Global Change Data Encyclopedia
Lake Manasarovar
Gao, Y.1 Zhou, Q.1,2* Liu, F. G.1,2
1. School of Geographical Sciences, Qinghai Normal
University, Xining 810008, China;
2.
Academy of Plateau Science and Sustainability, Xining
810008, China
Keywords: Lake Manasarovar; Qinghai-Tibet
Plateau; Tibet; data encyclopedia
Dataset Available Statement:
The dataset supporting this paper
was published at: Gao, Y., Zhou, Q., Liu, F. G. Lake
Manasarovar [J/DB/OL]. Digital
Journal of Global Change Data Repository, 2020. DOI: 10.3974/geodb.2020.04.03.V1.
Figure 1 Map of Lake Manasarovar (.kmz format)
Figure 2 Map of Lake Manasarovar (.shp format)
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Lake Manasarovar, also known as Mafamu
Lake, means ??incompetent holy lake?? and ??eternal
undefeated lake?? in Tibetan[1].Located
in Purang county, 20 km southeast of Kangrinboqe, the lake has an altitude of 4,588
m. The maximum water depth of the lake area is 81.8 m, and the average water
depth is about 46 m. It is a freshwater lake with the largest accumulation of
freshwater resources in high-altitude areas in the world[2]. The
lake shores are relatively regular. The lake basin is wide in the north and
narrow in the south, shaped like a pear. The lake is 26 km long from north to
south, and the maximum width is 21 km from east to west[3]. The
geolocation is 30??33¢43²N-30??47¢04²N, 81??21¢51²E-81??36¢44²E[4]
(Figure 1-2).
Manasarovar
is located in the Garzangbo-Yarlung Zangbo River fault zone, which is a faulted
structural basin between the Gangdise Mountains and the Himalayas. High
mountains stand on the north and south sides of the lake. On the south side is
Mount Naimona??nyi at 7,728 m asl., covered by glaciers all year round. On the
north side is Mount Kailash at 6,656 m asl., covered by snow and glaciers all
year round. The height of the modern glacier ends of the two peaks is about 5,500 m. A series of glacial
landforms such as moraines, and ancient ice buckets remain on the edge of the
lake basin[1].
In
2015, the lake area was 412.14 km2, and the shoreline was 90.02 km.
It is a plateau temperate semi-arid climate. The average annual precipitation
is about 190 mm. The precipitation from June to August
accounts for about 55% of the annual and the daily
maximum precipitation reaches 47 mm. The average annual temperature is about
2.0 ??C and the average daily temperature above 5 ??C lasts for about 160 days. The annual sunshine hours is
about 3,200 hours [1]. The annual average evaporation is 2,197.4 mm.
The
basin area of the lake is about 4,560 km2, and the supply of lake
water mainly depends on precipitation and surface glacial meltwater runoff[2].
The supply rivers are mainly distributed in the east, north and south of the
lakeshore. The larger runoff into the lake includes Zhaqu Zangbo, Samo River,
Baqing River, Zumanong River, Baqiong River, etc. The rivers are short, with
large slopes, and all belong to the melting water of ice and snow[5].
From July to August 1907, the Swedish scientist Sven Heding measured the
maximum water depth of the lake center to 81.8 m. In July 1976, the water depth
was more than 60 m. The lake center has a maximum transparency of 14 m, which
is one of the most transparent lakes in China. The lake has pH of 8.0-8.4 and salinity of
108.9-405.8 mg·L–1. The salinity at the mouth of the
northeast bank is the lowest at 108.9 mg·L–1. It is a heavy
carbonate freshwater lake[1].The lake water has the
characteristics of sweet, cool, clear, soft, non-smelling, non-damaging to the
throat, and non-damaging to the limbs. It is often drunk and bathed by local
people[6].
The
vegetation type in this area is dominated by Stipa grassland. The main wild
animals around the lake include bos mutus, equus hemionus, przewalski??s
gazelle, pseudois nayaur, wild sheep, tibetan antelope, snowcock, mallard, and
black-necked crane. Algae are commonly found in the lake, including 8 species
of crescent diatoms, window diatoms, and keel diatoms in the bacillariophyta; 4
species of stellaria and cosmarium in the chlorophyta; 4 species of oscillatoria and cyanococcus in the cyanophyta; tribonema in the phylum
xanthophyta, etc. The fish in the lake mainly include stoliczkae and
oxygymnocypris stewartii. The discovery of 2 genera and 5 species of ostracod
fossils in lake sediments is of great significance to the study of lake
evolution and climate change in lake areas[1].
The
dataset was developed based on Google Earth satellite images (2015) and related
maps. The dataset is archived in .shp[7] and .kmz formats, and
consists of 16 data files with a data size of 616 KB (compressed into 2 files with
243 KB).
References
[1]
Editorial Committee of
Encyclopedia Rivers and Lakes in China. Encyclopedia Rivers and Lakes in China:
Section of River Basins in Southwest Region [M]. Beijing: China Water &
Power Press, 2014.
[2]
Deng, B. T. Snowy Road: The
Ecological Humanities of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau [M]. Xining: Qinghai
People??s Publishing House, 2016.
[3]
The Chinese Academy of Sciences
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Comprehensive Scientific Expedition Team. Tibet Rivers
and Lakes [M]. Beijing: Science Press, 1984.
[4]
Gao, Y., Zhou, Q., Liu, F. G.
Lake Manasarovar [J/DB/OL]. Digital Journal of Global Change Data Repository,
2020. DOI: 10.3974/geodb.2020.04.03.V1.
[5]
Wang, S. M., Dou, H. S. Records
of Lakes in China [M]. Beijing: Science Press, 1998.
[6]
Ngari Prefecture Chronicles Compilation
Committee. Ngari District Chronicles [M]. Beijing: China Tibetology Publishing
House, 2009.
Data computing environment
[7]
ESRI??s
computing platform in the ArcGIS of Qinghai Normal University.
URL for Data
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