Himalayas: Glacial Lakes
(Created page with "{| class="wikitable" |- |colspan="0"|<div style="font-size:100%"> This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.<br/> Additional information ma...") |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
=Status= | =Status= | ||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
The study also cracks the belief that Tso Lhamo lake or Chho Lhamo or Cholamu lake --the source of river Teesta--is India's highest lake, located at an altitude of 5,330 m in eastern Himalaya. | The study also cracks the belief that Tso Lhamo lake or Chho Lhamo or Cholamu lake --the source of river Teesta--is India's highest lake, located at an altitude of 5,330 m in eastern Himalaya. | ||
The new highest lakes altitudinal distribution shows that lakes are detected up to 6000m altitude. Most of these are very small and mapped as point feature. Among the sizable lakes with at least 25 hectares area, the highest one is observed in western Himalaya at 5749 m in Jammu and Kashmir. "A total of 4699 High Altitude lakes have been mapped. This includes 1996 small lakes (2.25 hecatres area). The total area of high altitude lakes is 126125 hectares," it says. In eastern Himalaya, lakes above 5000-m are observed in the state of Sikkim. A cluster of large lakes are nestled at the altitude of 5000 m in the north-eastern side of the Kanchanjangha range (Khangchengyao), next to the Tibetan plateau. One of the lakes in this cluster is Cholamu lake. It is a small lake formed by the melting of the Teesta Khaytse glacier. The reported depth of the lake is around 5.5 m. | The new highest lakes altitudinal distribution shows that lakes are detected up to 6000m altitude. Most of these are very small and mapped as point feature. Among the sizable lakes with at least 25 hectares area, the highest one is observed in western Himalaya at 5749 m in Jammu and Kashmir. "A total of 4699 High Altitude lakes have been mapped. This includes 1996 small lakes (2.25 hecatres area). The total area of high altitude lakes is 126125 hectares," it says. In eastern Himalaya, lakes above 5000-m are observed in the state of Sikkim. A cluster of large lakes are nestled at the altitude of 5000 m in the north-eastern side of the Kanchanjangha range (Khangchengyao), next to the Tibetan plateau. One of the lakes in this cluster is Cholamu lake. It is a small lake formed by the melting of the Teesta Khaytse glacier. The reported depth of the lake is around 5.5 m. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Environment and ecology|H | ||
+ | HIMALAYAS: GLACIAL LAKES]] | ||
+ | [[Category:India|H | ||
+ | HIMALAYAS: GLACIAL LAKES]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Natural Disasters]] |
Revision as of 06:07, 17 November 2023
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content. |
Status
As in 2013
June 6, 2013: The Times of India
NEW DELHI: As many as 4,699 lakes in the Indian Himalayan region at an altitude above 3000-m above mean sea level have been found in an ISRO study revealing the wonders of Himalayas.
According to the first Atlas on High Altitude Lakes of the hills, the largest lake is Pangong Tso.
It is a long narrow lake spread over the Indian and Chinese territory in the upper drainage basin of the Indus river, at the east end of the Karakoram Range, says the study.
The study also cracks the belief that Tso Lhamo lake or Chho Lhamo or Cholamu lake --the source of river Teesta--is India's highest lake, located at an altitude of 5,330 m in eastern Himalaya. The new highest lakes altitudinal distribution shows that lakes are detected up to 6000m altitude. Most of these are very small and mapped as point feature. Among the sizable lakes with at least 25 hectares area, the highest one is observed in western Himalaya at 5749 m in Jammu and Kashmir. "A total of 4699 High Altitude lakes have been mapped. This includes 1996 small lakes (2.25 hecatres area). The total area of high altitude lakes is 126125 hectares," it says. In eastern Himalaya, lakes above 5000-m are observed in the state of Sikkim. A cluster of large lakes are nestled at the altitude of 5000 m in the north-eastern side of the Kanchanjangha range (Khangchengyao), next to the Tibetan plateau. One of the lakes in this cluster is Cholamu lake. It is a small lake formed by the melting of the Teesta Khaytse glacier. The reported depth of the lake is around 5.5 m.