hidden pixel

Lake Manly Information

Lake Manly is a pluvial, former freshwater, endorheic, rift lake that filled the Death Valley basin of Inyo County, California through the Holocene before the area's climate changed to desert. Following its isolation from the Colorado River system, Lake Manly receded by evaporation with Badwater Basin, Middle Basin, and Cotton Ball Marsh occupying the space left behind. At its greatest extent Lake Manly was roughly 80 mi (130 km) long and 600 ft (180 m) deep.[1]

Contents

Background

Shoreline Butte showing strandlines from ancient Lake Manly. Pleistocene Lakes and Rivers of Mojave

As Lake Manly evaporated to the surface of Death Valley, it left a remarkable legacy. Under the surface of Death Valley is one of the world's largest aquifers. Being fed by the Amargosa River and Salt Creek, this aquifer is barely visible above ground at Badwater Basin, at −282 ft (−86.0 m).[1]

Shoreline Butte has easy-to-see strandlines formed by wave action from the ancient lake. These features were created by stands of the lake, which would change its depth over time and also cause slight changes in climate. The conditions under which this lake existed are called "pluvial" by geologists instead of glacial because glaciers did not directly touch Death Valley, but the meltwater from the glaciers and the cooler and wetter climate of the time affected the valley. Approximately 8,000 ft (2,400 m) of gravel, sand, and mud overlay the bedrock of the valley floor.

Lake Manly is named after William L. Manly, who was among the original Death Valley party in 1849. Manly and a companion hiked out of Death Valley into the Greater Los Angeles Area, where he found help and returned to rescue his party.[2]

Reemergence

In 2005, severe flooding resulted in Lake Manly reappearing on a large scale.[3] More than 100 square miles (260 km2) were covered by the lake, allowing some tourists and park rangers to become probably the only humans to canoe across Death Valley. The lake was about two feet deep at its deepest point. It evaporated quickly, leaving behind a mud-salt mixture.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b US Geological Survey (30 June 2000). "Shoreline Butte: Ice age Death Valley". Death Valley Geology Field Trip Shoreline Butte. Department of the Interior. http://www.nature.nps.gov/geology/usgsnps/deva/ftsho1.html. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
  2. ^ Manly, William L. (1894). Death Valley in '49. San Jose: The Pacific Tree and Vine Co. ISBN 0912494239. OCLC 166605554. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/12236/12236-h/12236-h.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
  3. ^ National Weather Service (15 August 2004). "Survey of Death Valley Flood". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, US Dept of Commerce. http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/vef/projects/DeathValleyFloodSurvey.php. Retrieved 2009-09-05.

Further reading

External links

· · Death Valley and Death Valley National Park
Fauna, flora and minerals

Amargosa springsnail · Borax · Chuckwalla · Death Valley monkeyflower · Death Valley pupfish · Death Valley June beetle · Devil's Hole pupfish · Saratoga Springs pupfish

History

Amargosa Opera House and Hotel · Badwater · Death Valley Railroad · Greenwater · Harmony Borax Works · Lake Manly (Badwater Basin) · Skidoo · Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad · Twenty-mule team

Places

Amargosa Range / River / Valley · Ash Meadows NWR · Badwater Basin · Ballarat · Beatty · Black Mountains · Chloride City · Cottonwood Mountains · Darwin Falls · Death Valley Junction · Eureka Valley / Dunes · Funeral Mountains · Furnace Creek · Panamint City / Range / Springs / Valley · Racetrack · Rhyolite · Saline Valley · Saratoga Springs · Scotty's Castle · Stovepipe Wells · Telescope Peak · Trona · Ubehebe Crater · Zabriskie Point

Transportation

California: SR 127 · SR 178 · SR 190 · Trona Railway · Nevada: US 95 · SR 267 · SR 373 · SR 374

· · Pleistocene proglacial lakes and related seas
Africa Lake Makgadikgadi
Asia Lake Komi · West Siberian Glacial Lake
Europe Ancylus Lake · Baltic Ice Lake · Lake Harrison · Lake Lapworth · Lake Pickering · Littorina Sea · Mastogloia Sea · Yoldia Sea
North America Lake Admiralty · Lake Albany · Lake Algonquin · Lake Bonneville · Lake Bassano · Lake Cahuilla · Lake Chicago · Lake Columbia · Lake Connecticut · Early Lake Erie · Lake Frontenac · Lake Great Falls · Lake Hitchcock · Lake Iroquois · Lake Lahontan · Lake Manly · Lake Maumee · Lake Minong · Lake Missoula · Lake Ojibway · Lake Passaic · Proglacial lakes of Minnesota (Lake Agassiz · Lake Duluth) · Lake Souris · Lake Tight · Teays River · Lake Tonawanda · Tyrrell Sea · Lake Wisconsin
South America Lake Ballivián

Categories: Lakes of the Great Basin | Former lakes | Pleistocene | Lakes of the Mojave Desert | Death Valley | Geology of California | Geology of Nevada | Lakes of Inyo County, California | Natural history of the Mojave Desert

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue Jun 7 19:30:27 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.