Feb 24, 2019: Baikal Dzen

xoxoxoBruce • Feb 24, 2019 12:21 am
We’ve looked at Lake Baikal in Siberia before, the oldest, and deepest lake in the world.
It holds the cleanest fresh water, something like 20% of the world’s unfrozen fresh water.
Area = 12.248 sq mi
Volume = 5,666 cubic miles
Max. depth = 1,642 m (5,387 ft)
The surface gets up to about 45 F(7 C) in the summer but freezes over with pretty thick ice.
Anyway, I found these pictures supposedly from Baikal.

Image

Rocks on the lake Baikal get heated from the sunlight every now and then and melt the ice beneath. After the sun is gone, the ice turns solid again thus creating a small stand for the rock above. It is called the Baikal Dzen.

Apparently I don’t understand what he’s saying, because it doesn’t make sense to me..
The sun heats the rock which in turn melts the ice under it. OK, so why is the rock so high?
He says that melted ice refreezes and pushes the rock up. Nope, no way, not going to happen.
I know ice is strong like Babushka, splits rocks, and will lift tall buildings with a single uumph.
But I also know ice, like me and Mother nature, takes the path of least resistance... always.
Therefore no reason to push the rock up when the ice can spread out.

Image

In your freezer ice and frost migrate to a colder surface if there’s moving air, that’s how the self defrost works.
So maybe as the sun shines on the ice the wind wears it away and the rock is actually shade protecting that pillar.
But that rock disrupts the wind causing it to swirl, cutting that hollow.
But I’m guessing.

Image

Canada says, ho hum, not impressed, have an egg.Image
I'll be at Tim Hortons if you find something worth showing me.

link
limey • Feb 24, 2019 9:46 am
"Вот такие камни можно встретить на льду Байкала в районе Сарминского ущелья. Днем они нагреваются от солнца, растапливают лед под собой, ветреность этого места помогает создать тонкую ножку под камнем."
You can find stones like this on the ice of Baikal in the Sarmin Ravine. By day they are heated by the sun and begin to heat up the ice beneath them, and the strong winds of this place help to make little pedestals under the stone.
(from here)
xoxoxoBruce • Feb 24, 2019 10:03 am
Ah, thank you. So I was half right with my guess, not shade but heat like the quote said. I was right about the wind carving out the hollow under it, but still doesn't explain why the rock is perched so far above the apparently flat ice all around the rock. I still can't buy the ice pillar pushing the rock up. :unsure:

:idea: In Soviet Siberia, Mother Nature obey Putin laws. :haha:
Degrees • Feb 24, 2019 12:03 pm
Well, when ice freezes, it expands. If the outside ring on ice were to freeze first, then when the inner core froze, I could see it being forced to push up instead of out.

I'm guessing those are pretty light rocks, though. If they were heavy at all, the expansion would fracture the outside ring, and no lift would happen at all.
Gravdigr • Feb 24, 2019 12:56 pm
xoxoxoBruce;1026543 wrote:
Area = 12.248 sq mi


Period/decimal should be a comma.

12,248 sq miles, twelve thousand, two hundred forty-eight square miles.

Just saying, man, put that hatchet down...:bolt:
BigV • Feb 24, 2019 1:02 pm
Degrees;1026572 wrote:
Well, when ice freezes, it expands. If the outside ring on ice were to freeze first, then when the inner core froze, I could see it being forced to push up instead of out.

I'm guessing those are pretty light rocks, though. If they were heavy at all, the expansion would fracture the outside ring, and no lift would happen at all.


This sounds reasonable to me.

I have seen ice cubes in the ice tray in the freezer with little spikes in the center of the the cube sticking up like the tops of Hershey kisses.

No rocks though.

Not just me, apparently.
Gravdigr • Feb 24, 2019 1:10 pm
I'm having a little trouble buying that any water anywhere in Russia is considered even close to clean.

I did find this at wiki's Lake Baikal page:

It is considered among the world's clearest lakes...


