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Lake Baikal

Lake Baikal (/bˈkɑːl, -ˈkæl/ by-KAHL, -⁠KAL;[3] Russian: Oзеро Байкал, romanizedOzero Baykal [ˈozʲɪrə bɐjˈkaɫ]; Buryat: Байгал далай, romanized: Baigal dalai[4]) is a rift lake in Russia. It is situated in southern Siberia, between the federal subjects of Irkutsk Oblast to the northwest and the Republic of Buryatia to the southeast. With 23,615.39 km3 (5,670 cu mi) of water,[1] Lake Baikal is the world's largest freshwater lake by volume, containing 22–23% of the world's fresh surface water,[5][6] more than all of the North American Great Lakes combined.[7] It is also the world's deepest lake,[8] with a maximum depth of 1,642 metres (5,387 feet; 898 fathoms),[1] and the world's oldest lake,[9] at 25–30 million years.[10][11] At 31,722 km2 (12,248 sq mi)—slightly larger than Belgium—Lake Baikal is the world's seventh-largest lake by surface area.[12] It is among the world's clearest lakes.[13]

Lake Baikal
Satellite photo of Baikal, 2001
Lake Baikal
Lake Baikal
Lake Baikal
LocationSiberia, Russia
Coordinates53°30′N 108°0′E / 53.500°N 108.000°E / 53.500; 108.000
Lake typeAncient lake, Continental rift lake
Native name
  • Oзеро Байкал (Russian)
  • Байгал далай (Buryat)
Primary inflowsSelenga, Barguzin, Upper Angara
Primary outflowsAngara
Catchment area560,000 km2 (216,000 sq mi)
Basin countriesMongolia and Russia
Max. length636 km (395 mi)
Max. width79 km (49 mi)
Surface area31,722 km2 (12,248 sq mi)[1]
Average depth744.4 m (2,442 ft; 407.0 fathoms)[1]
Max. depth1,642 m (5,387 ft; 898 fathoms)[1]
Water volume23,610 km3 (5,660 cu mi)[1]
Residence time330 years[2]
Shore length12,100 km (1,300 mi)
Surface elevation455.5 m (1,494 ft)
FrozenJanuary–May
Islands27 (Olkhon Island)
SettlementsSeverobaykalsk, Slyudyanka, Baykalsk, Ust-Barguzin
CriteriaNatural: vii, viii, ix, x
Reference754
Inscription1996 (20th Session)
Area8,800,000 ha
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Lake Baikal is home to thousands of species of plants and animals, many of them endemic to the region. It is also home to Buryat tribes, who raise goats, camels, cattle, sheep, and horses[14] on the eastern side of the lake,[15] where the mean temperature varies from a winter minimum of −19 °C (−2 °F) to a summer maximum of 14 °C (57 °F).[16] The region to the east of Lake Baikal is referred to as Transbaikalia or as the Transbaikal,[17] and the loosely defined region around the lake itself is sometimes known as Baikalia. UNESCO declared Baikal a World Heritage Site in 1996.[18]

Geography and hydrography

 
The Yenisey basin, which includes Lake Baikal
 
A digital elevation model of Lake Baikal region

Lake Baikal is in a rift valley, created by the Baikal Rift Zone, where the Earth's crust is slowly pulling apart.[12] At 636 km (395 mi) long and 79 km (49 mi) wide, Lake Baikal has the largest surface area of any freshwater lake in Asia, at 31,722 km2 (12,248 sq mi), and is the deepest lake in the world at 1,642 metres (5,387 feet; 898 fathoms). The bottom of the lake is 1,186.5 m (3,893 ft; 648.8 fathoms) below sea level, but below this lies some 7 km (4.3 mi) of sediment, placing the rift floor some 8–11 km (5.0–6.8 mi) below the surface, the deepest continental rift on Earth.[12]

In geological terms, the rift is young and active – it widens about 2 cm (0.8 in) per year. The fault zone is also seismically active; hot springs occur in the area and notable earthquakes happen every few years. The lake is divided into three basins: North, Central, and South, with depths about 900 m (3,000 ft), 1,600 m (5,200 ft), and 1,400 m (4,600 ft), respectively. Fault-controlled accommodation zones rising to depths about 300 m (980 ft) separate the basins. The North and Central basins are separated by Academician Ridge, while the area around the Selenga Delta and the Buguldeika Saddle separates the Central and South basins. The lake drains into the Angara, a tributary of the Yenisey. Landforms include Cape Ryty on Baikal's northwest coast.

Baikal's age is estimated at 25–30 million years, making it the most ancient lake in geological history.[10][11] It is unique among large, high-latitude lakes, as its sediments have not been scoured by overriding continental ice sheets. Russian, U.S., and Japanese cooperative studies of deep-drilling core sediments in the 1990s provide a detailed record of climatic variation over the past 6.7 million years.[19][20]

Longer and deeper sediment cores are expected in the near future.[needs update] Lake Baikal is the only confined freshwater lake in which direct and indirect evidence of gas hydrates exists.[21][22][23]

The lake is surrounded by mountains; the Baikal Mountains on the north shore, the Barguzin Range on the northeastern shore and the Primorsky Range stretching along the western shore. The mountains and the taiga are protected as a national park. It contains 27 islands; the largest, Olkhon, is 72 km (45 mi) long and is the third-largest lake-bound island in the world. The lake is fed by as many as 330 inflowing rivers.[24] The main ones draining directly into Baikal are the Selenga, the Barguzin, the Upper Angara, the Turka, the Sarma, and the Snezhnaya. It is drained through a single outlet, the Angara.

Regular winds exist in Baikal's rift valley.[25]

Water characteristics

 
Lake Baikal's water is especially clear

Baikal is one of the clearest lakes in the world.[13] During the winter, the water transparency in open sections can be as much as 30–40 m (100–130 ft), but during the summer it is typically 5–8 m (15–25 ft).[26] Baikal is rich in oxygen, even in deep sections,[26] which separates it from distinctly stratified bodies of water such as Lake Tanganyika and the Black Sea.[27][28]

In Lake Baikal, the water temperature varies significantly depending on location, depth, and time of the year. During the winter and spring, the surface freezes for about 4–5 months; from early January to early May–June (latest in the north), the lake surface is covered in ice.[29] On average, the ice reaches a thickness of 0.5 to 1.4 m (1.6–4.6 ft),[30] but in some places with hummocks, it can be more than 2 m (6.6 ft).[29] During this period, the temperature slowly increases with depth in the lake, being coldest near the ice-covered surface at around freezing, and reaching about 3.5–3.8 °C (38.3–38.8 °F) at a depth of 200–250 m (660–820 ft).[31] After the surface ice breaks up, the surface water is slowly warmed up by the sun, and in May–June, the upper 300 m (980 ft) or so becomes homothermic (same temperature throughout) at around 4 °C (39 °F) because of water mixing.[26][31] The sun continues to heat up the surface layer, and at the peak in August can reach up to about 16 °C (61 °F) in the main sections[31] and 20–24 °C (68–75 °F) in shallow bays in the southern half of the lake.[26][32] During this time, the pattern is inverted compared to the winter and spring, as the water temperature falls with increasing depth. As the autumn begins, the surface temperature falls again and a second homothermic period at around 4 °C (39 °F) of the upper circa 300 m (980 ft) occurs in October–November.[26][31] In the deepest parts of the lake, from about 300 m (980 ft), the temperature is stable at 3.1–3.4 °C (37.6–38.1 °F) with only minor annual variations.[31]

The average surface temperature has risen by almost 1.5 °C (2.7 °F) in the last 50 years, resulting in a shorter period where the lake is covered by ice.[11] At some locations, hydrothermal vents with water that is about 50 °C (122 °F) have been found. These are mostly in deep water but locally have also been found in relatively shallow water. They have little effect on the lake's temperature because of its huge volume.[31]

Stormy weather on the lake is common, especially during the summer and autumn, and can result in waves as high as 4.5 m (15 ft).[26]

Fauna and flora

 
The Baikal seal is endemic to Lake Baikal.

Lake Baikal is rich in biodiversity. It hosts more than 1,000 species of plants and 2,500 species of animals based on current knowledge, but the actual figures for both groups are believed to be significantly higher.[26][33] More than 80% of the animals are endemic.[33]

Flora

The watershed of Lake Baikal has numerous floral species represented. The marsh thistle (Cirsium palustre) is found here at the eastern limit of its geographic range.[34]

Submerged macrophytic vascular plants are mostly absent, except in some shallow bays along the shores of Lake Baikal.[35] More than 85 species of submerged macrophytes have been recorded, including genera such as Ceratophyllum, Myriophyllum, Potamogeton, and Sparganium.[32] The invasive species Elodea canadensis was introduced to the lake in the 1950s.[35] Instead of vascular plants, aquatic flora is often dominated by several green algae species, notably Draparnaldioides, Tetraspora, and Ulothrix in water shallower than 20 m (65 ft); although Aegagrophila, Cladophora, and Draparnaldioides may occur deeper than 30 m (100 ft).[35] Except for Ulothrix, there are endemic Baikal species in all these green algae genera.[35] More than 400 diatom species, both benthic and planktonic, are found in the lake, and about half of these are endemic to Baikal; however, significant taxonomic uncertainties remain for this group.[35]

Fauna

Mammals

 
Baikal seal

The Baikal seal or nerpa (Pusa sibirica) is endemic to Lake Baikal.[36]

A wide range of land mammals can be found in the habitats around the lake, such as the Eurasian brown bear (Ursus arctos arctos), Eurasian wolf (Canis lupus lupus), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), sable (Martes zibellina), stoat (Mustela erminea), moose (Alces alces), wapiti (Cervus canadensis), reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), Siberian roe deer (Capreolus pygargus), Siberian musk deer ((Moschus moschiferus), wild boar (Sus scrofa), red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris), Siberian chipmunk (Eutamias sibiricus), marmots (Marmota sp.), lemmings (Lemmus sp.), and mountain hare (Lepus timidus).[37] Until the Early Middle Ages, populations of the European bison (Bison bonasus) were found near the lake; this represented the easternmost range of the species.[38]

Birds

 
Mongolian gulls on Baikal

There are 236 species of birds that inhabit Lake Baikal, 29 of which are waterfowl.[39] Although named after the lake, both the Baikal teal and Baikal bush warbler are widespread in eastern Asia.[40][41]

Fish

 
Two species of grayling (Thymallus baikalensis and T. brevipinnis) are found only in Baikal and rivers that drain into the lake.[42][43]

Fewer than 65 native fish species occur in the lake basin, but more than half of these are endemic.[26][44] The families Abyssocottidae (deep-water sculpins), Comephoridae (golomyankas or Baikal oilfish), and Cottocomephoridae (Baikal sculpins) are entirely restricted to the lake basin.[26][45] All these are part of the Cottoidea and are typically less than 20 cm (8 in) long.[35] Of particular note are the two species of golomyanka (Comephorus baicalensis and C. dybowskii). These long-finned, translucent fish typically live in open water at depths of 100–500 m (330–1,640 ft), but occur both shallower and much deeper. Together with certain abyssocottid sculpins, they are the deepest living freshwater fish in the world, occurring to near the bottom of Lake Baikal.[46] The golomyankas are the primary prey of the Baikal seal and represent the largest fish biomass in the lake.[47] Beyond members of Cottoidea, there are few endemic fish species in the lake basin.[26][44]

 
The omul (Coregonus migratorius) is endemic to Lake Baikal, and is a source of income to locals.

