinghai Province, Northwestern China", Palynology, 24: 95–112, doi:10.2113/0240095.
  • Qi, Huang; et al. (1997), "Stable isotopes distribution in core Ck6 and variations of paleoclimate over Qarhan Lake region in Qaidam Basin, China", Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology, 15 (3): 271–278, Bibcode:1997ChJOL..15..271H, doi:10.1007/BF02850884, S2CID 129491899.
  • Kong, Fanjing; et al. (2018), "Dalangtan Saline Playa in a Hyperarid Region on Tibet Plateau: I. Evolution and Environments", Astrobiology, 18 (10): 1243–1253, Bibcode:2018AsBio..18.1243K, doi:10.1089/ast.2018.1830, PMC 6205091, PMID 29792755.
  • Lowenstein, Timothy K.; et al. (1994), "Major-Element and Stable-Isotope Geochemistry of Fluid Inclusions in Halite, Qaidam Basin, Western China: Implications for Late Pleistocene/Holocene Brine Evolution and Paleoclimates", in Rosen, Michael R. (ed.), Paleoclimate and Basin Evolution of Playa Systems, Special Paper, No. 289, Boulder: Geological Society of America, pp. 19–32, ISBN 9780813722894.
  • Shan Zhiqiang (31 May 2010), "Qarhan Salt Lake: Drying Yard of the Heavens", Shanghai Daily.
  • Spencer, Ronald James; et al. (1990), "Origin of Potash Salts and Brines in the Qaidam Basin, China" (PDF), Fluid-Mineral Interactions: A Tribute to H.P. Eugster, Special Publication No. 2, Geochemical Society.
  • Stanford, Edward (1917), Complete Atlas of China, 2nd ed., London: China Inland Mission.
  • Ward, Thomas (1878), "On 'The Salt Lakes, Deserts, and Salt Districts of Asia,' with a Map", Proceedings of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool during the Sixty-Seventh Session, 1877–78, vol. 32, Liverpool: D. Marples & Co, pp. 233–256.
  • Yang, Hui; et al. (2012), "Integrated geophysical studies on the distribution of Quaternary biogenic gases in the Qaidam Basin, NW China", Petroleum Exploration and Development, 39 (1): 33–42, doi:10.1016/S1876-3804(12)60012-3.
  • Yu, Ge; et al. (2001), Lake Status Records from China: Data Base Documentation (PDF), MPI-BGC Tech Rep, No. 4, Jena: Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry.
  • Zhang Baozhen; et al. (1990), "Hydrogen and Oxygen Stable Isotope Analyses of Fluid Inclusions in Halite in Charhan Salt Lake with Geochemical Implications", Acta Sedimentologica Sinica, 8 (1): 3–17.
  • Zheng Mianping (1997), An Introduction to Saline Lakes on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 9789401154581.
  • Zhou, S. L.; et al. (2016), "Spatial-temporal variations and their dynamics of the saline lakes in the Qaidam Basin over the past 40 years", IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, 46 (1): 012043, Bibcode:2016E&ES...46a2043Z, doi:10.1088/1755-1315/46/1/012043.

dabusun, lake, other, uses, dabasun, dabusun, dabuxun, lake, alternately, known, dabasun, lake, beside, town, qarhan, just, north, golmud, haixi, prefecture, qinghai, province, northwestern, china, main, course, golmud, river, largest, present, lake, qarhan, p. For other uses see Dabasun Nor Dabusun or Dabuxun Lake alternately known as Dabasun Nor is a lake beside the town Qarhan just north of Golmud in the Haixi Prefecture of Qinghai Province in northwestern China Fed by the main course of the Golmud River it is the largest present day lake in the Qarhan Playa Like the other lakes of the surrounding Qaidam Basin it is extremely saline with 307 338 grams of salt per liter of water 2 5 lb gallon Dabusun Lake达布逊湖 Chinese ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨ ᠨᠠᠭᠤᠷ Mongolian Dabusun Lake 2006 Dabusun LakeLocationGolmud CityHaixi PrefectureQinghai ProvinceChinaCoordinates37 01 27 N 95 08 20 E 37 024081 N 95 1389253 E 37 024081 95 1389253TypeEndorheic saline lakePrimary inflowsGolmud RiverBasin countriesChinaMax length30 km 19 mi Max width4 7 5 km 2 5 mi Surface area184 334 km2 71 129 sq mi Average depth0 5 1 02 m 1 ft 8 in 3 ft 4 in Max depth1 72 m 5 ft 8 in Surface elevation2 675 m 8 776 ft Dabusun LakeA map of Dabusun Lake in the central Qarhan Playa 1975 Chinese nameTraditional Chinese達布遜鹽湖Simplified Chinese达布逊盐湖PostalDabasun NorLiteral meaningDabusun Salt LakeTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDabuxun YanhuWade GilesTa pu hsun Yen hu Mongolian nameMongolian script ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨ ᠨᠠᠭᠤᠷTranscriptionsSASM