Very deep lakes may have emerged from tectonic movements, ie when crustal blocks sink; round and maybe high edges formed when collapsed or flew the crater of a volcano; elongated could be remnants of glacial valleys; finally, of crescent shaped product is usually in latest river changes course. However, none of these freshwater bodies is permanent (clear lake veterinarian).
The Great Lakes have no outlet to sea are also called "closed seas" as the Caspian Sea, but the rule is unclear, because it speaks of Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lakes. Sometimes it is proposed to distinguish the waters of lakes by the character of salty seawater and freshwater lakes. Another example of a lakes has no outlet to sea is Lakes Valencia in Venezuela.
Natural reservoir, produced by collapse of slopes, freezing with formation of ice sheets or small dams built by beavers. Artificial lakes, also called dam, reservoir, and if lower pond. Built for various purposes such as agricultural reservoir, source of drinking water, hydroelectric dam, flood prenvention, to facilitate navigation, recreation, water sports and can usually be a multipurpose reservoir. Best known examples are the Itaipu Dam between Brazil and Paraguay, Guri Dam in Venezuela and the Three Gorges Dam in China.
Oasis, produced by a source of ground water or artesian well in an arid area. Eg .: Huacachina oasis in coastal desert of Peru. Marsh or swamp, formed by rainfall or flooding on level ground, contains funds soft mud or silt. The more the world is the Pantanal in South America, consisting of a network of lakes and floodplains in 3 countries.
Some volcanoes have crater lakes, some of which are acidic and highly mineralized lakes (Note: also known as lava lakes). The relatively closed lakes have a vulnerability to certain invasive species when they have been made tom (intentionally or not). Lakes receive water from one or more generally upstream rivers, either by springs or glacier. Water drains naturally, mainly by a river called emissary or also by evaporation. Lakes play an important reservoir of fresh water used by humans for crop irrigation, for drinking water, and in some cases to produce electricity.
Subglacial lakes, produced by the pressure under great glaciers that maintain liquid water below the ice. In Antarctica there are many subglacial lakes, Lakes Vostok is the largest. Freshwater fjord, where sea level rise becomes fjords ancient glaciers shaped channels lakes, including Lakes Como, Lakes Garda and other sudalpinos lakes in Italy. Laguna lakes formed in an island which in turn is within a lakes, for example: Manitou Lakes Manitoulin Island in Lakes Huron in Ontario, Canada. The folding of earth's crust (lithosphere) create depressions that accommodate the largest lakes. Bark undulates due to pressure, causing rises rounded called "domes".
Endorheic lakes salt lakes or inland sea sometimes called, produced in closed basin. Eg. The Caspian Sea as the largest lakes in world, also located in largest endorheic basin. Salina, salt lakes near seas or even indoors. Widely used for salt extraction. Salar, usually dry by extreme aridity endorheic lakes surface. Eg. Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, which is the world's largest. In karst erosion, calcareous soil is susceptible to chemically eroded by water with some acid content, resulting in depressions or groundwater seepage.
Tectonic lakes formed in depression of a fault or rift valley that deform the crust, which are long and deep as Lakes Victoria, Lakes Titicaca or Lakes Baikal in Siberia, which has more than 1,600 m deep. Violent eruptions originate depressions containing the most beautiful lakes. At the outbreak through an opening, the melt craters pierced domed shaped vessel measuring up to 1.6 kilometers in diameter. Such lakes there are in Central America, Iceland, Italy, Germany and New Zealand. Caldera lakes are much larger and occur when the edge of a volcano collapses into magma chamber empty.
The Great Lakes have no outlet to sea are also called "closed seas" as the Caspian Sea, but the rule is unclear, because it speaks of Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lakes. Sometimes it is proposed to distinguish the waters of lakes by the character of salty seawater and freshwater lakes. Another example of a lakes has no outlet to sea is Lakes Valencia in Venezuela.
Natural reservoir, produced by collapse of slopes, freezing with formation of ice sheets or small dams built by beavers. Artificial lakes, also called dam, reservoir, and if lower pond. Built for various purposes such as agricultural reservoir, source of drinking water, hydroelectric dam, flood prenvention, to facilitate navigation, recreation, water sports and can usually be a multipurpose reservoir. Best known examples are the Itaipu Dam between Brazil and Paraguay, Guri Dam in Venezuela and the Three Gorges Dam in China.
Oasis, produced by a source of ground water or artesian well in an arid area. Eg .: Huacachina oasis in coastal desert of Peru. Marsh or swamp, formed by rainfall or flooding on level ground, contains funds soft mud or silt. The more the world is the Pantanal in South America, consisting of a network of lakes and floodplains in 3 countries.
Some volcanoes have crater lakes, some of which are acidic and highly mineralized lakes (Note: also known as lava lakes). The relatively closed lakes have a vulnerability to certain invasive species when they have been made tom (intentionally or not). Lakes receive water from one or more generally upstream rivers, either by springs or glacier. Water drains naturally, mainly by a river called emissary or also by evaporation. Lakes play an important reservoir of fresh water used by humans for crop irrigation, for drinking water, and in some cases to produce electricity.
Subglacial lakes, produced by the pressure under great glaciers that maintain liquid water below the ice. In Antarctica there are many subglacial lakes, Lakes Vostok is the largest. Freshwater fjord, where sea level rise becomes fjords ancient glaciers shaped channels lakes, including Lakes Como, Lakes Garda and other sudalpinos lakes in Italy. Laguna lakes formed in an island which in turn is within a lakes, for example: Manitou Lakes Manitoulin Island in Lakes Huron in Ontario, Canada. The folding of earth's crust (lithosphere) create depressions that accommodate the largest lakes. Bark undulates due to pressure, causing rises rounded called "domes".
Endorheic lakes salt lakes or inland sea sometimes called, produced in closed basin. Eg. The Caspian Sea as the largest lakes in world, also located in largest endorheic basin. Salina, salt lakes near seas or even indoors. Widely used for salt extraction. Salar, usually dry by extreme aridity endorheic lakes surface. Eg. Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, which is the world's largest. In karst erosion, calcareous soil is susceptible to chemically eroded by water with some acid content, resulting in depressions or groundwater seepage.
Tectonic lakes formed in depression of a fault or rift valley that deform the crust, which are long and deep as Lakes Victoria, Lakes Titicaca or Lakes Baikal in Siberia, which has more than 1,600 m deep. Violent eruptions originate depressions containing the most beautiful lakes. At the outbreak through an opening, the melt craters pierced domed shaped vessel measuring up to 1.6 kilometers in diameter. Such lakes there are in Central America, Iceland, Italy, Germany and New Zealand. Caldera lakes are much larger and occur when the edge of a volcano collapses into magma chamber empty.
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