The most important local species for fisheries is the omul (Coregonus migratorius), an endemic whitefish.[26] It is caught, smoked, and then sold widely in markets around the lake. Also, a second endemic whitefish inhabits the lake, C. baicalensis.[48] The Baikal black grayling (Thymallus baicalensis), Baikal white grayling (T. brevipinnis), and Baikal sturgeon (Acipenser baerii baicalensis) are other important species with commercial value. They are also endemic to the Lake Baikal basin.[42][43][49][50]

Invertebrates

The lake hosts a rich endemic fauna of invertebrates. The copepod Epischura baikalensis is endemic to Lake Baikal and the dominating zooplankton species there, making up 80 to 90% of total biomass.[51] It is estimated that the epischurans filter as much as a thousand cubic kilometers of water a year, or the lake's entire volume every twenty-three years.[52]

Among the most diverse invertebrate groups are the amphipod and ostracod crustaceans, freshwater snails, annelid worms and turbellarian worms:

Amphipod, isopod, cladoceran and ostracod crustaceans

 
A "giant" Brachyuropus reicherti (Acanthogammaridae) amphipod caught during ice fishing in the lake. Red-orange is its natural, living coloration

More than 350 species and subspecies of amphipods are endemic to the lake.[33] They are exceptionally diverse in ecology and appearance, ranging from the pelagic Macrohectopus to the relatively large deep-water Abyssogammarus and Garjajewia, the tiny herbivorous Micruropus, and the parasitic Pachyschesis (parasitic on other amphipods).[53] The "gigantism" of some Baikal amphipods, which has been compared to that seen in Antarctic amphipods, has been linked to the high level of dissolved oxygen in the lake.[54] Among the "giants" are several species of spiny Acanthogammarus and Brachyuropus (Acanthogammaridae) found at both shallow and deep depths.[55] These conspicuous and common amphipods are essentially carnivores (will also take detritus), and can reach a body length up to 7 cm (2.8 in).[53][55]

The number of isopods is low, and belongs to the family Asellidae. There are four species of the genus Baicalasellus, and the two species Mesoasellus dybowskii and Limnoasellus poberezhnii.[56][57]

There are about 60 known species of cladocerans (water fleas), several of them endemic.[58]

Similar to another ancient lake, Tanganyika, Baikal is a center for ostracod diversity. About 90% of the Lake Baikal ostracods are endemic,[59] meaning that there are c. 200 endemic species.[60] This makes it the second-most diverse group of crustacean in the lake, after the amphipods.[59] The vast majority of the Baikal ostracods belong in the families Candonidae (more than 100 described species) and Cytherideidae (about 50 described species),[59][61] but genetic studies indicate that the true diversity in at least the latter family has been heavily underestimated.[62] The morphology of the Baikal ostracods is highly diverse.[59]

Snails and bivalves

As of 2006, almost 150 freshwater snails are known from Lake Baikal, including 117 endemic species from the subfamilies Baicaliinae (part of the Amnicolidae) and Benedictiinae (part of the Lithoglyphidae), and the families Planorbidae and Valvatidae.[63] All endemics have been recorded between 20 and 30 m (66 and 98 ft), but the majority mainly live at shallower depths.[63] About 30 freshwater snail species can be seen deeper than 100 m (330 ft), which represents the approximate limit of the sunlight zone, but only 10 are truly deepwater species.[63] In general, Baikal snails are thin-shelled and small. Two of the most common species are Benedictia baicalensis and Megalovalvata baicalensis.[64] Bivalve diversity is lower with more than 30 species; about half of these, all in the families Euglesidae, Pisidiidae, and Sphaeriidae, are endemic (the only other family in the lake is the Unionidae with a single nonendemic species).[64][65] The endemic bivalves are mainly found in shallows, with few species from deep water.[66]

Aquatic worms

With almost 200 described species, including more than 160 endemics, the center of diversity for aquatic freshwater oligochaetes is Lake Baikal.[67] A smaller number of other freshwater annelids is known: 30 species of leeches (Hirudinea),[68] and 4 polychaetes.[67] Several hundred species of nematodes are known from the lake, but a large percentage of these are undescribed.[67]

More than 140 endemic flatworm (Plathelminthes) species are in Lake Baikal, where they occur on a wide range of bottom types.[69] Most of the flatworms are predatory, and some are relatively brightly marked. They are often abundant in shallow waters, where they are typically less than 2 cm (1 in) long, but in deeper parts of the lake, the largest, Baikaloplana valida, can reach up to 30 cm (1 ft) when outstretched.[35][69]

 
Museum specimen of the branching sponge Lubomirskia baicalensis (living are brighter green)

Sponges

At least 18 species of sponges occur in the lake,[70] including about 15 species from the endemic family Lubomirskiidae (the remaining are from the nonendemic family Spongillidae),[71][72] which colonized the lake about 3.4 million years ago. The lake's sponges makes up around 44% of the benthic animal biomass.[73] Lubomirskia baicalensis, Baikalospongia bacillifera, and B. intermedia are unusually large for freshwater sponges and can reach 1 m (3.3 ft) or more.[70][74] These three are also the most common sponges in the lake.[70] While the Baikalospongia species typically have encrusting or carpet-like structures, L. baikalensis often has branching structures and in areas where common may form underwater "forests".[75] Most sponges in the lake are typically green when alive because of symbiotic chlorophytes (zoochlorella), but can also be brownish or yellowish.[76]

History

The Baikal area, sometimes known as Baikalia, has a long history of human habitation. Near the village of Mal'ta, some 160 km northwest of the lake, remains of a young human male known as MA-1 or "Mal'ta Boy" are indications of local habitation by the Mal'ta–Buret' culture ca. 24,000 BP. An early known tribe in the area was the Kurykans.[77]

Located in the former northern territory of the Xiongnu confederation, Lake Baikal is one site of the Han–Xiongnu War, where the armies of the Han dynasty pursued and defeated the Xiongnu forces from the second century BC to the first century AD. They recorded that the lake was a "huge sea" (hanhai) and designated it the North Sea (Běihǎi) of the semimythical Four Seas.[78] The Kurykans, a Siberian tribe who inhabited the area in the sixth century, gave it a name that translates to "much water". Later on, it was called "natural lake" (Baygal nuur) by the Buryats and "rich lake" (Bay göl) by the Yakuts.[79] Little was known to Europeans about the lake until Russia expanded into the area in the 17th century. The first Russian explorer to reach Lake Baikal was Kurbat Ivanov in 1643.[80]

Lake Baikal was under Anbei Protectorate of Tang Dynasty from 647 CE to 682 CE.

Russian expansion into the Buryat area around Lake Baikal[81] in 1628–58 was part of the Russian conquest of Siberia. It was done first by following the Angara River upstream from Yeniseysk (founded 1619) and later by moving south from the Lena River. Russians first heard of the Buryats in 1609 at Tomsk. According to folktales related a century after the fact, in 1623, Demid Pyanda, who may have been the first Russian to reach the Lena, crossed from the upper Lena to the Angara and arrived at Yeniseysk.[82]

Vikhor Savin (1624) and Maksim Perfilyev (1626 and 1627–28) explored Tungus country on the lower Angara. To the west, Krasnoyarsk on the upper Yenisei was founded in 1627. A number of ill-documented expeditions explored eastward from Krasnoyarsk. In 1628, Pyotr Beketov first encountered a group of Buryats and collected yasak (tribute) from them at the future site of Bratsk. In 1629, Yakov Khripunov set off from Tomsk to find a rumored silver mine. His men soon began plundering both Russians and natives. They were joined by another band of rioters from Krasnoyarsk, but left the Buryat country when they ran short of food. This made it difficult for other Russians to enter the area. In 1631, Maksim Perfilyev built an ostrog at Bratsk. The pacification was moderately successful, but in 1634, Bratsk was destroyed and its garrison killed. In 1635, Bratsk was restored by a punitive expedition under Radukovskii. In 1638, it was besieged unsuccessfully.[citation needed]

In 1638, Perfilyev crossed from the Angara over the Ilim portage to the Lena River and went downstream as far as Olyokminsk. Returning, he sailed up the Vitim River into the area east of Lake Baikal (1640) where he heard reports of the Amur country. In 1641, Verkholensk was founded on the upper Lena. In 1643, Kurbat Ivanov went further up the Lena and became the first Russian to see Lake Baikal and Olkhon Island. Half his party under Skorokhodov remained on the lake, reached the Upper Angara at its northern tip, and wintered on the Barguzin River on the northeast side.[citation needed]

In 1644, Ivan Pokhabov went up the Angara to Baikal, becoming perhaps the first Russian to use this route, which is difficult because of the rapids. He crossed the lake and explored the lower Selenge River. About 1647, he repeated the trip, obtained guides, and visited a 'Tsetsen Khan' near Ulan Bator. In 1648, Ivan Galkin built an ostrog on the Barguzin River which became a center for eastward expansion. In 1652, Vasily Kolesnikov reported from Barguzin that one could reach the Amur country by following the Selenga, Uda, and Khilok Rivers to the future sites of Chita and Nerchinsk.[citation needed]

The Trans-Siberian Railway was built between 1896 and 1902. Construction of the scenic railway around the southwestern end of Lake Baikal required 200 bridges and 33 tunnels. Until its completion, a train ferry transported railcars across the lake from Port Baikal to Mysovaya for a number of years. The lake became the site of the minor engagement between the Czechoslovak legion and the Red Army in 1918. At times during winter freezes, the lake could be crossed on foot, though at risk of frostbite and deadly hypothermia from the cold wind moving unobstructed across flat expanses of ice. In the winter of 1920, the Great Siberian Ice March occurred, when the retreating White Russian Army crossed frozen Lake Baikal. The wind on the exposed lake was so cold, many people died, freezing in place until spring thaw. Beginning in 1956, the impounding of the Irkutsk Dam on the Angara River raised the level of the lake by 1.4 m (4.6 ft).[83]

As the railway was built, a large hydrogeographical expedition headed by F.K. Drizhenko produced the first detailed contour map of the lake bed.[9]

Research

 
Ice cover survey on the lake

Several organizations are carrying out natural research projects on Lake Baikal. Most of them are governmental or associated with governmental organizations. The Baikalian Research Centre is an independent research organization carrying out environmental, educational and research projects at Lake Baikal.[84]

In July 2008, Russia sent two small submersibles, Mir-1 and Mir-2, to descend 1,592 m (5,223 ft) to the bottom of Lake Baikal to conduct geological and biological tests on its unique ecosystem. Although originally reported as being successful, they did not set a world record for the deepest freshwater dive, reaching a depth of only 1,580 m (5,180 ft).[85] That record is currently held by Anatoly Sagalevich, at 1,637 m (5,371 ft) (also in Lake Baikal aboard a Pisces submersible in 1990).[85][86] Russian scientist and federal politician Artur Chilingarov, the leader of the mission, took part in the Mir dives[87] as did Russian president Vladimir Putin.[88]

