Lake Baikal Shoreline Lake Baikal, located in southern (and eastern) Siberia near the city of Irkutsk, is the largest freshwater lake in the world. Very little was known about the lake until the Russian government undertook the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway in the 1890s, and voila, the government found out that there was this big lake right in the middle of the projected route for the railroad. The lake could not be moved, so they had to build a huge loop around the lake that needed hundreds of bridges and tunnels, which drove up the cost of the railway considerably--in the winter when the lake froze, they rebuilt the railway right across the lake to save time on the trip to Vladivostok. The building of the railway required further, detailed exploration of the lake, and the Russians discovered numerous interesting aspects of Baikal. Some facts about Lake Baikal:
|
|
So, what makes Lake Baikal so unique, a UNESCO world heritage site, besides its deep, clear water? Lake Baikal lies in a rift valley, a gorge where the crust of the earth is pulling apart. The section of Asia, to the northwest of the lake, is pulling away from the part of Asia to the southeast at a rate of about two centimeters (three-quarters of an inch) a year. In geological terms, the rift is still young and seismically active. There are earthquakes in the region every few years. |
|
Lake Baikal from the Air
This
page is copyright © 2007, C.T. Evans |