Under Environmental Concerns, though, the phrase "...the lake's ultra-pure water..." is used.

So, there is the possibility, however slight:blush:, that I may not know wtf I'm talking about.
Gravdigr • Feb 24, 2019 1:12 pm
BigV;1026583 wrote:
I have seen ice cubes in the ice tray in the freezer with little spikes in the center of the the cube sticking up like the tops of Hershey kisses.


I know that thing exact. Even documented it, somewhere here on Teh Cellar.

Usually with hot water in the cube makers.
xoxoxoBruce • Feb 24, 2019 1:23 pm
Yes, I've seen that in ice cube trays and other containers, but it's always constricted.
Sorry, about the comma/period mix up. It's funny, when I wrote that I thought to myself, I thought it was bigger than that.:facepalm:
Gravdigr • Feb 24, 2019 2:18 pm
xoxoxoBruce;1026590 wrote:
...I thought to myself, I thought it was bigger than that.


Me, too. I had to go see.
xoxoxoBruce • Feb 24, 2019 3:52 pm
I should have but I've learned in the past it's dangerous to wander off in the middle of a post.
Now why in hell did I come into this room???
limey • Feb 24, 2019 5:27 pm
xoxoxoBruce;1026590 wrote:
Yes, I've seen that in ice cube trays and other containers, but it's always constricted.

Sorry, about the comma/period mix up. It's funny, when I wrote that I thought to myself, I thought it was bigger than that.:facepalm:




And the little warmed spot of water in Baikal is constricted by the surrounding ice. No?


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
xoxoxoBruce • Feb 24, 2019 9:47 pm
No, you can see the is flat ice or a groove depression around the rock. as the melted water freezes there's nothing to constrict it. the rock is considerably higher.
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 6, 2019 8:58 am
Awhile back I posted somewhere in the Cellar an illustration that was a cross section of the Great Lakes. Now somebody has taken that illustration and
added Lake Baikal. The height to width ratio in the illustration is way off, but what we're interested in, the elevation of the surface and depth from there
to the bottom, are cool.
Gravdigr • Mar 6, 2019 12:52 pm
Urrbody settle the fuck down.

I found Lake Michigan.
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 1, 2019 12:40 am
Here's another set of fantastic pictures at Lake Baikal taken last winter. Some very different from previous pictures.


https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2019/05/lake-baikal-ice-formations-photos/590374/
Diaphone Jim • Jun 1, 2019 12:29 pm
I have thought for many years that Lake Baikal is the only place in Russia that I would like to visit.
The picture of the lonely orange van takes my breath away.
Another flop for IE; had to go Chrome.
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 1, 2019 2:58 pm
That Orange van made me think I'd want the windows open just in case. But then most people who die being dumped in cold water are dead in less that a minute.
Diaphone Jim • Jun 5, 2019 12:54 pm
This popped up from somewhere this morning:
https://earthsky.org/earth/what-is-the-worlds-deepest-lake?fbclid=IwAR23_LA10YgMrId8hmJ9-ot__TRu_9pxi7YeImfMlF9Ak7pSf8RWISVRafo

Good article with good links.
Not sure how a hydro plant by itself could Aralize Baikal.
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 7, 2019 12:39 am
Most of Lake Baikal’s 2,500-plus species of plants and animals are found nowhere else in the world. Scientists believe up to 40 percent of the lake’s species haven’t been described yet.
What a massive project it would be to catalog them all, think of the paper work and man hours saved for every species exterminated.
SPUCK • Jul 6, 2019 3:51 am
This is like the elephant in the room no one is mentioning...

Rock on a pedestal. Why would there be a multi kilogram rock a hundred feet from shore in a DEEP lake available to 'sit on a pedestal'?
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 6, 2019 8:11 am
Wind blew it across the ice?
Happy Monkey • Jul 7, 2019 3:27 pm
Or a rockslide at the edge, and it skittered across the ice.