Since 1993, neutrino research has been conducted at the Baikal Deep Underwater Neutrino Telescope (BDUNT). The Baikal Neutrino Telescope NT-200 is being deployed in Lake Baikal, 3.6 km (2.2 mi) from shore at a depth of 1.1 km (0.68 mi). It consists of 192 optical modules.[89]

Economy

 
Baikal fishermen fish for 15 commercially used species. The omul, found only in Baikal, accounts for most of the catch.[90]

The lake, nicknamed "the Pearl of Siberia", drew investors from the tourist industry as energy revenues sparked an economic boom.[91] Viktor Grigorov's Grand Baikal in Irkutsk is one of the investors, who planned to build three hotels, creating 570 jobs. In 2007, the Russian government declared the Baikal region a special economic zone. A popular resort in Listvyanka is home to the seven-story Hotel Mayak. At the northern part of the lake, Baikalplan (a German NGO) built together with Russians in 2009 the Frolikha Adventure Coastline Track, a 100 km (62 mi)-long long-distance trail as an example for sustainable development of the region. Baikal was also declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996. Rosatom plans to build a laboratory near Baikal, in conjunction with an international uranium plant and to invest $2.5 billion in the region and create 2,000 jobs in the city of Angarsk.[91]

Lake Baikal is a popular destination among tourists from all over the world. According to the Russian Federal State Statistics Service, in 2013, 79,179 foreign tourists visited Irkutsk and Lake Baikal; in 2014, 146,937 visitors. The most popular places to stay by the lake are Listvyanka village, Olkhon Island, Kotelnikovsky cape, Baykalskiy Priboi, resort Khakusy and Turka village. The popularity of Lake Baikal is growing from year to year, but there is no developed infrastructure in the area. For the quality of service and comfort from the visitor's point of view, Lake Baikal still has a long way to go.

The ice road to Olkhon Island is the only legal ice road on Lake Baikal. The route is prepared by specialists every year and it opens when the ice conditions allow it. In 2015, the ice road to Olkhon was open from 17 February to 23 March. The thickness of the ice on the road is about 60 cm (24 in), maximum capacity allowed – 10 t (9.8 long tons; 11 short tons); it is open to the public from 9 am to 6 pm. The road through the lake is 12 km (7.5 mi) long and it goes from the village Kurkut on the mainland, to Irkutskaya Guba on Olkhon Island.[92]

Ecotourism

 
Cracks in Baikal ice

Baikal has a number of different tourist activities, depending on the season. Generally, Baikal has two top tourist seasons. The first season is ice season, which starts usually in mid-January and lasts till mid-April.[93] During this season ice depth increases up to 140 centimeters, that allows safe vehicle driving on the ice cover (except heavy vehicles, such as tourist buses, that do not take this risk). This allows access to the figures of ice that are formed at rocky banks of Olkhon Island, including Cape Hoboy, the Three Brothers rock, and caves to the North of Khuzhir. It also provides access to small islands like Ogoy Island and Zamogoy.

The ice itself has a transparency of one meter depth.[citation needed] That is why this season is popular for hiking, ice-walking, ice-skating, and bicycle-riding.[94] An ice route around Olkhon is around 200 km. Some tourists may spot a Baikal seal along the route. Local entrepreneurs offer overnight in Yurt on ice.

The ice season ends in mid-April. Owing to increasing temperatures ice starts to melt and becomes shallow and fragile, especially in places with strong under-ice flows. A range of factors contribute to an increased risk of falling through the ice towards the end of the season, resulting in multiple deaths in Russia each year, although exact data for Baikal are unknown.[95] Viktor Viktorovych Yanukovych, son of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, reportedly died after his car fell through the ice while driving on Baikal in 2015.[96][97]

The second tourist season is summer, which lets tourists dive deeper into virgin Baikal nature. Hiking trails become open,[98] many of them cross two mountain ranges: Baikal Range on the western side and Barguzin Range on the eastern side of Baikal.

Small tourist vessels operate in the area, availing bird-watching, animal watching (especially Baikal seal), and fishing. Water in the lake stays extremely cold in most places (does not exceed 10 C most of the year), but in few gulfs like Chivirkuy it can be comfortable for swimming.[99]

 
Great Baikal Trail goes from Listvyanka to Bolshoe Goloustnoye along Lake Baikal coast

Olkhon's most-populated village Khuzhir is an ecotourist destination.[100] Baikal has always been popular in Russia and CIS-countries, but for the last few years[when?] Baikal has seen an influx of visitors from China and Europe.[101]

Environmental concerns

Environmentalists have previously acknowledged pollution at Lake Baikal.[102][103][104] It faces a series of detrimental phenomena including the disappearance of the omul fish, the rapid growth of putrid algae and the death of endemic species of sponges across its area.[104] Environmental advocacy for the lake began in the late 1950s.[105] Since 2010, more than 15,000 metric tons of toxic waste have flowed into the lake.

Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill

 
Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill in 2008, 5 years before its closure

The Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill was constructed in 1966, directly on the shoreline of Lake Baikal. The plant bleached paper using chlorine and discharged waste directly into Lake Baikal. The decision to construct the plant on the Lake Baikal resulted in strong protests from Soviet scientists; according to them, the ultra-pure water of the lake was a significant resource and should have been used for innovative chemical production (for instance, the production of high-quality viscose for the aeronautics and space industries). The Soviet scientists felt that it was irrational to change Lake Baikal's water quality by beginning paper production on the shore. It was their position that it was also necessary to preserve endemic species of local biota, and to maintain the area around Lake Baikal as a recreation zone.[106] However, the objections of the Soviet scientists faced opposition from the industrial lobby and only after decades of protest, the plant was closed in November 2008 due to unprofitability.[107][108]

On 4 January 2010, production was resumed. On 13 January 2010, Russian President Vladimir Putin introduced changes in legislation legalising the operation of the plant; this action brought about a wave of protests from ecologists and local residents.[109] These changes were based on the determination President Putin made through a visual verification of Lake Baikal's condition from a miniature submarine, where he said: "I could see with my own eyes – and scientists can confirm – Baikal is in good condition and there is practically no pollution".[110] Despite this, in September 2013, the mill underwent a final bankruptcy, with the last 800 workers slated to lose their jobs by 28 December 2013.[111] The mill has since shut down, though its reservoirs of lignin sludge remain an environmental hazard.[112][113]

Cancelled East Siberia–Pacific Ocean oil pipeline

 
The lake in the winter. The ice is thick enough to support pedestrians and snowmobiles.

Russian oil pipelines state company Transneft[114] was planning to build a trunk pipeline that would have come within 800 m (2,600 ft) of the lake shore in a zone of substantial seismic activity. Environmental activists in Russia,[115] Greenpeace, Baikal pipeline opposition[116] and local citizens[117] were strongly opposed to these plans, due to the possibility of an accidental oil spill that might cause significant damage to the environment. According to the Transneft's president, numerous meetings with citizens near the lake were held in towns along the route, especially in Irkutsk.[118] Transneft agreed to alter its plans when Russian president Vladimir Putin ordered the company to consider an alternative route 40 kilometers (25 mi) to the north to avoid such ecological risks.[119] Transneft has since decided to move the pipeline away from Lake Baikal, so that it will not pass through any federal or republic natural reserves.[120][121] Work began on the pipeline two days after President Putin agreed to changing the route away from Lake Baikal.[122]

Proposed uranium enrichment center

In 2006, the Russian government announced plans to build the world's first international uranium enrichment center at an existing nuclear facility in Angarsk, a city on the river Angara some 95 km (59 mi) downstream from the lake's shores. Critics and environmentalists argued it would be a disaster for the region and are urging the government to reconsider.[123]

After enrichment, only 10% of the uranium-derived radioactive material would be exported to international customers,[123] leaving 90% near the Lake Baikal region for storage. Uranium tailings contain radioactive and toxic materials, which if improperly stored, are potentially dangerous to humans and can contaminate rivers and lakes.[123]

An enrichment center was constructed in the 2010s.[124]

Chinese-owned bottled water plant

Chinese-owned AquaSib had been purchasing land alongside the lake and in 2019 started building a bottling plant and pipeline in the town of Kultuk. The goal was to export 190 million liters of water to China even though the lake had been experiencing historically low water levels. This spurred protests by the local population that the lake would be drained of its water, at which point the local government halted the plans pending analysis.[125]

Other pollution sources

According to The Moscow Times and Vice, an increasing number of an invasive species of algae thrive in the lake from hundreds of tons of liquid waste, including fuel and excrement, regularly disposed into the lake by tourist sites, and up to 25,000 tons of liquid waste are disposed of every year by local ships.[126][127]

Historical traditions

 
An 1883 British map using the More Baikal (Baikal Sea) designation, rather than the conventional Ozero Baikal (Lake Baikal).

The first European to reach the lake is said to have been Kurbat Ivanov in 1643.[128]

In the past, the Baikal was referred to by many Russians as the "Baikal Sea" (море Байкал, More Baikal), rather than merely "Lake Baikal" (озеро Байкал, Ozero Baikal).[129] This usage is attested already in the Life of Protopope Avvakum (1621–1682),[130] and on the late-17th-century maps by Semyon Remezov.[131] It is also attested in the famous song, now passed into the tradition, that opens with the words Славное море, священный Байкал (Glorious sea, [the] sacred Bajkal). To this day, the strait between the western shore of the Lake and the Olkhon Island is called Maloye More (Малое море), i.e. "the Little Sea".

Lake Baikal is nicknamed "Older sister of Sister Lakes (Lake Khövsgöl and Lake Baikal)".[132]

According to 19th-century traveler T. W. Atkinson, locals in the Lake Baikal Region had the tradition that Christ visited the area:

The people have a tradition in connection with this region which they implicitly believe. They say "that Christ visited this part of Asia and ascended this summit, whence he looked down on all the region around. After blessing the country to the northward, he turned towards the south, and looking across the Baikal, he waved his hand, exclaiming 'Beyond this there is nothing.'" Thus they account for the sterility of Daouria, where it is said "no corn will grow."[133]

Lake Baikal has been celebrated in Russian folk songs. Two of these songs are known in Russia and its neighboring countries, such as Japan.

  • "Glorious Sea, Sacred Baikal" (Славное мope, священный Байкал) is about a katorga fugitive. The lyrics as documented and edited in the 19th century by Dmitriy P. Davydov (1811–1888).[134] See "Barguzin River" for sample lyrics.
  • "The Wanderer" (Бродяга) is about a convict who had escaped from jail and was attempting to return home from Transbaikal.[135] The lyrics were collected and edited in the 20th century by Ivan Kondratyev.

The latter song was a secondary theme song for the Soviet Union's second color film, Ballad of Siberia (1947; Сказание о земле Сибирской).

