NationStates Jolt Archive


The amazing universe! Part 1

Eutrusca
09-05-2005, 00:07
NOTE: I've been fascinated by the interrelationships between various species with each other and with their natural environment. Lake Natron is a great example of this interrelatedness.


http://img249.echo.cx/img249/7898/lakenatron8bz.jpg (http://www.imageshack.us)
Lake Natron, Tanzania (http://www.rednova.com/images/images-of-the-day/img/7577/lake_natron_tanzania/index.html)

Lake Natron, in Africa’s Great Rift Valley, practically sends a warning with its color. This bright red lake is the world’s most caustic body of water, but not to everything. An endemic species of fish, the alkaline tilapia, lives along the edges of the hotspring inlets, and the lake actually derives its color from salt-loving microorganisms that thrive in its alkaline waters. Spirulina, a blue-green algae with red pigments, passes its pigments along to the Lesser Flamingoes that feed on the algae and raise their young here.

The Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) flying on the Terra satellite captured this image on March 8, 2003. This image simulates natural color, showing where the salt-loving microorganisms have colored the lake’s salt crust red or pink. The salt crust changes over time, giving the lake a slightly different appearance each time it is photographed by astronauts or imaged by satellites.

Volcanic ash from the Great Rift Valley has collected in local lake basins, creating a network of soda lakes hostile to most organisms. This forbidding environment enables Lake Natron to serve millions of flamingoes as the ideal nursery; would-be predators avoid the saline lake and leave young birds in peace. Flamingoes must exercise caution, however, because the lake can turn deadly even to them. Depending on rainfall, its alkalinity can approach that of straight ammonia, and when the lake is flooded with water that has heated underground, its temperature can reach a scalding 60 degrees Celsius (140 degrees Fahrenheit).

The uniqueness of Lake Natron prompted Tanzania to add the lake to the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance on July 4, 2001.
31
09-05-2005, 00:11
In all honesty that is very interesting. It seems endless, this parade of things that are amazing in our world. I still prefer the word swamp, it is just better than wetlands.
The Tribes Of Longton
09-05-2005, 00:16
...its alkalinity can approach that of straight ammonia...
Straight ammonia is a gas...and even as a base, it is a weak base...

But yeah, I've watched loads of Natural History things on lake Natron. Have you ever seen what happens to the flamingoes? They get these balls of salt around their ankles sometimes that stops them from walking fast, so it builds and builds and builds until it puts them in a leg lock and they die. Pretty nasty place.
Dyslexic lawn gnomes
09-05-2005, 00:22
I too agree with this individual’s point. The word swamp offers a since of mystery. And word Wet land simply reminds me of rice fields in Asia. I know that is odd but their for I do! Also the hole idea that you can contain So much out of one slight topic. I really feel informed concerning this Tanzanian lake. I never knew the world was such an weird.
:p Thank you for the PBS entertainment.
Shadowstorm Imperium
09-05-2005, 00:22
Straight ammonia is a gas...and even as a base, it is a weak base...

Yeah, but this is from an article which says "forbidding" when it means "foreboding", so...
Dyslexic lawn gnomes
09-05-2005, 00:31
OMG you people are like text books :rolleyes:
Patra Caesar
09-05-2005, 02:44
David Attenborough rocks man! :D
Eutrusca
09-05-2005, 03:47
David Attenborough rocks man! :D
Heh! Another random comment of yours, that? :)
Patra Caesar
09-05-2005, 03:56
Heh! Another random comment of yours, that? :)

Not totally random, after all he does make natural history videos (and he does rock). ;) In fact I think in "Life of Birds" he gets his flamingo footage there (plus birds of prey that prey on flamingos). I also seem to recall from "Life of Mammals" that a troop of Baboons have started hunting flamingos on the edge of the lakes. :) Facinating stuff David! :D The reason why he is so much better than other narrators is that he actually provides interesting information that is well researched and organized that most people don't know, unlike almost everyone else who drones on about stuff we already knew.
Evil Arch Conservative
09-05-2005, 04:22
Yeah, but this is from an article which says "forbidding" when it means "foreboding", so...

Foreboding implies that the thing in question is menacing. Forbidding implies that it is merely unpleasant. A cold shower would be (to me, anyway) forbidding. A head on a stake in my neighbor's front yard would be foreboding. I don't see anything wrong with the way he used the word.

Oh, and that's an interesting article. I'd like to see that lake some time.
Vaitupu
09-05-2005, 06:45
A head on a stake in my neighbor's front yard would be foreboding.

very Lord of the Flies.

and just to give people an idea of what ammonia is like, I googled it (that and because I had no clue. it has been way too long since I took a chem class)
Ammonia is very well suited as a refrigerant, since it liquefies readily under pressure,
pH (10% solution in water) (pKa):12

pH is measured 0-14, >7 is a base, <7 is an acid...so it is a relatively strong base
Evil Arch Conservative
09-05-2005, 06:53
very Lord of the Flies.

and just to give people an idea of what ammonia is like, I googled it (that and because I had no clue. it has been way too long since I took a chem class)
Ammonia is very well suited as a refrigerant, since it liquefies readily under pressure,
pH (10% solution in water) (pKa):12

pH is measured 0-14, >7 is a base, <7 is an acid...so it is a relatively strong base

So, does that make ammonia 'really caustic' or just 'kind of caustic'?
NERVUN
09-05-2005, 06:55
Heh, reminds me of Mono Lake and some of the alkaline flats of home. It's amazing where life will live.
Bitchkitten
09-05-2005, 07:49
I saw a bit on the place on Discover. They did a thing on the flamingos. Cool spot. I can't remember the name right now, but there's a wildlife refuge in an extinct volcano someplace in Africa. The lions there tend to be larger and darker there because they're so well fed. In my next life I'd like to go there.