Lake Elmenteita

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Lake Elmenteita is a soda lake, in the Great Rift Valley, about 120 km northwest of Nairobi, Kenya.[2]

Lake Elementaita
Location of Lake Elmenteita in Kenya.
Location of Lake Elmenteita in Kenya.
Lake Elementaita
Location of Lake Elmenteita in Kenya.
Location of Lake Elmenteita in Kenya.
Lake Elementaita
Coordinates0°27′S 36°15′E / 0.450°S 36.250°E / -0.450; 36.250
Basin countriesKenya
Surface area18 km2 (6.9 sq mi)
Surface elevation1,670 m (5,480 ft) ASL
Designated5 September 2005
Reference no.1498[1]

Geography

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Lake Elmenteita from the Nairobi-Nakuru highway

Elmenteita is derived from the Maasai word muteita, meaning "dust place", a reference to the dryness and dustiness of the area, especially between January and March. The town of Gilgil is near the lake. In the south-to-north sequence of Rift Valley lakes, Elmenteita is between Lake Naivasha and Lake Nakuru. Along the nearby escarpment, the major Nairobi-Nakuru highway (A104 Road) gives motorists a spectacular vista of the lake. Today the lake is a protected area due to its bird life and has been named as a UNESCO heritage site together with Lake Nakuru and Lake Bogoria.

At the southern end of the lake are the "Kekopey" hot springs, in which an introduced fish, the Lake Magadi tilapia, breed. The reed beds nearby are fishing grounds for night herons and pelicans.

It is a soda lake (high alkalinity, high biodiversity).[3]

 
Lake Elmenteita, as seen from space.

History

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The Lake Elmenteita area saw its first white settlement when Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere (1879−-1931) established the Soysambu ranch on 190-square-kilometre (48,000-acre) of land on the western side of the lake. He gifted land on the other side of the lake to his brother-in-law, Galbraith Lowry Egerton Cole (1881−1929), part of whose Kekopey ranch, where he is buried, is preserved today as the Lake Elementaita Lodge.

The Soysambu ranch, which is still owned by the Delamere family, covers two-thirds of the shoreline and is home to over 12,000 wild animals. The lake itself has been a Ramsar site since 2005.[4]

Ecology

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Over 400 bird species have been recorded in the Lake Nakuru/Lake Elmenteita basin. Elmenteita attracts visiting flamingoes, both the greater and lesser varieties, which feed on the lake's crustacean and insect larvae and on its suspended blue-green algae, respectively. Lake Magadi tilapia were introduced to the lake from Lake Magadi in 1962 and since that time the flamingo population has dwindled considerably. The tilapia attract many fish-eating birds that also feed upon the flamingo eggs and chicks. Over a million birds that formerly bred at Elmenteita are now said to have sought refuge at Lake Natron in Tanzania.

The lake's shores are grazed by zebra, gazelle, eland and families of warthog.

The lake is normally very shallow (less than 1 m deep) and bordered by trona-encrusted mudflats during the dry seasons. During the late Pleistocene and early Holocene, Lake Elmenteita was at times united with an expanded Lake Nakuru, forming a much larger dilute lake. Remnants of the former joined lake are preserved as sediments at various locations around the lake basins, including former shorelines.

Recently the lake level and number of flamingoes has receded as increased human activity has dried up catchment areas.[5]

Associated sites

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Nearby is the Kariandusi Museum, at an important prehistoric site where stone handaxes and cleavers were discovered in 1928 by Louis Leakey.

Elmenteita Badlands is a lava flow to the south of the lake, covered in bush and including some spectacularly scenic peaks.

References

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  1. ^ "Lake Elmenteita". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ Scoon, Roger N. (2018), "Lakes of the Gregory Rift Valley: Baringo, Bogoria, Nakuru, Elmenteita, Magadi, Manyara and Eyasi", Geology of National Parks of Central/Southern Kenya and Northern Tanzania, Springer International Publishing, pp. 167–180, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-73785-0_15, ISBN 978-3-319-73784-3
  3. ^ Duckworth, Alexander W.; Grant, William D.; Jones, Bryan E.; Van Steenbergen, Robert (1996). "Phylogenetic diversity of soda lake alkaliphiles". FEMS Microbiology Ecology. 19 (3): 181–191. Bibcode:1996FEMME..19..181D. doi:10.1111/j.1574-6941.1996.tb00211.x.
  4. ^ Peck, Dwight (17 September 2005). "Lake Elmenteita added to the Ramsar List". The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. Archived from the original on November 14, 2008. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
  5. ^ Daily Nation, December 8, 2009: A lake lies on its deathbed Archived 2012-09-15 at the Wayback Machine