See also

Notes

References

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  123. ^ a b c "Saving the Sacred Sea: Russian nuclear plant threatens ancient lake". Newint.org. 2 May 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  124. ^ "The International Uranium Enrichment Center | JSC IUEC". eng.iuec.ru. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  125. ^ "Siberian Authorities Halt Construction of Lake Baikal Bottling Plant After Backlash". 15 March 2019.
  126. ^ "StephenMBland". StephenMBland.
  127. ^ Russia's Baikal, Biggest Lake in the World, 'Becoming a Swamp'. 8 September 2014 19:35. The Moscow Times.
  128. ^ Raymond H. Fisher, The Voyage of Semon Dezhnev, The Haklyut Society, 1981, p. 246, ISBN 0904180123.
  129. ^ Tooke, William (1800). View of the Russian empire during the reign of Catharine the Second, and to the close of the eighteenth century. Printed by A. Strahan, for T. N. Longman and O. Rees. p. 203.
  130. ^ "On the Baikal Sea I was in a shipwreck again" (На Байкалове море паки тонул), in the Life of Protopope Avvakum, Written by Himself (Житие протопопа Аввакума, им самим написанное)
  131. ^ L. Bagrov (1964). International Society for the History of Cartography (ed.). Imago mundi. Vol. 1. Brill Archive. p. 115.
  132. ^ Lake Baikal: Siberia's Great Lake, ISBN 978-1-84162-294-1, p. 4.
  133. ^ T. W. Atkinson (1861). Travels in the Regions of the Upper and Lower Amoor. Hurst and Blackett. p. 385.
  134. ^ "The Glorious Sea, Sacred Baikal". Karaoke.ru. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  135. ^ «По диким степям Забайкалья», Русланова Лидия. karaoke.ru (in Russian)

Further reading

External links

  • Lake Baikal Information
  • Lake Baikal Ice Formations in Photos
  • Lake Baikal on Vimeo

