- Lake Magadi
Infobox lake
lake_name = Lake Magadi
image_lake = LakeMagadi.png
caption_lake =
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location =Rift Valley
coords = coord|1|52|S|36|16|E|region:KE-700_type:waterbody|display=inline,title
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catchment =
basin_countries = Kenya
length =
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area = 100 km²
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frozen =Lake Magadi is the southermost
lake in theKenya Rift Valley , lying in a catchment of faulted volcanic rocks, north east ofLake Natron . During the dry season, it is 80% covered by soda and is well known for itswading bird s, includingflamingo s.Lake Magadi is a saline,
alkaline lake, approximately 100 square kilometers in size, that lies in agraben . The lake is an example of a "saline pan". The lake water, which is a densesodium carbonate brine , precipitates vast quanitites of the mineraltrona (sodium sesquicarbonate). In places, the salt is up to 40 m thick. The lake is recharged mainly by salinehot spring s (temperatures up to 86°C) that discharge into alkaline "lagoons" around the lake margins, there being little surface runoff in this arid region. Most hot springs lie along the northwestern and southern shorelines of the lake. During the rainy season a thin (<1 m) layer of brine covers much of the saline pan, but this evaporates rapidly leaving a vast expanse of white salt that cracks to produce large polygons. A single species of fish, acichlid Alcolapia grahami , inhabits the hot, highly alkaline waters of this lake basin and is commonly seen in some of the hot spring pools around the shoreline where the water temperature is less than 45°C.Lake Magadi was not always so saline. Several thousand years ago (during the late
Pleistocene to mid-Holocene ) the Magadi basin held a freshwater lake with many fish, whose remains are preserved in the High Magadi Beds, a series of lacustrine and volcaniclastic sediments preserved in various locations around the present shoreline. Evidence also exists for several older Pleistocene precursor lakes that were much larger than present Lake Magadi. At times, Lake Magadi andLake Natron were united as a single larger lake.Lake Magadi is also well known for its extensive deposits of siliceous
chert . There are many varieties including bedded cherts that formed in the lake and intrusive dike-like bodies that penetrated through overlying sediments while the silica was soft. Most famous is "Magadi-type chert", which formed from a sodium silicate mineral precursormagadiite that was discovered at Lake Magadi during the 1960s.Magadi township lies on the
lake 's east shore, and is home to the Magadi Soda factory, owned by Tata India since December 2005. This factory producessoda ash , which has a range of industrial uses.The lake is featured in Fernando Meirelles's film "The Constant Gardener", which is based on the book of the same name by
John le Carré , although in the film the shots are supposed to be atLake Turkana .A
causeway that crosses the lake provides access to the area west of the lake (Nguruman Escarpment). There is no tourist accommodation at Magadi townsite.References
*Baker, B.H. 1958. Geology of the Magadi area. Report of the Geological Survey of Kenya, 42, 81 pp.
*Behr, H.J. 2002. Magadiite and Magadi chert: a critical analysis of the silica sediments in the Lake Magadi Basin, Kenya. SEPM Special Publication 73, p. 257-273.
*Eugster, H.P. 1970. Chemistry and origin of the brines from Lake Magadi, Kenya. Mineralogical Society of America Special Paper, No. 3, p. 215-235.
*Eugster, H.P. 1980. Lake Magadi, Kenya, and its Pleistocene precursors. In Nissenbaum, A. (Editor) Hypersaline brines and evaporitic environments. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 195-232.
*Jones, B.F., Eugster, H.P., and Rettig, S.L. 1977. Hydrochemistry of the Lake Magadi basin, Kenya. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, v. 41, p. 53-72.
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