10 Most Unique Lakes of our World
 Published on 11/13/2008  under Cool Places  - 136,425 views  
TAGS: Largest Lakes, Beautiful Lakes, Plitvice Lakes, Boiling Lake, Red Lagoon, Five-Flower Lake, Dead Sea, Lake Baikal, Lake Titicaca, Caspian Sea, Crater Lake, Lake Karachay   
  Plitvice Lakes (Croatia): Sixteen Lakes interconnected by Spectacular Waterfalls
 Plitvice Lakes (Croatia): Sixteen Lakes interconnected by Spectacular Waterfalls
The Plitvice Lakes are a series of sixteen lakes interconnected by  spectacular waterfalls, set in a deep woodland and populated by deers,  bears, wolves, boars and rare bird species.  A UNESCO 
World Heritage Site, the  lakes are renowned for their distinctive colours, ranging from azure to  green, grey or blue. The colours change constantly depending on the  quantity of minerals or organisms 
in the water and the angle of sunlight. 
 
 
  Boiling Lake (Dominica): A Flooded Fumarole
 Boiling Lake (Dominica): A Flooded Fumarole

 The Boiling Lake is situated in the Morne Trois Pitons 
National Park, Dominica's World Heritage site.  It is a flooded fumarole, or hole in the earth’s surface, 10.5 km east of Roseau, Dominica, on the Caribbean.  It is filled with bubbling greyish-blue water that is usually enveloped in a cloud of vapor.  
The lake is approximately 60 m across. 
      Red Lagoon (Bolivia): Red (algae) + White (borax)
 Red Lagoon (Bolivia): Red (algae) + White (borax)

 The Laguna Colorada (Red Lagoon) is a shallow salt lake in the southwest  of the altiplano of Bolivia, close to the border with Chile.  The lake contains borax islands, whose white color contrasts nicely with  the reddish color of its waters, caused by red sediments and  pigmentation of some algae. 
  Five-Flower Lake (China): Beautiful Multi-Coloured Lake with Fallen Tree Trunks
 Five-Flower Lake (China): Beautiful Multi-Coloured Lake with Fallen Tree Trunks

 The Wuhua Hai, or Five-Flower Lake, is the signature of the Jiuzhaigon National Park in China.  The lake is a shallow multi-coloured lake whose bottom is littered with  fallen tree trunks.  The water is so clear that you can see the trunks clearly. The water  comes in different shares of turquoise, from yellowish to green, to  blue. It is located at an elevation of 2472 meters, below Panda Lake and above  the Pearl Shoal Waterfall. 
  Dead Sea (Israel and Jordan): Lowest Point on Earth
 Dead Sea (Israel and Jordan): Lowest Point on Earth

 The Dead Sea is a salt lake situated between Israel and the West bank to  the west, and Jordan to the east. It is 420 meters (1,378 ft) below sea  level and its shores are the lowest point on the surface of the Earth  on dry land. The Dead Sea is 330 m (1,083 ft) deep, the deepest hypersaline lake 
in the world.  It is also the world's second saltiest body of water, after Lake Assal  in Djibouti, with 30 percent salinity. It is 8.6 times saltier than the  ocean. This salinity makes for a harsh environment where animals cannot  flourish and boats cannot sail. The Dead Sea is 67 kilometers (42 mi)  long and 18 kilometers (11 mi) wide at its widest point. It lies in the  Jordan Rift Valley, and its main tributary is the Jordan River. 
The Dead Sea has attracted visitors from around the Mediterranean basin  for thousands of years. Biblically, it was a place of refuge for King  David. It was one of the world's first health resorts (for Herod the  Great), and it has been the supplier of a wide variety of products, from  balms for Egyptian mummification to potash for fertilizers. 
  Lake Baikal (Russia): Deepest and Oldest Lake in the World
 Lake Baikal (Russia): Deepest and Oldest Lake in the World

 Lake Baikal is located in Southern Siberia in Russia, and it's also  known as the "Blue Eye of Siberia". It contains more water than all the  North American Great Lakes combined.  At 1,637 meters (5,371 ft), Lake Baikal is the deepest lake in the world, and the largest freshwater lake in the world by volume, holding approximately twenty percent of the world's total fresh water. However, Lake Baikal contains less than one third the amount of water as the Caspian Sea which is the largest lake in the world.  Lake Baikal was formed in an ancient rift valley and therefore is long  and crescent-shaped with a surface area (31,500 km²) slightly less than  that of Lake Superior or Lake Victoria. Baikal is home to more than  1,700 species of plants and animals, two thirds of which can be found  nowhere else in the world and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. At more than 25 million years old, it is the oldest lake in the world. 
  Lake Titicaca (Bolivia and Peru): World's Highest Navigable Lake
 Lake Titicaca (Bolivia and Peru): World's Highest Navigable Lake

 Lake Titicaca is a lake located on the border of Bolivia and Peru. It  sits 3,812 m (12,500 ft) above sea level making it the highest  commercially navigable lake in the world. By volume of water it is also the largest lake in South America. Lake Titicaca is fed by rainfall and meltwater from glaciers on the sierras that abut the Altiplano. 
  Caspian Sea (Russia): World's Largest Lake
 Caspian Sea (Russia): World's Largest Lake

 The Caspian Sea is the world's largest lake or largest inland body of water in the world, and accounts for 40 to 44 percent of the total lacustrine waters of the world.  With a surface area of 394,299 km² (152,240 mi²), it has a surface area greater than the next six largest lakes combined. 
  Crater Lake (USA): its waters are considered one of the World's Most Clearest
 Crater Lake (USA): its waters are considered one of the World's Most Clearest

 Crater Lake is a caldera lake located in Oregon; due to several unique  factors, most prominently that it has no inlets or tributaries, the  waters of Crater Lake are considered one of the world's most clearest. The lake partly fills a nearly 4,000 foot (1,220 m) deep caldera that  was formed around 5,677 (± 150) BC by the collapse of the volcano Mount  Mazama. Its deepest point has been measured at 1,949 feet (594 m) deep, making  it the deepest lake in the United States, and the ninth deepest in the world.  
  Lake Karachay (Russia): Most Polluted Spot on Earth
 Lake Karachay (Russia): Most Polluted Spot on Earth

 Lake Karachay is a small lake in the southern Ural mountains in western  Russia. Starting in 1951 the Soviet Union used Karachay as a dumping  site for radioactive waste from Mayak, the nearby nuclear waste storage  and reprocessing facility, located near the town of Ozyorsk. According to a report by the Washington, D.C.-based Worldwatch Institute  on nuclear waste, Karachay is the "most polluted spot" on Earth. The lake  accumulated some 4.44 exabecquerels (EBq) of radioactivity, including  3.6 EBq of Caesium-137 and 0.74 EBq of Strontium-90. For comparison, the  Chernobyl disaster released from 5 to 12 EBq of radioactivity, however  this radiation is not concentrated in one location.
 
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