lake, baikal, baykal, redirects, here, other, uses, baykal, disambiguation, ɑː, kahl, russian, oзеро, Байкал, romanized, ozero, baykal, ˈozʲɪrə, bɐjˈkaɫ, buryat, Байгал, далай, romanized, baigal, dalai, rift, lake, russia, situated, southern, siberia, between,. Baykal redirects here For other uses see Baykal disambiguation Lake Baikal b aɪ ˈ k ɑː l ˈ k ae l by KAHL KAL 3 Russian Ozero Bajkal romanized Ozero Baykal ˈozʲɪre bɐjˈkaɫ Buryat Bajgal dalaj romanized Baigal dalai 4 is a rift lake in Russia It is situated in southern Siberia between the federal subjects of Irkutsk Oblast to the northwest and the Republic of Buryatia to the southeast With 23 615 39 km3 5 670 cu mi of water 1 Lake Baikal is the world s largest freshwater lake by volume containing 22 23 of the world s fresh surface water 5 6 more than all of the North American Great Lakes combined 7 It is also the world s deepest lake 8 with a maximum depth of 1 642 metres 5 387 feet 898 fathoms 1 and the world s oldest lake 9 at 25 30 million years 10 11 At 31 722 km2 12 248 sq mi slightly larger than Belgium Lake Baikal is the world s seventh largest lake by surface area 12 It is among the world s clearest lakes 13 Lake BaikalSatellite photo of Baikal 2001Lake BaikalShow map of Republic of BuryatiaLake BaikalShow map of Irkutsk OblastLake BaikalShow map of RussiaLocationSiberia RussiaCoordinates53 30 N 108 0 E 53 500 N 108 000 E 53 500 108 000Lake typeAncient lake Continental rift lakeNative nameOzero Bajkal Russian Bajgal dalaj Buryat Primary inflowsSelenga Barguzin Upper AngaraPrimary outflowsAngaraCatchment area560 000 km2 216 000 sq mi Basin countriesMongolia and RussiaMax length636 km 395 mi Max width79 km 49 mi Surface area31 722 km2 12 248 sq mi 1 Average depth744 4 m 2 442 ft 407 0 fathoms 1 Max depth1 642 m 5 387 ft 898 fathoms 1 Water volume23 610 km3 5 660 cu mi 1 Residence time330 years 2 Shore length12 100 km 1 300 mi Surface elevation455 5 m 1 494 ft FrozenJanuary MayIslands27 Olkhon Island SettlementsSeverobaykalsk Slyudyanka Baykalsk Ust BarguzinUNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaNatural vii viii ix xReference754Inscription1996 20th Session Area8 800 000 ha1 Shore length is not a well defined measure Lake Baikal is home to thousands of species of plants and animals many of them endemic to the region It is also home to Buryat tribes who raise goats camels cattle sheep and horses 14 on the eastern side of the lake 15 where the mean temperature varies from a winter minimum of 19 C 2 F to a summer maximum of 14 C 57 F 16 The region to the east of Lake Baikal is referred to as Transbaikalia or as the Transbaikal 17 and the loosely defined region around the lake itself is sometimes known as Baikalia UNESCO declared Baikal a World Heritage Site in 1996 18 Contents 1 Geography and hydrography 1 1 Water characteristics 2 Fauna and flora 2 1 Flora 2 2 Fauna 2 2 1 Mammals 2 2 2 Birds 2 2 3 Fish 2 2 4 Invertebrates 2 2 5 Amphipod isopod cladoceran and ostracod crustaceans 2 2 6 Snails and bivalves 2 2 7 Aquatic worms 2 2 8 Sponges 3 History 4 Research 5 Economy 6 Ecotourism 7 Environmental concerns 7 1 Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill 7 2 Cancelled East Siberia Pacific Ocean oil pipeline 7 3 Proposed uranium enrichment center 7 4 Chinese owned bottled water plant 7 5 Other pollution sources 8 Historical traditions 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksGeography and hydrography Edit The Yenisey basin which includes Lake Baikal A digital elevation model of Lake Baikal regionLake Baikal is in a rift valley created by the Baikal Rift Zone where the Earth s crust is slowly pulling apart 12 At 636 km 395 mi long and 79 km 49 mi wide Lake Baikal has the largest surface area of any freshwater lake in Asia at 31 722 km2 12 248 sq mi and is the deepest lake in the world at 1 642 metres 5 387 feet 898 fathoms The bottom of the lake is 1 186 5 m 3 893 ft 648 8 fathoms below sea level but below this lies some 7 km 4 3 mi of sediment placing the rift floor some 8 11 km 5 0 6 8 mi below the surface the deepest continental rift on Earth 12 In geological terms the rift is young and active it widens about 2 cm 0 8 in per year The fault zone is also seismically active hot springs occur in the area and notable earthquakes happen every few years The lake is divided into three basins North Central and South with depths about 900 m 3 000 ft 1 600 m 5 200 ft and 1 400 m 4 600 ft respectively Fault controlled accommodation zones rising to depths about 300 m 980 ft separate the basins The North and Central basins are separated by Academician Ridge while the area around the Selenga Delta and the Buguldeika Saddle separates the Central and South basins The lake drains into the Angara a tributary of the Yenisey Landforms include Cape Ryty on Baikal s northwest coast Baikal s age is estimated at 25 30 million years making it the most ancient lake in geological history 10 11 It is unique among large high latitude lakes as its sediments have not been scoured by overriding continental ice sheets Russian U S and Japanese cooperative studies of deep drilling core sediments in the 1990s provide a detailed record of climatic variation over the past 6 7 million years 19 20 Longer and deeper sediment cores are expected in the near future needs update Lake Baikal is the only confined freshwater lake in which direct and indirect evidence of gas hydrates exists 21 22 23 The lake is surrounded by mountains the Baikal Mountains on the north shore the Barguzin Range on the northeastern shore and the Primorsky Range stretching along the western shore The mountains and the taiga are protected as a national park It contains 27 islands the largest Olkhon is 72 km 45 mi long and is the third largest lake bound island in the world The lake is fed by as many as 330 inflowing rivers 24 The main ones draining directly into Baikal are the Selenga the Barguzin the Upper Angara the Turka the Sarma and the Snezhnaya It is drained through a single outlet the Angara Regular winds exist in Baikal s rift valley 25 Frozen lake Baikal near Olkhon Island Cliffs on Olkhon Island A sandy beach in the Kabansky District Mountains on the Svyatoy Nos Peninsula Zabaykalsky National Park The river Turka at its mouth before joining Lake BaikalWater characteristics Edit Lake Baikal s water is especially clearBaikal is one of the clearest lakes in the world 13 During the winter the water transparency in open sections can be as much as 30 40 m 100 130 ft but during the summer it is typically 5 8 m 15 25 ft 26 Baikal is rich in oxygen even in deep sections 26 which separates it from distinctly stratified bodies of water such as Lake Tanganyika and the Black Sea 27 28 In Lake Baikal the water temperature varies significantly depending on location depth and time of the year During the winter and spring the surface freezes for about 4 5 months from early January to early May June latest in the north the lake surface is covered in ice 29 On average the ice reaches a thickness of 0 5 to 1 4 m 1 6 4 6 ft 30 but in some places with hummocks it can be more than 2 m 6 6 ft 29 During this period the temperature slowly increases with depth in the lake being coldest near the ice covered surface at around freezing and reaching about 3 5 3 8 C 38 3 38 8 F at a depth of 200 250 m 660 820 ft 31 After the surface ice breaks up the surface water is slowly warmed up by the sun and in May June the upper 300 m 980 ft or so becomes homothermic same temperature throughout at around 4 C 39 F because of water mixing 26 31 The sun continues to heat up the surface layer and at the peak in August can reach up to about 16 C 61 F in the main sections 31 and 20 24 C 68 75 F in shallow bays in the southern half of the lake 26 32 During this time the pattern is inverted compared to the winter and spring as the water temperature falls with increasing depth As the autumn begins the surface temperature falls again and a second homothermic period at around 4 C 39 F of the upper circa 300 m 980 ft occurs in October November 26 31 In the deepest parts of the lake from about 300 m 980 ft the temperature is stable at 3 1 3 4 C 37 6 38 1 F with only minor annual variations 31 The average surface temperature has risen by almost 1 5 C 2 7 F in the last 50 years resulting in a shorter period where the lake is covered by ice 11 At some locations hydrothermal vents with water that is about 50 C 122 F have been found These are mostly in deep water but locally have also been found in relatively shallow water They have little effect on the lake s temperature because of its huge volume 31 Stormy weather on the lake is common especially during the summer and autumn and can result in waves as high as 4 5 m 15 ft 26 Lake Baikal as seen from the OrbView 2 satellite Spring ice melt underway on Lake Baikal on 4 May Notice the ice covered north while much of the south is already ice free Circle of thin ice diameter of 4 4 km 2 7 mi at the lake s southern tip probably caused by convection Delta of the Selenga River Baikal s main tributaryFauna and flora Edit The Baikal seal is endemic to Lake Baikal Lake Baikal is rich in biodiversity It hosts more than 1 000 species of plants and 2 500 species of animals based on current knowledge but the actual figures for both groups are believed to be significantly higher 26 33 More than 80 of the animals are endemic 33 Flora Edit The watershed of Lake Baikal has numerous floral species represented The marsh thistle Cirsium palustre is found here at the eastern limit of its geographic range 34 Submerged macrophytic vascular plants are mostly absent except in some shallow bays along the shores of Lake Baikal 35 More than 85 species of submerged macrophytes have been recorded including genera such as Ceratophyllum Myriophyllum Potamogeton and Sparganium 32 The invasive species Elodea canadensis was introduced to the lake in the 1950s 35 Instead of vascular plants aquatic flora is often dominated by several green algae species notably Draparnaldioides Tetraspora and Ulothrix in water shallower than 20 m 65 ft although Aegagrophila Cladophora and Draparnaldioides may occur deeper than 30 m 100 ft 35 Except for Ulothrix there are endemic Baikal species in all these green algae genera 35 More than 400 diatom species both benthic and planktonic are found in the lake and about half of these are endemic to Baikal however significant taxonomic uncertainties remain for this group 35 Fauna Edit Mammals Edit Baikal sealThe Baikal seal or nerpa Pusa sibirica is endemic to Lake Baikal 36 A wide range of land mammals can be found in the habitats around the lake such as the Eurasian brown bear Ursus arctos arctos Eurasian wolf Canis lupus lupus red fox Vulpes vulpes sable Martes zibellina stoat Mustela erminea moose Alces alces wapiti Cervus canadensis reindeer Rangifer tarandus Siberian roe deer Capreolus pygargus Siberian musk deer Moschus moschiferus wild boar Sus scrofa red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris Siberian chipmunk Eutamias sibiricus marmots Marmota sp lemmings Lemmus sp and mountain hare Lepus timidus 37 Until the Early Middle Ages populations of the European bison Bison bonasus were found near the lake this represented the easternmost range of the species 38 Birds Edit Mongolian gulls on BaikalThere are 236 species of birds that inhabit Lake Baikal 29 of which are waterfowl 39 Although named after the lake both the Baikal teal and Baikal bush warbler are widespread in eastern Asia 40 41 Fish Edit Two species of grayling Thymallus baikalensis and T brevipinnis are found only in Baikal and rivers that drain into the lake 42 43 Fewer than 65 native fish species occur in the lake basin but more than half of these are endemic 26 44 The families Abyssocottidae deep water sculpins Comephoridae golomyankas or Baikal oilfish and Cottocomephoridae Baikal sculpins are entirely restricted to the lake basin 26 45 All these are part of the Cottoidea and are typically less than 20 cm 8 in long 35 Of particular note are the two species of golomyanka Comephorus baicalensis and C dybowskii These long finned translucent fish typically live in open water at depths of 100 500 m 330 1 640 ft but occur both shallower and much deeper Together with certain abyssocottid sculpins they are the deepest living freshwater fish in the world occurring to near the bottom of Lake Baikal 46 The golomyankas are the primary prey of the Baikal seal and represent the largest fish biomass in the lake 47 Beyond members of Cottoidea there are few endemic fish species in the lake basin 26 44 The omul Coregonus migratorius is endemic to Lake Baikal and is a source of income to locals The most important local species for fisheries is the omul Coregonus migratorius an endemic whitefish 26 It is caught smoked and then sold widely in markets around the lake Also a second endemic whitefish inhabits the lake C baicalensis 48 The Baikal black grayling Thymallus baicalensis Baikal white grayling T brevipinnis and Baikal sturgeon Acipenser baerii baicalensis are other important species with commercial value They are also endemic to the Lake Baikal basin 42 43 49 50 Invertebrates Edit The lake hosts a rich endemic fauna of invertebrates The copepod Epischura baikalensis is endemic to Lake Baikal and the dominating zooplankton species there making up 80 to 90 of total biomass 51 It is estimated that the epischurans filter as much as a thousand cubic kilometers of water a year or the lake s entire volume every twenty three years 52 Among the most diverse invertebrate groups are the amphipod and ostracod crustaceans freshwater snails annelid worms and turbellarian worms Amphipod isopod cladoceran and ostracod crustaceans Edit A giant Brachyuropus reicherti Acanthogammaridae amphipod caught during ice fishing in the lake Red orange is its natural living colorationMore than 350 species and subspecies of amphipods are endemic to the lake 33 They are exceptionally diverse in ecology and appearance ranging from the pelagic Macrohectopus to the relatively large deep water Abyssogammarus and Garjajewia the tiny herbivorous Micruropus and the parasitic Pachyschesis parasitic on other amphipods 53 The gigantism of some Baikal amphipods which has been compared to that