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Lake thread | HFBoards - NHL Message Board and Forum for National Hockey League
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Lake thread

Hippasus

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I just binge-watched some nature videos and wanted to share a few highlights. Feel free to post information, videos, etc. of these or other lakes if you think they are of interest.


Surface area comparisons of the Earth's lakes:


The following are ranked by greatest water volume.

1. Caspian Sea (central Eurasia)

This is the largest lake in the world by volume and surface area. It is largely formed by or is an endoheic basin. This means that it has disproportionally little outflow and is formed on a basin.



2. Lake Baikal (south-central Russia)

This is an astoundingly deep lake. Very foreboding. It was formed by plate tectonics.



3. Lake Tanganyika (central Africa)

This lake is practically endoheic, and like the above lakes, faces significant ecological issues.



 
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This sent me down a rabbit hole right before what was supposed to be bedtime last night, eventually leading me to the Aral Sea, once the 4th largest lake on Earth as recently as the 1960's and it has now shrunk to the point of being outside the top 50




 
Since it is not landlocked, the Black Sea is not technically a lake. However, I saw a documentary earlier today (linked below) that hypothesized that it used to be a lake around the end of the last ice age. By volume, it makes even the Caspian Sea or Lake Baikal look small.



 
Since it is not landlocked, the Black Sea is not technically a lake..However, I saw a documentary earlier today (linked below) that hypothesized that it used to be a lake around the end of the last ice age. ...
Seems we need a "Sea thread" ... :sarcasm:
 

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