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An ancient lake is a lake that has consistently carried water for more than one million years. Twelve of the 20 ancient lakes have existed for more than 2.6 million years, the full Quaternary period. Ancient lakes continue to persist due to plate tectonics in an active . This active rift zone creates lakes that are extremely deep and difficult to naturally fill with sediment. Due to the prolonged life of ancient lakes, they serve as models for isolated evolutionary traits and . Most of the world's bodies of water are less than 18,000 years old. There are only 20 ancient lakes over 1 million years old.

is often considered the oldest, as clear evidence shows that it is 25–30 million years old. may be even older, of origin and at least 66 million years old (most likely around 70 million years), but its exact age is controversial and labeled with some uncertainty. Another contender for oldest is , estimated to be 20–36 million years old. In ancient times it was indisputably a true lake, but today it is saline and directly connected to the sea, leading many to consider it a large or bay.


Ancient lakes vs. younger lakes
There are six major types of lakes (listed below). The majority of lakes dry up as the result of the filling with lacustrine deposits, sediment deposited from a river into a lake over thousands of years. Factors that influence the water level decreasing include fluvial-lacustrine sediment build-up, , natural drainage, and processes. Ancient lakes have a prolonged life when compared to younger, more ordinary lakes due to the local active and sections of land called .

For example, in Russia, the deepest lake in the world, is an ancient lake created by the Baikal Rift Zone which is 25–30 million years old and deep. This is compared to the North American , which were formed by the last glacial period by glacial scouring and the pooling of which are 14,000 years old and have maximum depths ranging from deep.


Formation of ancient lakes
Ancient lake formation is similar to that of a . Formation occurs within a graben that is located on an active rift zone. Grabens are sections of land, formed along divergent plate boundaries, which have subsided between two parallel plates. The location of the graben above the active rift zone results in a lake bottom that is constantly dropping in-depth and walls increasing in height.


Importance to evolution
Ancient lakes allow scientists to study the mechanisms of environmental changes over glacial-interglacial timescales. Evolutionary characteristics including , adaptive radiation and punctuated equilibrium are studied in ancient lakes due to their prolonged existence and general geographic isolation. Most of the research has been associated with the endemic fauna and diatoms that exist in these isolated lakes, concentrating on , the and the African Great Lakes. Information is derived from the associations of the fluvial-lacustrine, and .


List of ancient lakes
These are the 20 ancient lakes in the world that have existed for more than 1 million years.

+ !Name !Origin !Type !Age !Area
(km2) !Volume
(km3) !Depth max !Depth average !Countries ! class="unsortable"
Notes
meteor impactfresh, permanent, crater1.5 million8 267
tectonicfresh, permanent1–2 million499156505313
meteor impactsoda, permanent, crater1–2 million492.248145
volcanicfresh, permanent2 million375 11260.3
tectonic3 million8372893281107,
1.5-5 million2594.85418.7, ,
1.5-5 million358.1853.63286.7163.71Albania
2–5 million296008400705292, ,
Lake Hovsgol2–5 million2770381267138
saline, intermittent, endorheic2.5-5 million969030.163
fresh, permanent3–6 million32000178001471572, Congo, ,
saline, permanent, endorheic5.5 million374000782001025182, , , ,
saline, permanent5.5 million645006256716, Formerly the fourth in the world with an area of 68,000 km2 (26,300 sq mi). By 1997, it had shrunk to 10% of its original size due to water that was diverted in the Soviet Era. It is now split into 4 smaller lakes. As of 2023, the Aral Sea has become mostly desert.
fresh, permanent5–6 million67427.510441
3–15 million5340
saline, permanent, coastal bay20+ million130102806025.9Historically it was an ancient lake. Now, it is a large tidal bay/inlet rather than a lake in the traditional sense. It is saline and directly connected to the , leading many to consider it a large lagoon or bay.
fresh, permanent25+ million31500230001741740
saline, permanent25 million62361738668270
subglacialfresh, permanent, subglacial15–35 million125005400510432
tectonicfresh, permanent65+ million551053105The construction of the Bukhtarma dam inundated the lake, thus, in some sources, the lake is considered a reservoir. Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary, Moscow, 1980, p. 451.

  • (2025). 9780521582810, Cambridge UP.
    Chapter 11.1–11.2.
  • Wilke, Thomas, Risto Väinölä, and F. Riedel. Patterns and Processes of Speciation in Ancient Lakes: Proceedings of the Fourth Symposium on Speciation in Ancient Lakes, Berlin, Germany, September 4–8, 2006. Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Springer, 2009. 126–28. Print.
  • Vaillant, J. J., G. D. Haffner, and M. E. Cristescu. "The Ancient Lakes of Indonesia: Towards Integrated Research on Speciation." Integrative and Comparative Biology 51.4 (2011): 634–43. Web. Nov. 2015
  • . Download from researchgate.net.
  • Hoffmann, N., K. Reicherter, T. Fernández-Steeger, and C. Grützner. "Evolution of Ancient Lake Ohrid: A Tectonic Perspective." Biogeosciences 7.10 (2010): 3377–386. Web. Nov. 2015.


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