seen in Antarctic amphipods has been linked to the high level of dissolved oxygen in the lake 54 Among the giants are several species of spiny Acanthogammarus and Brachyuropus Acanthogammaridae found at both shallow and deep depths 55 These conspicuous and common amphipods are essentially carnivores will also take detritus and can reach a body length up to 7 cm 2 8 in 53 55 The number of isopods is low and belongs to the family Asellidae There are four species of the genus Baicalasellus and the two species Mesoasellus dybowskii and Limnoasellus poberezhnii 56 57 There are about 60 known species of cladocerans water fleas several of them endemic 58 Similar to another ancient lake Tanganyika Baikal is a center for ostracod diversity About 90 of the Lake Baikal ostracods are endemic 59 meaning that there are c 200 endemic species 60 This makes it the second most diverse group of crustacean in the lake after the amphipods 59 The vast majority of the Baikal ostracods belong in the families Candonidae more than 100 described species and Cytherideidae about 50 described species 59 61 but genetic studies indicate that the true diversity in at least the latter family has been heavily underestimated 62 The morphology of the Baikal ostracods is highly diverse 59 Snails and bivalves Edit As of 2006 update almost 150 freshwater snails are known from Lake Baikal including 117 endemic species from the subfamilies Baicaliinae part of the Amnicolidae and Benedictiinae part of the Lithoglyphidae and the families Planorbidae and Valvatidae 63 All endemics have been recorded between 20 and 30 m 66 and 98 ft but the majority mainly live at shallower depths 63 About 30 freshwater snail species can be seen deeper than 100 m 330 ft which represents the approximate limit of the sunlight zone but only 10 are truly deepwater species 63 In general Baikal snails are thin shelled and small Two of the most common species are Benedictia baicalensis and Megalovalvata baicalensis 64 Bivalve diversity is lower with more than 30 species about half of these all in the families Euglesidae Pisidiidae and Sphaeriidae are endemic the only other family in the lake is the Unionidae with a single nonendemic species 64 65 The endemic bivalves are mainly found in shallows with few species from deep water 66 Aquatic worms Edit With almost 200 described species including more than 160 endemics the center of diversity for aquatic freshwater oligochaetes is Lake Baikal 67 A smaller number of other freshwater annelids is known 30 species of leeches Hirudinea 68 and 4 polychaetes 67 Several hundred species of nematodes are known from the lake but a large percentage of these are undescribed 67 More than 140 endemic flatworm Plathelminthes species are in Lake Baikal where they occur on a wide range of bottom types 69 Most of the flatworms are predatory and some are relatively brightly marked They are often abundant in shallow waters where they are typically less than 2 cm 1 in long but in deeper parts of the lake the largest Baikaloplana valida can reach up to 30 cm 1 ft when outstretched 35 69 Museum specimen of the branching sponge Lubomirskia baicalensis living are brighter green Sponges Edit At least 18 species of sponges occur in the lake 70 including about 15 species from the endemic family Lubomirskiidae the remaining are from the nonendemic family Spongillidae 71 72 which colonized the lake about 3 4 million years ago The lake s sponges makes up around 44 of the benthic animal biomass 73 Lubomirskia baicalensis Baikalospongia bacillifera and B intermedia are unusually large for freshwater sponges and can reach 1 m 3 3 ft or more 70 74 These three are also the most common sponges in the lake 70 While the Baikalospongia species typically have encrusting or carpet like structures L baikalensis often has branching structures and in areas where common may form underwater forests 75 Most sponges in the lake are typically green when alive because of symbiotic chlorophytes zoochlorella but can also be brownish or yellowish 76 History EditThe Baikal area sometimes known as Baikalia has a long history of human habitation Near the village of Mal ta some 160 km northwest of the lake remains of a young human male known as MA 1 or Mal ta Boy are indications of local habitation by the Mal ta Buret culture ca 24 000 BP An early known tribe in the area was the Kurykans 77 Located in the former northern territory of the Xiongnu confederation Lake Baikal is one site of the Han Xiongnu War where the armies of the Han dynasty pursued and defeated the Xiongnu forces from the second century BC to the first century AD They recorded that the lake was a huge sea hanhai and designated it the North Sea Beihǎi of the semimythical Four Seas 78 The Kurykans a Siberian tribe who inhabited the area in the sixth century gave it a name that translates to much water Later on it was called natural lake Baygal nuur by the Buryats and rich lake Bay gol by the Yakuts 79 Little was known to Europeans about the lake until Russia expanded into the area in the 17th century The first Russian explorer to reach Lake Baikal was Kurbat Ivanov in 1643 80 Lake Baikal was under Anbei Protectorate of Tang Dynasty from 647 CE to 682 CE Russian expansion into the Buryat area around Lake Baikal 81 in 1628 58 was part of the Russian conquest of Siberia It was done first by following the Angara River upstream from Yeniseysk founded 1619 and later by moving south from the Lena River Russians first heard of the Buryats in 1609 at Tomsk According to folktales related a century after the fact in 1623 Demid Pyanda who may have been the first Russian to reach the Lena crossed from the upper Lena to the Angara and arrived at Yeniseysk 82 Vikhor Savin 1624 and Maksim Perfilyev 1626 and 1627 28 explored Tungus country on the lower Angara To the west Krasnoyarsk on the upper Yenisei was founded in 1627 A number of ill documented expeditions explored eastward from Krasnoyarsk In 1628 Pyotr Beketov first encountered a group of Buryats and collected yasak tribute from them at the future site of Bratsk In 1629 Yakov Khripunov set off from Tomsk to find a rumored silver mine His men soon began plundering both Russians and natives They were joined by another band of rioters from Krasnoyarsk but left the Buryat country when they ran short of food This made it difficult for other Russians to enter the area In 1631 Maksim Perfilyev built an ostrog at Bratsk The pacification was moderately successful but in 1634 Bratsk was destroyed and its garrison killed In 1635 Bratsk was restored by a punitive expedition under Radukovskii In 1638 it was besieged unsuccessfully citation needed In 1638 Perfilyev crossed from the Angara over the Ilim portage to the Lena River and went downstream as far as Olyokminsk Returning he sailed up the Vitim River into the area east of Lake Baikal 1640 where he heard reports of the Amur country In 1641 Verkholensk was founded on the upper Lena In 1643 Kurbat Ivanov went further up the Lena and became the first Russian to see Lake Baikal and Olkhon Island Half his party under Skorokhodov remained on the lake reached the Upper Angara at its northern tip and wintered on the Barguzin River on the northeast side citation needed In 1644 Ivan Pokhabov went up the Angara to Baikal becoming perhaps the first Russian to use this route which is difficult because of the rapids He crossed the lake and explored the lower Selenge River About 1647 he repeated the trip obtained guides and visited a Tsetsen Khan near Ulan Bator In 1648 Ivan Galkin built an ostrogon the Barguzin River which became a center for eastward expansion In 1652 Vasily Kolesnikov reported from Barguzin that one could reach the Amur country by following the Selenga Uda and Khilok Rivers to the future sites of Chita and Nerchinsk citation needed The Trans Siberian Railway was built between 1896 and 1902 Construction of the scenic railway around the southwestern end of Lake Baikal required 200 bridges and 33 tunnels Until its completion a train ferry transported railcars across the lake from Port Baikal to Mysovaya for a number of years The lake became the site of the minor engagement between the Czechoslovak legion and the Red Army in 1918 At times during winter freezes the lake could be crossed on foot though at risk of frostbite and deadly hypothermia from the cold wind moving unobstructed across flat expanses of ice In the winter of 1920 the Great Siberian Ice March occurred when the retreating White Russian Army crossed frozen Lake Baikal The wind on the exposed lake was so cold many people died freezing in place until spring thaw Beginning in 1956 the impounding of the Irkutsk Dam on the Angara River raised the level of the lake by 1 4 m 4 6 ft 83 As the railway was built a large hydrogeographical expedition headed by F K Drizhenko produced the first detailed contour map of the lake bed 9 Buryat shaman on Olkhon Island Russian map circa 1700 Baikal not to scale is at top Steam locomotive on the Circum Baikal Railroad Angara ru was launched in 1900 and is one of the oldest surviving icebreakersResearch Edit Ice cover survey on the lakeSeveral organizations are carrying out natural research projects on Lake Baikal Most of them are governmental or associated with governmental organizations The Baikalian Research Centre is an independent research organization carrying out environmental educational and research projects at Lake Baikal 84 In July 2008 Russia sent two small submersibles Mir 1 and Mir 2 to descend 1 592 m 5 223 ft to the bottom of Lake Baikal to conduct geological and biological tests on its unique ecosystem Although originally reported as being successful they did not set a world record for the deepest freshwater dive reaching a depth of only 1 580 m 5 180 ft 85 That record is currently held by Anatoly Sagalevich at 1 637 m 5 371 ft also in Lake Baikal aboard a Pisces submersible in 1990 85 86 Russian scientist and federal politician Artur Chilingarov the leader of the mission took part in the Mir dives 87 as did Russian president Vladimir Putin 88 Since 1993 neutrino research has been conducted at the Baikal Deep Underwater Neutrino Telescope BDUNT The Baikal Neutrino Telescope NT 200 is being deployed in Lake Baikal 3 6 km 2 2 mi from shore at a depth of 1 1 km 0 68 mi It consists of 192 optical modules 89 Economy Edit Baikal fishermen fish for 15 commercially used species The omul found only in Baikal accounts for most of the catch 90 The lake nicknamed the Pearl of Siberia drew investors from the tourist industry as energy revenues sparked an economic boom 91 Viktor Grigorov s Grand Baikal in Irkutsk is one of the investors who planned to build three hotels creating 570 jobs In 2007 the Russian government declared the Baikal region a special economic zone A popular resort in Listvyanka is home to the seven story Hotel Mayak At the northern part of the lake Baikalplan a German NGO built together with Russians in 2009 the Frolikha Adventure Coastline Track a 100 km 62 mi long long distance trail as an example for sustainable development of the region Baikal was also declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996 Rosatom plans to build a laboratory near Baikal in conjunction with an international uranium plant and to invest 2 5 billion in the region and create 2 000 jobs in the city of Angarsk 91 Lake Baikal is a popular destination among tourists from all over the world According to the Russian Federal State Statistics Service in 2013 79 179 foreign tourists visited Irkutsk and Lake Baikal in 2014 146 937 visitors The most popular places to stay by the lake are Listvyanka village Olkhon Island Kotelnikovsky cape Baykalskiy Priboi resort Khakusy and Turka village The popularity of Lake Baikal is growing from year to year but there is no developed infrastructure in the area For the quality of service and comfort from the visitor s point of view Lake Baikal still has a long way to go The ice road to Olkhon Island is the only legal ice road on Lake Baikal The route is prepared by specialists every year and it opens when the ice conditions allow it In 2015 the ice road to Olkhon was open from 17 February to 23 March The thickness of the ice on the road is about 60 cm 24 in maximum capacity allowed 10 t 9 8 long tons 11 short tons it is open to the public from 9 am to 6 pm The road through the lake is 12 km 7 5 mi long and it goes from the village Kurkut on the mainland to Irkutskaya Guba on Olkhon Island 92 Ecotourism Edit Cracks in Baikal iceBaikal has a number of different tourist activities depending on the season Generally Baikal has two top tourist seasons The first season is ice season which starts usually in mid January and lasts till mid April 93 During this season ice depth increases up to 140 centimeters that allows safe vehicle driving on the ice cover except heavy vehicles such as tourist buses that do not take this risk This allows access to the figures of ice that are formed at rocky banks of Olkhon Island including Cape Hoboy the Three Brothers rock and caves to the North of Khuzhir It also provides access to small islands like Ogoy Island and Zamogoy The ice itself has a transparency of one meter depth citation needed That is why this season is popular for hiking ice walking ice skating and bicycle riding 94 An ice route around Olkhon is around 200 km Some tourists may spot a Baikal seal along the route Local entrepreneurs offer overnight in Yurt on ice The ice season ends in mid April Owing to increasing temperatures ice starts to melt and becomes shallow and fragile especially in places with strong under ice flows A range of factors contribute to an increased risk of falling through the ice towards the end of the season resulting in multiple deaths in Russia each year although exact data for Baikal are unknown 95 Viktor Viktorovych Yanukovych son of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych reportedly died after his car fell through the ice while driving on Baikal in 2015 96 97 The second tourist season is summer which lets tourists dive deeper into virgin Baikal nature Hiking trails become open 98 many of them cross two mountain ranges Baikal Range on the western side and Barguzin Range on the eastern side of Baikal Small tourist vessels