GNC J egun Dabusun NaɣurFormer namesThe Sanhu Depression in 2014 with Dabusun in the southeast ESA Mongolian nameMongolian scriptᠳᠠᠯᠠᠢ ᠳᠠᠪᠤᠰᠤᠨTranscriptionsSASM GNCDalai Dabusun Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 Geology 4 History 5 Transportation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 BibliographyName editDabusun 1 2 or Dabasun Nor 3 4 is a romanization of its Mongolian name which means simply Salt Lake 5 In Mongolian the name is sometimes designated eastern to distinguish it from West Dabusun Lake 5 It is sometimes misspelled Dabsun 6 or Dabsan 7 8 It was formerly known as the Dalai Dabasun 9 meaning Sea or Ocean of Salt Dabuxun 6 is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese name 達布遜 Dabuxun a transcription into characters of the Mongolian name Geography editDabusun lies in the Dabusun subbasin in the central Qarhan Playa 10 It is one of the many saltwater lakes in the endorheic Qaidam Basin 6 bound by the Qilian Mountains to the north the Altun to the west and the Kunlun to the south 11 Lying at an elevation of 2 675 m 8 776 ft above sea level it has a mean annual temperature of 0 1 C 32 2 F despite lying on the same latitude as Greece Algeria and Virginia in the United States 7 Dabasun is the largest present lake in the Qarhan Playa 6 It is fed by the main course of the Golmud River from the south and to a lesser extent by mineral springs 2 from the north 12 In Qaidam s hyperarid climate there is generally only 28 40 mm 1 2 in of annual rainfall but about 3 000 mm 120 in of annual evaporation 7 Its area is thus variable by season and year 13 usually 184 334 km2 71 129 sq mi but increasing in the wetter winter and spring and decreasing through the summer and fall The lake is elongated stretching from the northwest to the southeast Its length is usually about 30 km 19 mi east to west and its width is usually about 4 7 5 km 2 5 mi north to south The maximum depth is 1 72 m 5 ft 8 in and the average depth varies from 0 5 to 1 02 m 1 ft 8 in to 3 ft 4 in Geology editAlthough the northern springs contribute much less volume their waters carry far greater concentrations of solutes and are important to the chemical composition of the lake 14 Below the alternating beds of mud and halite extend at least 40 m 130 ft in some places 6 In addition to common salt it also has an abundance of carnallite 1 potassium magnesium chloride in an area of 2 km 35 km 1 mi 22 mi and magnesium sulfate The known beds are exposed at the surface or buried by 3 4 m 10 13 ft of sedimentation 6 History editFurther information Qaidam Basin History Paleoclimatologists believe that between 770 000 and 30 000 years ago Dabusun formed part of a much larger Qarhan Lake which alternated nine times between being a fresh and saltwater lake 15 Pollen studies suggest that the area of the lake bed which now underlies Dabusun was raised around 700 m 2 300 ft in just the last 500 000 years 16 Tectonic activity also varied sedimentation in the lake by shifting its tributaries and basins although it remained in the Qarhan Playa during this period 17 At around 30 000 years ago this great freshwater lake spread over at least 25 000 km2 9 700 sq mi with a surface 50 60 m 160 200 ft above the present levels of its successors It was cut off and became saline again around 30 000 years ago and began precipitating salts about 25 000 years ago 18 It has been shrinking in size by evaporation for most of that time 9 although it was only about 42 km 26 mi in circumference in the mid 19th century when it was visited by the Polono Russian explorer Przhevalsky 9 a Until the recent commercial exploitation of the salts and other minerals the district has remained largely unpopulated as the salt deposits made it difficult for the nomads of northwestern China to use the area for their herds 9 The area s potassium deposits were accidentally discovered in 1957 20 and exploratory wells found the Yanhu Gas Field north of the lake the next year 21 Transportation editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The lake lies just west of the G3011 Liuge Expressway It is also serviced by the Dabusun and Qarhan railway stations on the Qingzang Railway See also editSalt in Chinese history List of lakes and saltwater lakes of ChinaNotes edit Note that