Our Beautiful Planet: Tanzania's crimson 'stone animal' lake
Melanie Hall
July 19, 2018
Bright-red Lake Natron in Tanzania may not look inviting enough to take a dip – and that's a good thing: its water is extremely alkaline. The caustic lake has another strange quality: it appears to turn animals to stone.
Advertisement
The scarlet waters of Lake Natron in northern Tanzania are eye-catching enough by themselves. But when coupled with the sight of dead animals seemingly turned to stone, the lake appears even more eerie. So what's causing it?
The lake's extremely alkaline water has a pH as high as 10.5, similar to milk of magnesia, a treatment used to neutralize stomach acid. It owes its unusual chemistry to the surrounding volcanic geology: the minerals, particularly sodium carbonate, and salts created by volcanic processes flow into the lake from the surrounding hills. Ol Doinyo Lengai, an active volcano, lies not far from the lake.
This raises the lake's alkalinity to far above water's normal neutral pH of 7. The lake actually takes its name from the naturally-occurring blend of chemicals it contains.
The water comes from mineral hot springs and a river, but the lake doesn't drain out to any sea or river – evaporation is how the shallow lake loses water, which can reach as high as 41 degrees Celsius (106 degrees Fahrenheit).
The reason for the lake’s colorful water is down to haloarchaea, microorganisams that flourish in its salty waters – the vermillion shade is even more stunning at the end of the dry season, when the water level is especially low.
While it may be paradise for haloarchaea, many creatures can't survive in such alkaline waters – but animals whose bodies are adapted to such pH levels also inhabit the lake, meaning Lake Natron is far from barren.
Flocks of flamingos, other birds and tilapia fish all call the lake their home. More than 2 million lesser flamingos use the lake as their primary breeding ground in Africa.
But when animals die and end up in the water, something odd happens: it looks like living animals turned to stone instantly on hitting the lake. But what actually happens is that the corpses of animals which died in the lake are sometimes preserved by the sodium carbonate minerals and other salts that were used by the ancient Egyptians for mummification - calcifying their bodies.
Earth art: Spectacular photos from space
Astronaut Scott Kelly is spending a year on the International Space Station and has been tweeting some incredible abstract photos of our planet.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Blues and greens
The coast and green fields of Southeast Asia.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Africa in abstract
An African landscape from space.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Lake Urmia by morning light
Lake Urmia is a salt lake in northwestern Iran near its border to Turkey. It's protected as a national park.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
The Red Sea
The Red Sea from above. Noted for its biodiversity and the desert dust storms that often sweep across it, the salty sea is an inlet of the Indian Ocean, located between Africa and Asia. .
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Earth's color palette
A photo taken just south of the oasis town of Awjila in Libya. The town is well known for its high quality dates.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Ice and water
"Patagonia never disappoints," tweeted Scott Kelly. The sparsely populated region at the southern end of South America is home to a range of habitats.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Fiery desert dunes
Desert dunes and soil near Egypt’s Toshka Lakes. The lakes were created in the 1980s and 1990s by the diversion of water from Lake Nasser through a manmade canal into the Sahara Desert.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Watercolors
Tanzania's Lake Kitangiri. The lake is located just south of the Serengeti National Park.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Oil on canvas
From the ground, it might appear that all deserts look pretty much the same. But as Scott Kelly points out, that is not the case from above. "Whenever I think I've seen all the desert scenes Earth has to offer, I see something new and amazing," wrote Kelly on Twitter, when he posted this snap from above Roudkhāneh, Iran.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Salt and soda
Tanzania's Lake Natron is a salt and soda lake close to the Kenyan border. The lake's unusual but beautiful colors result from very high rates of evaporation there.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Blue gem
Cuo Womo Lake in Tibet appears to be the bluest place on earth from the International Space Station, according to Kelly.
Image: Scott Kelly/NASA
Space selfie
Astronaut Scott Kelly takes a selfie on the International Space Station. Kelly is almost 100 days into a mission to investigate the effects of a long stay in space on the human body. The U.S. astronaut regularly posts abstract photos of Earth, asking followers to guess where over the world he is.