operate in the area availing bird watching animal watching especially Baikal seal and fishing Water in the lake stays extremely cold in most places does not exceed 10 C most of the year but in few gulfs like Chivirkuy it can be comfortable for swimming 99 Great Baikal Trail goes from Listvyanka to Bolshoe Goloustnoye along Lake Baikal coastOlkhon s most populated village Khuzhir is an ecotourist destination 100 Baikal has always been popular in Russia and CIS countries but for the last few years when Baikal has seen an influx of visitors from China and Europe 101 Environmental concerns EditEnvironmentalists have previously acknowledged pollution at Lake Baikal 102 103 104 It faces a series of detrimental phenomena including the disappearance of the omul fish the rapid growth of putrid algae and the death of endemic species of sponges across its area 104 Environmental advocacy for the lake began in the late 1950s 105 Since 2010 more than 15 000 metric tons of toxic waste have flowed into the lake Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill Edit Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill in 2008 5 years before its closureThe Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill was constructed in 1966 directly on the shoreline of Lake Baikal The plant bleached paper using chlorine and discharged waste directly into Lake Baikal The decision to construct the plant on the Lake Baikal resulted in strong protests from Soviet scientists according to them the ultra pure water of the lake was a significant resource and should have been used for innovative chemical production for instance the production of high quality viscose for the aeronautics and space industries The Soviet scientists felt that it was irrational to change Lake Baikal s water quality by beginning paper production on the shore It was their position that it was also necessary to preserve endemic species of local biota and to maintain the area around Lake Baikal as a recreation zone 106 However the objections of the Soviet scientists faced opposition from the industrial lobby and only after decades of protest the plant was closed in November 2008 due to unprofitability 107 108 On 4 January 2010 production was resumed On 13 January 2010 Russian President Vladimir Putin introduced changes in legislation legalising the operation of the plant this action brought about a wave of protests from ecologists and local residents 109 These changes were based on the determination President Putin made through a visual verification of Lake Baikal s condition from a miniature submarine where he said I could see with my own eyes and scientists can confirm Baikal is in good condition and there is practically no pollution 110 Despite this in September 2013 the mill underwent a final bankruptcy with the last 800 workers slated to lose their jobs by 28 December 2013 111 The mill has since shut down though its reservoirs of lignin sludge remain an environmental hazard 112 113 Cancelled East Siberia Pacific Ocean oil pipeline Edit The lake in the winter The ice is thick enough to support pedestrians and snowmobiles Main article Eastern Siberia Pacific Ocean oil pipeline Russian oil pipelines state company Transneft 114 was planning to build a trunk pipeline that would have come within 800 m 2 600 ft of the lake shore in a zone of substantial seismic activity Environmental activists in Russia 115 Greenpeace Baikal pipeline opposition 116 and local citizens 117 were strongly opposed to these plans due to the possibility of an accidental oil spill that might cause significant damage to the environment According to the Transneft s president numerous meetings with citizens near the lake were held in towns along the route especially in Irkutsk 118 Transneft agreed to alter its plans when Russian president Vladimir Putin ordered the company to consider an alternative route 40 kilometers 25 mi to the north to avoid such ecological risks 119 Transneft has since decided to move the pipeline away from Lake Baikal so that it will not pass through any federal or republic natural reserves 120 121 Work began on the pipeline two days after President Putin agreed to changing the route away from Lake Baikal 122 Proposed uranium enrichment center Edit In 2006 the Russian government announced plans to build the world s first international uranium enrichment center at an existing nuclear facility in Angarsk a city on the river Angara some 95 km 59 mi downstream from the lake s shores Critics and environmentalists argued it would be a disaster for the region and are urging the government to reconsider 123 After enrichment only 10 of the uranium derived radioactive material would be exported to international customers 123 leaving 90 near the Lake Baikal region for storage Uranium tailings contain radioactive and toxic materials which if improperly stored are potentially dangerous to humans and can contaminate rivers and lakes 123 An enrichment center was constructed in the 2010s 124 Chinese owned bottled water plant Edit Chinese owned AquaSib had been purchasing land alongside the lake and in 2019 started building a bottling plant and pipeline in the town of Kultuk The goal was to export 190 million liters of water to China even though the lake had been experiencing historically low water levels This spurred protests by the local population that the lake would be drained of its water at which point the local government halted the plans pending analysis 125 Other pollution sources Edit According to The Moscow Times and Vice an increasing number of an invasive species of algae thrive in the lake from hundreds of tons of liquid waste including fuel and excrement regularly disposed into the lake by tourist sites and up to 25 000 tons of liquid waste are disposed of every year by local ships 126 127 Historical traditions Edit An 1883 British map using the More Baikal Baikal Sea designation rather than the conventional Ozero Baikal Lake Baikal The first European to reach the lake is said to have been Kurbat Ivanov in 1643 128 In the past the Baikal was referred to by many Russians as the Baikal Sea more Bajkal More Baikal rather than merely Lake Baikal ozero Bajkal Ozero Baikal 129 This usage is attested already in the Life of Protopope Avvakum 1621 1682 130 and on the late 17th century maps by Semyon Remezov 131 It is also attested in the famous song now passed into the tradition that opens with the words Slavnoe more svyashennyj Bajkal Glorious sea the sacred Bajkal To this day the strait between the western shore of the Lake and the Olkhon Island is called Maloye More Maloe more i e the Little Sea Lake Baikal is nicknamed Older sister of Sister Lakes Lake Khovsgol and Lake Baikal 132 According to 19th century traveler T W Atkinson locals in the Lake Baikal Region had the tradition that Christ visited the area The people have a tradition in connection with this region which they implicitly believe They say that Christ visited this part of Asia and ascended this summit whence he looked down on all the region around After blessing the country to the northward he turned towards the south and looking across the Baikal he waved his hand exclaiming Beyond this there is nothing Thus they account for the sterility of Daouria where it is said no corn will grow 133 Lake Baikal has been celebrated in Russian folk songs Two of these songs are known in Russia and its neighboring countries such as Japan Glorious Sea Sacred Baikal Slavnoe mope svyashennyj Bajkal is about a katorga fugitive The lyrics as documented and edited in the 19th century by Dmitriy P Davydov 1811 1888 134 See Barguzin River for sample lyrics The Wanderer Brodyaga is about a convict who had escaped from jail and was attempting to return home from Transbaikal 135 The lyrics were collected and edited in the 20th century by Ivan Kondratyev The latter song was a secondary theme song for the Soviet Union s second color film Ballad of Siberia 1947 Skazanie o zemle Sibirskoj See also Edit Lakes portal Siberia portalCryptodepression Russian Far East Seven Wonders of RussiaNotes EditReferences Edit a b c d e f A new bathymetric map of Lake Baikal Morphometric Data INTAS Project 99 1669 Ghent University Ghent Belgium Consolidated Research Group on Marine Geosciences CRG MG University of Barcelona Spain Limnological Institute of the Siberian Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences Irkutsk Russian Federation State Science Research Navigation Hydrographic Institute of the Ministry of Defense St Petersburg Russian Federation Ghent University Ghent Belgium Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 9 July 2009 M A Grachev On the present state of the ecological system of lake Baikal Limnological Institute Siberian Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 20 August 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2009 Baikal Collins English Dictionary Dervla Murphy 2007 Silverland A Winter Journey Beyond the Urals London John Murray p 173 Schwarzenbach Rene P Philip M Gschwend Dieter M Imboden 2003 Environmental Organic Chemistry 2 ed Wiley Interscience p 1052 ISBN 9780471350538 Tyus Harold M 2012 Ecology and Conservation of Fishes CRC Press p 116 ISBN 978 1 4398 9759 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Bright Michael ed 2010 1001 natural wonders you must see before you die preface by Koichiro Mastsuura 2009 ed London Cassell Illustrated p 620 ISBN 9781844036745 Deepest Lake in the World geology com Retrieved 18 August 2007 a b Lake Baikal A Touchstone for Global Change and Rift Studies United States Geological Survey Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2016 a b Lake Baikal UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 5 October 2012 a b c Lake Baikal Protection of a unique ecosystem ScienceDaily 26 July 2017 Retrieved 16 January 2018 a b c The Oddities of Lake Baikal Alaska Science Forum Archived from the original on 3 February 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2007 a b Jung J Hojnowski C Jenkins H Ortiz A Brinkley C Cadish L Evans A Kissinger P Ordal L Osipova S Smith A Vredeveld B Hodge T Kohler S Rodenhouse N and Moore M 2004 Diel vertical migration of zooplankton in Lake Baikal and its relationship to body size PDF In Smirnov A I Izmest eva L R eds Ecosystems and Natural Resources of Mountain Regions Proceedings of the first international symposium on Lake Baikal The current state of the surface and underground hydrosphere in mountainous areas Nauka Novosibirsk Russia pp 131 140 Retrieved 9 August 2009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link S Hudgins 2003 The Other Side of Russia A Slice of Life in Siberia and the Russian Far East Texas A amp M University Press Retrieved 9 August 2009 M Hammer T Karafet 1995 DNA amp the peopling of Siberia Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 9 August 2009 Fefelov I Tupitsyn I August 2004 Waders of the Selenga delta Lake Baikal eastern Siberia PDF Wader Study Group Bulletin 104 66 78 Retrieved 9 August 2009 Erbajeva Margarita A Khenzykhenova Fedora I Alexeeva Nadezhda V 23 January 2013 Aridization of the Transbaikalia in the context of global events during the Pleistocene and its effect on the evolution of small mammals Quaternary International Quaternary interconnections in Eurasia focus on Eastern Europe SEQS Conference Rostov on Don Russia 21 26 June 2010 284 45 52 Bibcode 2013QuInt 284 45E doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 12 024 ISSN 1040 6182 Lake Baikal World Heritage Site World Heritage Retrieved 13 January 2007 Kravchinsky V A M A Krainov M E Evans J A Peck J W King M I Kuzmin H Sakai T Kawai and D Williams Magnetic record of Lake Baikal sediments chronological and paleoclimatic implication for the last 6 7 Myr Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 195 281 298 2003 doi 10 1016 S0031 0182 03 00362 6 Kravchinsky V A M E Evans J A Peck H Sakai M A Krainov J W King M I Kuzmin A 640kyr geomagnetic and paleoclimatic record from Lake Baikal sediments Geophysical Journal International 170 1 101 116 doi 10 1111 j 1365 246X 2007 03411 x 2007 M I Kuzmin et al 1998 First find of gas hydrates in sediments of Lake Baikal Doklady Adademii Nauk 362 541 543 in Russian M Vanneste M De Batist A Golmshtok A Kremlev W Versteeg 2001 Multi frequency seismic study of gas hydrate bearing sediments in Lake Baikal Siberia Marine Geology 172 1 1 21 Bibcode 2001MGeol 172 1V doi 10 1016 S0025 3227 00 00117 1 P Van Rensbergen M De Batist J Klerkx R Hus J Poort M Vanneste N Granin O Khlystov P Krinitsky 2002 Sublacustrine mud volcanoes and methane seeps caused by dissociation of gas hydrates in Lake Baikal Geology 30 7 631 634 Bibcode 2002Geo 30 631V doi 10 1130 0091 7613 2002 030 lt 0631 SMVAMS gt 2 0 CO 2 Lake Baikal the great blue eye of Siberia CNN Archived from the original on 11 October 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2006 Touchart Laurent 2012 Baikal Lake in Bengtsson Lars Herschy Reginald W Fairbridge Rhodes W eds Encyclopedia of Lakes and Reservoirs Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 83 91 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 4410 6 50 ISBN 978 1 4020 4410 6 retrieved 18 October 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Freshwater Ecoregions of the World 2008 Lake Baikal Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 16 July 2014 Hutter Yongqi Chubarenko 2011 Physics of Lakes Foundation of the Mathematical and Physical Background Vol 1 Springer p 11 ISBN 978 3 642 15178 1 Unique body of water Black Sea Scene Retrieved 5 March 2018 a b Ice Conditions bww irk ru Retrieved 8 June 2017 Baikal seal baikal ru Retrieved 9 June 2017 a b c d e f Gurulev S A Temperature of Lake Baikal Water bww irk ru Retrieved 8 June 2017 a b Pomazkina G L Kravtsova E Sorokovikova 2012 Structure of epiphyton communities on Lake Baikal submerged macrophytes Limnological Review 12 1 19 27 doi 10 2478 v10194 011 0041 1 a b c Rivarola Duartea Otto Juhling Schreiber Bedulina Jakob Gurkov Axenov Gribanov Sahyoun Lucassen Hackermuller Hoffmann Sartoris Portner Timofeyev Luckenbach and Stadler 2014 A First Glimpse at the Genome of the Baikalian Amphipod Eulimnogammarus verrucosus Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B