See also: Karakul (disambiguation).
Karakul | |||||
Pushpin Map: | Tajikistan#Pamir | ||||
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Tajikistan | ||||
Pushpin Map Alt: | A mape of Tajikistan with a mark indicating the location of Karakul | ||||
Location: | Pamir Mountains | ||||
Coords: | 39.04°N 73.42°W | ||||
Type: | Impact crater lake, endorheic | ||||
Outflow: | None | ||||
Basin Countries: | Tajikistan | ||||
Embedded: |
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Karakul or Qarokul (Kyrgyz for "black lake", replacing the older Tajik name Siob; Russian: Каракуль; Tajik: Қарокӯл; Uighur; Uyghur: قاراكۆل|translit=Qaraköl, Uighur; Uyghur: Қаракөл; Kirghiz; Kyrgyz: Каракөл) is an endorheic lake, in diameter, located within a impact crater.[1] [2] It is located in the Tajik National Park in the Pamir Mountains in Tajikistan.
Karakul lies within a circular depression, which has been interpreted as an impact crater with a rim diameter of .[2] Some estimates say the impact is relatively recent. A preliminary estimate dated it to between 25 Ma[1] and 23 Ma.[3] However, it may be from the recent Pliocene epoch (5.3 to 2.6 Ma).[4] The Earth Impact Database (EID) also lists it as younger than 5 Ma.[2] It is larger than the Eltanin impact (2.5 Ma), which has already been suggested as a contributor to the cooling and ice cap formation in the Northern Hemisphere during the late Pliocene.[5]
The Karakul impact structure was first identified around 1987 through studies of imagery taken from space.[4] [6]
The lake/crater lies at an elevation of above mean sea level. A peninsula projecting from the south shore and an island off the north shore divide the lake into two basins: a smaller, relatively shallow eastern one, between deep, and a larger western one, deep. It is endorheic (lacking a drainage outlet) and the water is brackish. There is a small village with the same name on the eastern shore of the lake.[7]
The lake level was 35 m higher after the last ice age.[8] [9]
Although the lake lies within a national park, much of the surroundings are used as pasture. The lake, with its islands, marshes, wet meadows, peat bogs, and pebbly and sandy plains, has been identified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area (IBA) because it supports significant numbers of the populations of various bird species, either as residents, or as breeding or passage migrants.
These species include bar-headed geese, ruddy shelducks, common mergansers, saker falcons, Himalayan vultures, lesser sand plovers, brown-headed gulls, Tibetan sandgrouse, yellow-billed choughs, Himalayan rubythroats, white-winged redstarts, white-winged snowfinches, rufous-streaked accentors, brown accentors, black-headed mountain finches and Caucasian great rosefinches. The lake's islands are the main places where waterbirds rest and nest.
The only fish in the lake are Triplophysa lacusnigri.
Higher than Lake Titicaca, Karakul hosted the Roof of the World Regatta from 2014 to 2017.[10] This replaced the Alpine Bank Dillon Open, held on the Dillon Reservoir in Colorado, United States as the highest sailing regatta in the world.[11]