Przhevalsky s text but not map confused the name of this lake with Djaratai Dabas 9 which lay in Alxa 19 to the northeast References editCitations edit a b Casas amp al 1992 a b Lowenstein amp al 1994 p 20 Geogr Journ 1908 p 442 Stanford 1917 p 21 a b Jia 2019 a b c d e f Garrett 1996 p 177 a b c Yu amp al 2001 p 62 Zhang amp al 1990 a b c d e Ward 1878 p 250 Du amp al 2018 pp 2 3 Casas amp al 1992 p 882 Spencer amp al 1990 pp 397 399 Zhou amp al 2016 pp 4 amp 6 Spencer amp al 1990 pp 398 399 Huang amp al 1997 p 277 Jiang amp al 2000 pp 96 amp 106 Kong amp al 2018 2 Zheng 1997 p 149 Ward 1878 p 251 Shan 2010 Yang amp al 2012 p 33 Bibliography edit The Monthly Record The Geographical Journal 31 4 438 451 1908 JSTOR 1777861 Casas Enrique et al 1992 Carnallite Mineralization in the Nonmarine Qaidam Basin China Evidence for the Early Diagenetic Origin of Potash Evaporites SEPM Journal of Sedimentary Research 62 5 881 898 doi 10 1306 D4267A05 2B26 11D7 8648000102C1865D Du Yongsheng et al 2019 Evaluation of boron isotopes in halite as an indicator of the salinity of Qarhan paleolake water in the eastern Qaidam Basin western China Geoscience Frontiers 10 253 262 Bibcode 2019AGUFM V33C0255D doi 10 1016 j gsf 2018 02 016 Garrett Donald Everett 1996 Potash Deposits Processing Properties and Uses London Chapman amp Hall ISBN 9789400915459 Jia Xiru 20 February 2019 Qinghǎi Menggǔyǔ Diming de Jǐge Tese 青海蒙古語地名的幾個特色 Several Characteristics of Mongolian Placenames in Qinghai Xuehua Xinwen 雪花新闻 Snowflake News in Chinese Dexin J 2000 Quaternary Palynofloras and Paleoclimate of the Qaidam Basin Qinghai Province Northwestern China Palynology 24 95 112 doi 10 2113 0240095 Qi Huang et al 1997 Stable isotopes distribution in core Ck6 and variations of paleoclimate over Qarhan Lake region in Qaidam Basin China Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology 15 3 271 278 Bibcode 1997ChJOL 15 271H doi 10 1007 BF02850884 S2CID 129491899 Kong Fanjing et al 2018 Dalangtan Saline Playa in a Hyperarid Region on Tibet Plateau I Evolution and Environments Astrobiology 18 10 1243 1253 Bibcode 2018AsBio 18 1243K doi 10 1089 ast 2018 1830 PMC 6205091 PMID 29792755 Lowenstein Timothy K et al 1994 Major Element and Stable Isotope Geochemistry of Fluid Inclusions in Halite Qaidam Basin Western China Implications for Late Pleistocene Holocene Brine Evolution and Paleoclimates in Rosen Michael R ed Paleoclimate and Basin Evolution of Playa Systems Special Paper No 289 Boulder Geological Society of America pp 19 32 ISBN 9780813722894 Shan Zhiqiang 31 May 2010 Qarhan Salt Lake Drying Yard of the Heavens Shanghai Daily Spencer Ronald James et al 1990 Origin of Potash Salts and Brines in the Qaidam Basin China PDF Fluid Mineral Interactions A Tribute to H P Eugster Special Publication No 2 Geochemical Society Stanford Edward 1917 Complete Atlas of China 2nd ed London China Inland Mission Ward Thomas 1878 On The Salt Lakes Deserts and Salt Districts of Asia with a Map Proceedings of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool during the Sixty Seventh Session 1877 78 vol 32 Liverpool D Marples amp Co pp 233 256 Yang Hui et al 2012 Integrated geophysical studies on the distribution of Quaternary biogenic gases in the Qaidam Basin NW China Petroleum Exploration and Development 39 1 33 42 doi 10 1016 S1876 3804 12 60012 3 Yu Ge et al 2001 Lake Status Records from China Data Base Documentation PDF MPI BGC Tech Rep No 4 Jena Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Zhang Baozhen et al 1990 Hydrogen and Oxygen Stable Isotope Analyses of Fluid Inclusions in Halite in Charhan Salt Lake with Geochemical Implications Acta Sedimentologica Sinica 8 1 3 17 Zheng Mianping 1997 An Introduction to Saline Lakes on the Qinghai Tibet Plateau Dordrecht Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 9789401154581 Zhou S L et al 2016 Spatial temporal variations and their dynamics of the saline lakes in the Qaidam Basin over the past 40 years IOP Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science 46 1 012043 Bibcode 2016E amp ES 46a2043Z doi 10 1088 1755 1315 46 1 012043 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dabusun Lake amp oldid 1120390853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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