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   » » Wiki: Hypersaline Lake
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Hypersaline lake
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A hypersaline lake is a landlocked body of water that contains significant of , , and other salts, with levels surpassing those of (3.5%, i.e. ).

Specific microbial species can thrive in high-salinity environments that are inhospitable to most lifeforms, including some that are thought to contribute to the color of . Some of these species enter a dormant state when , and some species are thought to survive for over 250 million years.

The water in hypersaline lakes has great due to its high salt content.

Hypersaline lakes are found on every continent, especially in or semi-arid regions.

In the , the Canadian Devon Ice Cap contains two that are hypersaline. In , there are larger hypersaline water bodies, lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys such as with salinity of over 35% (i.e. 10 times as salty as ocean water).

The most saline water body in the world is the Gaet'ale Pond, located in the Danakil Depression in , Ethiopia. The water of Gaet'ale Pond has a of 43%, making it the saltiest water body on Earth (i.e. 12 times as salty as ocean water). Previously, it was considered that the most outside of Antarctica was Lake Assal, in , which has a salinity of 34.8% (i.e. 10 times as salty as ocean water). The best-known hypersaline lakes are the (34.2% salinity in 2010) and the Great Salt Lake in the state of , US (5–27% variable salinity). The , dividing and the from , is the world's deepest hypersaline lake. The Great Salt Lake, while having nearly three times the surface area of the Dead Sea, is shallower and experiences much greater fluctuations in salinity. At its lowest recorded water levels, it approaches 7.7 times the salinity of ocean water, but when its levels are high, its salinity drops to only slightly higher than that of the ocean.


See also
  • – organism that thrives in high salt concentrations
  • List of bodies of water by salinity
  • – one with a concentration of salts and minerals significantly higher than most lakes

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