Tuesday, June 23, 2020

LONAR LAKE: HC SEEKS REPORT ON COLOUR CHANGE




LONAR LAKE: HC SEEKS REPORT ON COLOUR CHANGE

The Nagpur Bench of Bombay High Court has sought reports on the environmental impact assessment of Lonar Lake from Nationals Environment Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) and the Geological Survey of India

Raising concerns over the lake water which has turned pink in colour

As per Dr. Wright’s findings, there is a glass formation over the surface of the bed rock of the Lonar crater, which is a basalt rock

This is a new feature not found anywhere else on the Earth and only on the beds of craters existing on moon

Lonar Lake, also known as Lonar crater: A notified National Geo-heritage Monument, saline, soda lake, located at Lonar in Buldhana district, Maharashtra, India

Lonar Lake lies within the only known extraterrestrial impact crater found within the great Deccan Traps, a huge basaltic formation in India

Lonar Lake was created by an asteroid collision with earth impact during the Pleistocene Epoch

It is one of the four known, hyper-velocity, impact craters in basaltic rock anywhere on Earth. The other three basaltic impact structures are in southern Brazil

Chemical characteristics of the lake shows two distinct regions that do not mix – an outer neutral (pH 7) and an inner alkaline (pH 11) each with its own flora and fauna

Water in the lake is both saline and alkaline

Water of the lake contains various salts and sodas 

A series of small hills surround the basin, which has an oval shape, almost round, with a circumference at top of about 8 km (five miles)

Two small streams, named Purna and Penganga, drain into the lake, and a well of fresh water is located on the southern side, close to the water's edge 

Geological features of the Lonar crater have been divided into five distinguishable zones, exhibiting distinct geomorphic characteristics. The five zones are: The outermost ejecta blanket, the crater rim, the slopes of the crater, the crater basin, excluding lake, and the crater lake

Gaylussite is the mineral has been recently reported from drill core in Lonar lake. Gaylussite is a carbonate mineral, a hydrated sodium calcium carbonate

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