The calcium carbonate (limestone) "tufa" rock formations at Mono Lake form underwater, when calcium-rich springs meet the alkaline water of the lake. The PH of the lake is 10, roughly the same as household glass cleaner, and it has a slippery, soapy feel to it. There's even a soapy foam which forms from wave action on the lake on windy days.
Diversion of the streams flowing into the lake to send water to Los Angeles have lowered the lake level over 40 feet, and doubled the salinity level to as high as 99 grams per liter, three times the salinity of the ocean. If you walk out into the lake you are very bouyant, and your feet come off the bottom before your shoulders get wet.
The lake was described as "lifeless, treeless, hideous desert… the loneliest place on earth" by writer Mark Twain, but the prolific alkali flies living in its water and along its shores support up to 2 million migrating or nesting birds. Up to 90 percent of California's seagull population nests here.
The increased salinity however may have contributed to increasing "meromixis" at the lake, a condition in which saltier and more dense water fails to mix with the water closer to the surface, and becomes "anoxic" (oxygen poor). This greatly affects the lake's ecology.
Another large lake in the Eastern Sierra, Owens Lake, had already been drained dry through water diversions to Los Angeles, but when dropping water levels at Mono Lake threatened to turn Paoha Island into a peninsula and decimate the nesting California Gull population through predation by coyotes, the +Mono Lake Committee was formed and the issue went to court. Eventually a victory was won, reducing diversions and setting a target lake level at an elevation of 6392 feet, 10 feet above the 1998 level. Some progress was made, but the last two dry Winters have caused the lake to drop back a couple of feet. The current lake level is 6382.1 feet, so this provides a temporary opportunity for photographers to catch the tufa formations standing tall out of the water, hopefully as high and dry as we'll see them before they slip back into 10 more feet of water.
Join me June 29 for a Milky Way photography workshop in Bodie State Historic Park with fellow award-winning astrophotographer +Steven Christenson: http://activesole.blogspot.com/p/bodie-night-photography-workshops-2013.html
Calcium carbonate tufa rock formations at Mono Lake, California
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Comments
like fingers
Wonder just Wonder
Amazing, This picture is the best…
Fabulous. 🙂
so cold,,
underwater!
nice.
Wonder of nature. Thanks for the explanations.
good
amazing 🙂
its kool
that's very good
Beautiful shot
+Jeff Sullivan , now your work and passion just touching the sky , always , all pictures are awsome , I feel glad for it
so beautiful
Nice…those rock formations kind of remind me of Bryce canyon in Utah. Except Bryce rock formations are more tightly packed together.
wow…
Its Amazng
Seeing the Tufa against the milky way makes for one sweet shot!
WOW……. <3
Was there last weekend, the whole area with mono lake, mammoth mountain, bodie the ghost town , hot creek geological site, devils postpile monument and rainbow falls has amazing photographic opportunities…
Stunning!
on dirait des coraux!la nature est toujours aussi belle…pour le moment.
toujours aussi splendides les photos!
Very nice, in a way it looks like hands raising up.
o benchod thats amazing…+Ishit Vasavada , +Pravin Vasava
SON COMO MUCHAS PAREJAS MIRANDO LAS ESTRELLAS,,,,SUBLIME
Amazing!!
woww..v.nice !!
Superbe beautiful
Incredibly beautiful!!
damn wonderful
Woow
nature's beauty
Post a photo taken in day light, Please.
That is very interesting. Thanks. The formations remind me a bit of Bryce, but I know they are different. The picture looks "other wordly". Great color.
NUESTRO UNIVERSO ES INIGUALABLE Y MAGNIFICO
Great share thanks +Jeff Sullivan
LA is responsible for the lake's salinity. So it would be fitting to add an ecology tax for every sip they make of their tap water.
Wow
Woww!
That is beautiful
It's really great! Its so nice to know about it. Thanks.
Wow amazing
I think so too.
Totally thought the same thing, +karim musa
beautifuel ^^
Actually +Donna McClure there has been a story playing out in recent years where scientists thought that they had discovered life at the lake with "other worldly" properties, with an affinity for arsenic, unlike all other life on our planet. It turns out that the bacteria they found actually is simply very good at avoiding arsenic:
Controversial "Arsenic Life" Bacterium Prefers Phosphorus After All
https://plus.google.com/107459220492917008623/posts/iE3JYkeuzPU
_"The exceedingly high preference for phosphorus found in the key proteins in that species represent 'just the last nail in the coffin' of the hypothesis that GFAJ-1 uses arsenic in its DNA, says Tawfik."_
amazing!
What a beauty!
tone
Beautiful pictures.
wow
amazing
Wow just amazing
What a beautiful image. I need to spend more time there.
Wow soo amazing
Beautiful!
Nice photo.
wow!
=)
AWESOME!!!
Very informative
lah ra nggiadek lek..
It so beutiful
Fascinating
f
Thanks for the photo and the geology lesson. Great stuff.
Bellissima…
They look like giant hands reaching out of the red ground. Really cool looking.
ชอบมาก
Beutiful
Beautiful harmony between the Magnificence of the Sky and the Natural Beauty of the ocher "tufas"! An Artwork! Perfect osmosis between Nature and Photographer!