(Redirected from Endorheic)
An 'endorheic basin' (from
Greek ''endo'' 'inside' + ''rhein'' 'to flow'; also ''terminal'' or ''closed basin'') is a closed
watershed that retains water and allows no outflow to other bodies of water such as rivers or oceans. Normally the water accruing in drainage basins flows out through surface
rivers or by underground diffusion through
permeable rock to the oceans. However, in an endorheic basin rain (or other
precipitation) that falls within it does not flow out but may only leave the drainage system by
evaporation and
seepage. Endorheic basins are also called internal drainage systems. Some of the largest lakes in the world are endorheic. Good examples are the
Aral Sea and the
Caspian Sea, the world's largest
saline body of water.
[1]
Occurrence
Endorheic basins can occur in any climate but are most commonly found in hot
desert locations. In areas where rainfall is higher,
riparian erosion will generally carve drainage channels (particularly in times of flood), breaking the enclosed endorheic
hydrological system's geographical barrier and opening it to the surrounding terrain. The
Black Sea was such a lake, having once been an independent hydrological system in its own right before the
Mediterranean Sea broke through the terrain separating the two.
[2]
Endorheic basins tend to be far inland with their watershed confined by mountains or other geological features that severs their access to oceans. Since the inflowing water can evacuate only through seepage or evaporation, dried minerals or other products collect in the basin, eventually making the water saline and also making the basin vulnerable to pollution.
Continents vary in their concentration of endorheic basins due to conditions of geography and climate. Australia has the highest percentage of area not draining to the ocean at 64 percent while North America has the least at 10 percent.
[3] Approximately 18 percent of the earth's land drains to endorheic lakes or seas, the largest of these land areas being the interior of Asia.
In hot deserts water inflow is low and loss to solar evaporation high, drastically reducing the formation of complete
drainage systems. Closed water flow areas often lead to the concentration of salts and other minerals in the basin. Minerals leached from the surrounding rocks are deposited in the basin, and left behind when the water evaporates. Thus endorheic basins often contain extensive
salt pans (also called salt flats,
salt lakes,
alkali flats or
playas). These areas tend to be large, flat hardened surfaces and are sometimes used for
aviation runways or
land speed record attempts.
Both permanent and seasonal endorheic lakes can form in endorheic basins. Some endorheic basins are essentially stable, climate change having reduced precipitation to the degree that a lake no longer forms. Even the endorheic lakes that exist permanently, most change size and shape dramatically over time, often becoming dramatically smaller or breaking into several smaller parts during the dry season. As humans have expanded into previously uninhabitable desert areas, the river systems that feed many endorheic lakes have been altered by the construction of dams and aqueducts. As a result many endorheic lakes in developed or developing countries have contracted dramatically, resulting in increased salinity, higher concentrations of pollutants, and the subsequent disruption of the lake's ecosystem.
Notable endorheic basins and lakes

Major endorheic basins of the world. Basins are shown in dark gray; major endorheic lakes are shown in black.
One of the few endorheic lakes in a cold desert location,
Antarctica's
Lake Vida remains liquid because its salinity is seven times that of seawater.
Asia
Much of western and
Central Asia is a single, giant inland basin. It contains a number of lakes, including:
★ The
Caspian Sea, the largest lake on Earth. In fact, a large part of Eastern Europe drained by the
Volga River also belongs to its basin.
★ The
Aral Sea, whose tributary rivers have been diverted, leading to a dramatic shrinkage of the lake. The resulting ecological disaster has brought the plight faced by internal drainage basins to public attention.
★
Lake Balkhash (
Kazakhstan)
★
Lop Nur, in the southeastern portion of
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in northwestern
China
★
Issyk-Kul,
Son-Kul and
Chatyr-Kul lakes in
Kyrgyzstan
★
Sistan Basin covering areas of
Iran and
Afghanistan
★
Tarim Basin in
Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
★
Sambhar Lake in
Rajasthan, north-western
India
The
Dead Sea, the lowest surface point on Earth and one of its saltiest bodies of water, lies between
Israel and
Jordan.
Australia
Australia, being very dry and having exceedingly low runoff ratios due to its ancient soils, has a great prominence of variable, endorheic drainages. The most important are:
★
Lake Eyre Basin, which drains into the highly variable
Lake Eyre and includes
Lake Frome.
★
Lake Torrens, to the west of the
Flinders Ranges in
South Australia.
★
Lake Corangamite, a highly saline
crater lake in western
Victoria.
★
Lake George, formerly connected to the
Murray-Darling Basin

A false-colour satellite photo of
Australia's
Lake EyreImage credit: ''NASA's Earth Observatory''
Africa
★
Lake Turkana in
Kenya
★ The
Okavango Delta, an endorheic inland delta in the
Kalahari Desert of
Botswana
★
Lake Ngami in Botswana
★
Lake Chad (between
Chad and
Cameroon), fed by the
Chari and
Logon rivers
★
Etosha pan in
Namibia's
Etosha National Park
★
Qattara Depression in
Egypt
★
Chott Melrhir in
Algeria
★
Afar Depression in
Eritrea,
Ethiopia and
Djibouti
North America
★ The
Valley of Mexico. In
Pre-Columbian times, the Valley was substantially covered with five lakes, including
Lake Texcoco,
Lake Xochimilco, and
Lake Chalco.
★
Crater Lake in
Oregon
★
Devil's Lake (North Dakota)
★
Devil's Lake (Wisconsin)
★
California's
Salton Sea, a lake accidentally created in
1905 when irrigation canals ruptured, filling a desert endorheic basin and recreating an ancient saline sea.
★ The
Great Divide Basin in
Wyoming, a small endorheic basin which straddles the
Continental Divide.
★ The
United States'
Great Basin, which covers much of
Nevada and
Utah, includes:
★
★ The
Black Rock Desert in
Nevada, location of the
Thrust2 and
ThrustSSC landspeed record runs, and the annual home to the
Burning Man festival
★
★
Groom Dry Lake in Nevada, location of the secret
Area 51 base
★
★ Utah's
Great Salt Lake, the largest terminal lake in the
Western Hemisphere.
★
★ Utah's
Sevier Lake
★
★
Pyramid Lake in Nevada
★
★
Mono Lake in
California
★
New Mexico has a number of desert endorheic basins including:
★
★ The
Tularosa Basin, a
rift valley;
★
★
Zuni Salt Lake, a
maar;
★
Bolsón de Mapimí, in northern Mexico;
★
Guzmán Basin, in northern Mexico southwestern New Mexico;
Europe
★
Neusiedlersee in
Austria
★
Lake Trasimeno in
Italy
Minor additional endorheic lakes exist throughout the mediterranean countries
Spain (e.g.
Laguna de Gallocanta),
Italy and
Greece.
South America
★
Altiplano basin, one of the largest and second highest in the world.
★
Lake Valencia (Spanish: Lago de Valencia) the second largest lake in Venezuela.
Ancient
Some of the Earth's ancient endorheic systems include:
★ The
Black Sea, until its merger with the Mediterranean
★ The
Mediterranean Sea itself and all its tributary basins, during its Messinian dissecation (5 m.y. BP aprox.) as it became disconnected from the Atlantic Ocean.
★
Lake Lahontan in the western US
★
Ebro and
Duero basins, draining most of northern
Spain during the
Neogene and perhaps
Pliocene.
★
Lake Bonneville (Utah)
References
1. Endorheic Lakes: Waterbodies That Don't Flow to the Sea
2. Major drainage basins of the world
3. Saline Lake Ecosystems of the World
External links
★
Primer on endorheic lakes
★
The Silk Roads and Eurasian Geography