Molecular and Developmental Evolution 322 3 177 189 C Michael Hogan 2009 Marsh Thistle Cirsium palustre GlobalTwitcher com ed N Stromberg Archived 13 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g Mackay A R Flower L Granina 2002 Lake Baikal In Shahgedanova M ed The Physical Geography of Northern Eurasia Oxford University Press pp 403 421 ISBN 978 0 19 823384 8 Peter Saundry 2010 Baikal seal Encyclopedia of Earth Topic ed C Michael Hogan Ed in chief C NCSE Washington D C Wildlife of Lake Baikal bww irk ru Retrieved 9 June 2017 Sipko P T 2009 European bison in Russia past present and future pdf the European Bison Conservation Newsletter Vol 2 2009 pp 148 159 the Institute of Problems Ecology and Evolution RAS Retrieved on 31 March 2017 Zhivotnyj mir Bajkala Ozero Bajkal ekologiya Ozero Bajkal Priroda Presnovodnye vodoemy rastitelnost zhivotnyj mir www zooeco com Retrieved 30 June 2018 Flint V E R L Boehme Y V Kostin A A Kuznetsov 1984 Birds of the USSR Princeton University Press p 38 ISBN 0 691 02430 8 BirdLife International 2016 Locustella davidi IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22732200A95043817 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22732200A95043817 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2014 Thymallus baikalensis in FishBase April 2014 version a b Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2014 Thymallus brevipinnis in FishBase April 2014 version a b FishBase Species in Lake Baikal Retrieved 6 April 2017 Kontula Tytti Kirilchik Sergei V Vainola Risto 2003 Endemic diversification of the monophyletic cottoid fish species flock in Lake Baikal explored with mtDNA sequencing Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 27 1 143 155 doi 10 1016 S1055 7903 02 00376 7 PMID 12679079 Hunt D M et al 1997 Molecular evolution of the cottoid fish endemic to Lake Baikal deduced from nuclear DNA evidence Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 8 3 415 22 Pastukhov V D Lake Baikal Seals NERPA Retrieved 19 July 2014 Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2014 Coregonus baicalensis in FishBase April 2014 version Baikal ru Baikal grayling Retrieved 19 July 2014 Baikal ru Baikal sturgeon Retrieved 19 July 2014 Zooplankton v ekosisteme ozera Bajkal O Bajkale ru Bajkal Nauchno i populyarno Baikal mobi Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Sacred Sea A Journey to Lake Baikal a b Sherbakov Kamaltynov Ogarkov and Verheyen 1998 Patterns of Evolutionary Change in Baikalian Gammarids Inferred from DNA Sequences Crustacea Amphipoda Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 10 2 160 167 BBC News 13 May 1999 Oxygen boosts polar giants Retrieved 17 July 2014 a b Daneliya M E Kamaltynov R M and Vainola R 2011 Phylogeography and systematics of Acanthogammarus s str giant amphipod crustaceans from Lake Baikal Zoologica Scripta 40 6 623 637 Evolution and Phylogeny of Pancrustacea A Story of Scientific Method A new obligate groundwater species of Asellus Isopoda Asellidae from Iran Cladocera species Crustacea Branchiopoda in the littoral zone of Lake Baikal some representatives of Daphniidae families a b c d Karanovic I and T Y Sitnikova 2017 Morphological and molecular diversity of Lake Baikal candonid ostracods with a description of a new genus Zookeys 2017 684 19 56 doi 10 3897 zookeys 684 13249 Martens Schon Meisch and Horne 2008 Global diversity of ostracods Ostracoda Crustacea in freshwater Hydrobiologia 595 185 193 doi 10 1007 s10750 007 9245 4 Karanovic I and T Y Sitnikova 2017 Phylogenetic position and age of Lake Baikal candonids Crustacea Ostracoda inferred from multigene sequence analyzes and molecular dating Ecol Evol 7 17 7091 7103 doi 10 1002 ece3 3159 Schon Pieri Sherbakov and Martens 2017 Cryptic diversity and speciation in endemic Cytherissa Ostracoda Crustacea from Lake Baikal Hydrobiologia 800 1 61 79 doi 10 1007 s10750 017 3259 3 a b c Sitnikova T Y 2006 Endemic gastropod distribution in Baikal Hydrobiologia 568 S1 207 211 doi 10 1007 s10750 006 0313 y S2CID 35020631 a b Baikal ru Gastropoda Retrieved 17 July 2014 Slugina Z V 2006 Endemic Bivalvia in ancient lakes Hydrobiologia 568 S1 213 217 doi 10 1007 s10750 006 0312 z S2CID 22330810 Slugina Starobogatov and Korniushin 1994 Bivalves Bivalvia of Lake Baikal Ruthenica 4 2 111 146 a b c Segers H and Martens K editors 2005 The Diversity of Aquatic Ecosystems pp 43 44 Developments in Hydrobiology Aquatic Biodiversity ISBN 1 4020 3745 7 Kaygorodova I A and N M Pronin 2013 New Records of Lake Baikal Leech Fauna Species Diversity and Spatial Distribution in Chivyrkuy Gulf ScientificWorldJournal 2013 2013 206590 doi 10 1155 2013 206590 a b Baikal ru Flatworms Plathelminthes Retrieved 7 June 2017 a b c Kaluzhnaya Belikov Schroder Rothenberger Zapf Kaandorp Borejko Muller and Muller 2005 Dynamics of skeleton formation in the Lake Baikal sponge Lubomirskia baicalensis Part I Biological and biochemical studies Naturwissenschaften 92 128 133 Paradina Kulikova Suturin and Saibatalova 2003 The Distribution of Chemical Elements in Sponges of the Family Lubomirskiidae in Lake Baikal International Symposium Speciation in Ancient Lakes SIAL III Irkutsk 2002 Berliner Palaobiologische Abhandlungen 4 151 157 de Voogd N J Alvarez B Boury Esnault N Carballo J L Cardenas P Diaz M C Dohrmann M Downey R Hajdu E Hooper J N A Kelly M Klautau M Manconi R Morrow C C Pisera A B Rios P Rutzler K Schonberg C Vacelet J van Soest R W M 2021 Lubomirskiidae Weltner 1895 WoRMS World Register of Marine Species Retrieved 24 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Symbiosis Selection and Novelty Freshwater Adaptation in the Unique Sponges of Lake Baikal Belikov Kaluzhnaya Schroder Muller and Muller 2007 Lake Baikal endemic sponge Lubomirskia baikalensis structure and organization of the gene family of silicatein and its role in morphogenesis Porifera Research Biodiversity Innovation and Sustainability pp 179 188 Kozhov M 1963 Lake Baikal and Its Life Monographiae Biologicae Vol 11 pp 63 67 ISBN 978 94 015 7388 7 Muller and Grachev eds 2009 Biosilica in Evolution Morphogenesis and Nanobiotechnology Case Study Lake Baikal pp 81 110 Springer Publishing ISBN 978 3 540 88551 1 Lincoln W B 2007 The Conquest of a Continent Siberia and the Russians Cornell University Press p 246 ISBN 978 0 8014 8922 8 Chang Chun shu 2007 The Rise of the Chinese Empire Nation State and Imperialism in Early China ca 1600 B C A D 8 University of Michigan Press p 264 ISBN 978 0 472 11533 4 Lincoln W Bruce 2007 The Conquest of a Continent Siberia and the Russians Cornell University Press p 246 ISBN 978 0 8014 8922 8 Research of the Baikal Irkutsk org 18 January 2006 Retrieved 2 January 2012 George V Lantzeff and Richard A Price Eastward to Empire 1973 Otkrytie Russkimi Srednej I Vostochnoj Sibiri in Russian Randewy ru Retrieved 2 January 2012 Irkutsk Hydroelectric Power Station History Irkutskenergo Archived from the original on 25 March 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Bajkalskij issledovatelskij centr Baikal Research Centre in Russian www baikal research org a b Russians in landmark Baikal dive BBC News 29 July 2008 Retrieved 4 April 2010 Gallant Jeffrey 29 July 2008 Russian submersible dives in Lake Baikal do not establish new freshwater depth record Archived from the original on 22 September 2008 Retrieved 4 June 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link DivingAlmanac com PA News 19 July 2008 Submarines to plumb deepest lake Barry Ellen 23 May 2011 A Rugged Guys heart to heart International Herald Tribune Baikal Lake Neutrino Telescope Baikalweb 6 January 2005 Archived from the original on 31 August 2010 Retrieved 30 July 2008 Lake Baikal Global Great Lakes Archived from the original on 27 February 2014 Retrieved 23 February 2014 a b Tom Esslemont 7 September 2007 Pearl of Siberia draws investors BBC News Retrieved 4 December 2007 Daniil Timin Driving on frozen Lake Baikal in the winter Russian blogger Lake Baikal Travel Guide Top Ten Attractions on Lake Baikal 23 November 2017 A Winter Bikepacking Journey Across Lake Baikal BIKEPACKING com 18 May 2020 Retrieved 18 January 2021 Sharma Sapna Blagrave Kevin Watson Simon R O Reilly Catherine M Batt Ryan Magnuson John J Clemens Tessa Denfeld Blaize A Flaim Giovanna Grinberga Laura Hori Yukari 18 November 2020 Increased winter drownings in ice covered regions with warmer winters PLOS ONE 15 11 e0241222 Bibcode 2020PLoSO 1541222S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0241222 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 7673519 PMID 33206655 Ukraine ex President Yanukovych s son drowns in lake BBC News 22 March 2015 Yanukovych junior perished Ukrayinska Pravda 22 March 2015 Trails Great Baikal Trail GBT Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 10 March 2019 Samyj teplyj zaliv na Bajkale Chivyrkujskij zaliv 17 December 2017 McGee Rylin 17 April 2018 Ecotourism in Siberia Development and Challenges on Olkhon Island GeoHistory Retrieved 26 October 2019 Chinese tourists eager to visit Baikal 18 March 2015 Times The Moscow 1 April 2019 Russian Scientists Ring the Alarm on Lake Baikal s Pollutants The Moscow Times Retrieved 14 February 2021 Stewart John Massey The great lake is in great peril Siberia s sacred sea bigger than Belgium and older than any other lake Baikal is threatened by pollution from industry and agriculture New Scientist Retrieved 14 February 2021 a b World s deepest lake crippled by putrid algae poaching and pollution The Guardian Agence France Presse 19 October 2017 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Brown Kate Pride 2018 Saving the Sacred Sea The Power of Civil Society in an Age of Authoritarianism and Globalization Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190660949 Sobisevich A V Snytko V A Some aspects of nature protection in the scientific heritage of academician Innokentiy Gerasimov Acta Geographica Silesiana 2018 Vol 29 1 pp 55 60 Tom Parfitt in Moscow 12 November 2008 Russia Water Pollution The Guardian London Retrieved 2 January 2012 Sacred Land Film Project Lake Baikal Sacredland org Retrieved 2 January 2012 Clifford J Levy 11 September 2010 Russia Uses Microsoft to Suppress Dissent International Herald Tribune Retrieved 10 December 2011 Russians Debate Fate of Lake Jobs Or Environment Npr org 10 May 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Tide of discontent sweeps through Russia s struggling rust belt NBC News Archived 15 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Worldnews nbcnews com 30 November 2013 Retrieved on 15 May 2014 Panin Alexander 13 October 2013 Polluting Baikal Paper Mill Finally Shuts Down The Moscow Times Retrieved 13 August 2022 Khurshudyan Isabelle 13 May 2021 This Siberian town lost everything when the mill closed It s now struggling to find a future The Washington Post Retrieved 13 August 2022 Transneft Transneft Archived from the original on 4 October 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2006 Baikal Environmental Wave Archived from the original on 25 August 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2006 Baikal pipeline Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 21 October 2006 The Right to Know Irkutsk Citizens Want to be Consulted Archived from the original on 11 July 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2007 Tema ENWL Vlasti Irkutskoj obl vystupili protiv prokladki nefteprovoda k Tihomu okeanu Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 3 August 2007 Putin orders oil pipeline shifted BBC News 26 April 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2006 Transneft charged with Siberia Pacific pipeline construction BizTorg ru Retrieved 21 October 2006 New route Transneft Press Center Archived from the original on 4 October 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2006 Work starts on Russian pipeline BBC News 28 April 2006 Retrieved 4 December 2007 a b c Saving the Sacred Sea Russian nuclear plant threatens ancient lake Newint org 2 May 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2012 The International Uranium Enrichment Center JSC IUEC eng iuec ru Retrieved 19 June 2018 Siberian Authorities Halt Construction of Lake Baikal Bottling Plant After Backlash 15 March 2019 StephenMBland StephenMBland Russia s Baikal Biggest Lake in the World Becoming a Swamp 8 September 2014 19 35 The Moscow Times Raymond H Fisher The Voyage of Semon Dezhnev The Haklyut Society 1981 p 246 ISBN 0904180123 Tooke William 1800 View of the Russian empire during the reign of Catharine the Second and to the close of the eighteenth century Printed by A Strahan for T N Longman and O Rees p 203 On the Baikal Sea I was in a shipwreck again Na Bajkalove more paki tonul in the Life of Protopope Avvakum Written by Himself Zhitie protopopa Avvakuma im samim napisannoe L Bagrov 1964 International Society for the History of Cartography ed Imago mundi Vol 1 Brill Archive p 115 Lake Baikal Siberia s Great Lake ISBN 978 1 84162 294 1 p 4 T W Atkinson 1861 Travels in the Regions of the Upper and Lower Amoor Hurst and Blackett p 385 The Glorious Sea Sacred Baikal Karaoke ru Retrieved 2 January 2012 Po dikim stepyam Zabajkalya Ruslanova Lidiya karaoke ru in Russian Further reading EditDetlev Henschel Kayak Adventure in Siberia The first solo circumnavigation of Lake Baikal Amazon ISBN 978 3737561020 Colin Thubron 2000 In Siberia ISBN 978 0060953737 Harper Perennial Leonid Borodin 1988 Year of Miracle And Grief Quartet Books ISBN 978 0704300866 Martin Cruz Smith 2019 Siberian Dilemma Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781439140253 Baynes T S ed 1878 Baikal Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol III 9th ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 241 Kropotkin Peter Alexeivitch Bealby John Thomas 1911 Baikal Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed pp 215 216 External links EditLake Baikal at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Travel information from Wikivoyage Lake Baikal Information Lake Baikal Ice Formations in Photos Lake Baikal on Vimeo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Baikal amp oldid 1171726335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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