Today,
Lake Titicaca in South America is considered a fresh water lake.
However, in earlier times, it was an inland salt water lake high in the Andes,
after being pushed up to over 12,000 feet from its once sea-level existence. Countless
articles have been written about its diminishing salt water content and existence
of salt water fish and flora within the lake itself.
It should be noted that lakes
are measured, in part, by their “Residence Time,”
that is, the time it takes for the water to be flushed from the lake and
replaced by new water. Also called “Lake Retention Time,” it is the measurement
of the age of the water within the lake. At its simplest, this figure is the
result of dividing the lake volume by the flow in or out of the lake. It
roughly expresses the amount of time taken for a substance introduced into a
lake to flow out of it again.
In the
case of Lake Titicaca, the Residence Time is 1343
years. By comparison, Lake Tahoe in Nevada/California, is 650 years, the
Caspian Sea is 250 years, Lake Superior is 191 years, Lake Michigan is 99 years,
Lake Huron is 22 years, Bear Lake in Utah is 19.6 years, Lake Powell in Utah is
7.2 years, Lake Ontario is 6 years, Lake Erie is 2.6 years, and Devil’s Lake in
Oregon is about 4.5 weeks. In all, of the top 195 lakes in the world, only
three have longer resident time than Lake Titicaca (Lake Qaban in Russia, of several thousand
years; Lake Poyang in China of 5000 years; and Lake Vostok in Antartica of
13300 years).
The
point is, that once Lake Titicaca was raised up
from sea level, no doubt around 2000 years ago (about the time the Sea East
disappeared from mention in the Land of Promise), all of the original sea water
content was drained from the lake after 1343 years. It was replaced by fresh
water from the five river systems of the high Andes, and over two dozen small
rivers and streams. The lake is now midway into the second retention period (or flushing) and still retains a little of the original salt residue from the first retention period.
Lake Titicaca drains to the south along the Altiplano tableland, spreading out
over the Desaguadero Basin and toward Lake Poopó, and from there into the
largest Salt Flat in the world—over twenty-five times larger than Bonneville
Salt Flats in Utah
Now, if this truly happened, that Lake Titicaca
once contained salt water, its drainage of salt would be quite noticeable
in the downstream of the current lake’s outflow. Which it is along the
Altiplano south of Titicaca where salt has accumulated along the slightly
sloping tableland which drops 400 feet from Titicaca to Poopó.
The Salar de Tunupa: Top LtoR: Crusted over salt flats stretch for
miles; in places an ankle-deep water appears where the water has not fully
evaporated leaving just the salt; Bottom LtoR: Mining firms gather the salt and
stack it for shipment; on both sides of the seepage area, now mostly salt, lies
the desert hills of the Altiplano
Lake Poopó is a large saline lake located in a
shallow depression in the Altiplano Mountains in Bolivia at an altitude of just
over 12,000 feet. The lake is about 56 miles long and about 20 miles wide,
covering approximately 621 miles. The lake receives most of its water from the
Desaguadero River, which drains Lake Titicaca. Since Lake Poopó is little more
than a depression in the tableland and lacks any major outlet with a mean depth
of only eight to ten feet, the surface area varies greatly. Throughout this
Altiplano south of Lake Titicaca and around Lake Poopó lies the Salar de Uyuni, or
Salar de Tunupa, the worlds’s largest salt flat at about 4,000 square miles,
containing about 10 billion tons of salt. This Salar was formed as a result of
transformations between these high-altitude lakes, beginning with Titicaca and
including several drainage sumps formed by the lakes outflow.
It is covered by a few meters of salt crust, which
has an extraordinary flatness with the average altitude variations within one meter
over the entire area of the Salar. The crust serves as a source of salt and
covers a pool of brine, which is exceptionally rich in lithium, containing 50
to 70% of the world's lithium reserves.
For approximately two thousand years, Lake Titicaca
has been draining, or exchanging the age of the water, leaving the lake mostly
fresh water today, with billions of tons of salt lying along the flat tableland
of Uyuni Salt Flat to the south and within the brine-filled Lake Poopó which,
with no basic outlet, and only an 8 to 10 foot deep depression, overflows into
the Coipasa Salt Flat to its southwest.
Obviously, when one starts to look for ideas, such
as the Andes rising at the time of Christ’s crucifixion, and Lake Titicaca once
part of the Sea East (Atlantic ocean), then there must be some proof of such an
act other than one’s belief in its happening. In the case of Titicaca, the exchange of water and
the resultant salt forming to the south is mute evidence of such an event.
Even to the extent that Titicaca is still slightly salty, skeletons of
salt-water, ocean-dwelling fish have been found within it, and its shoreline is
littered with millions of fossilized seashells. The marine fishes and seahorses
in the lake are all oceanic types found only in salt water. In addition, the
banks of the fresh water Desaguadero River is flanked by a halophytic prairie
(salt tolerant), which is composed of quaternary silts of saline soils, and the
vegetation is adapted to high concentrations of salts, suggesting this fresh
water river (the outflow of Lake Titicaca) was once a river with high salt
content. And finally, archaeologists searching around the area have located the
remains of what they consider to be stone wharfs used for shipping when
Tihuanaco was a viable seaport.
I realize this is an old post, but I recently tried to look up details on freshwater seahorses and was unable to find any documentation of such. While my research has not been exhaustive, the official descriptions of the lake do not include it and other sites claim that this was either a hoax or the result of a fisherman giving a dried seahorse to a tourist or researcher, possibly as medicine, and they thought it was taken from the lake. I do not recall if this was included in either of your first two books, or just on this website. I'll check the books when I can.
ReplyDeleteWhile i have not done research specifically looking for sea-horses i have watched plenty of nature documentaries that confirms that Lake Titicaca is likely the only fresh water lake with sea-horses. I understand jyst saying i have seen it on tv is not a credible witness but it leads me to believe that a legitamite search on the subject will birth supportive results of this claim. Just check the sources.
ReplyDeleteTyson: See our article in this blog dated Saturday, June 9 2012 entitled "Lake Titicaca's Rise to its Present Height," in which we discuss its original salt water origins.
ReplyDelete