[转载]独处荒寒的贝加尔湖(英文)
2014-05-28 15:14阅读:
planning for my next journey.
独处荒寒的贝加尔湖
Timeless Solitude of Lake
Baikal
Lake Baikal, the
'Pearl of Sibetia', is a crystal-clear body of the bluest water.
When the famous Russian philosopher Bierkayev said that the
nation has a soule of black wine, he probably refered to the
great lake. In fact, it's drinkably pure, surrounded
by rocky, tree-covered cliffs and so vast that one can sail for
hours without the mountain backdrops becoming appreciably
closer.
Shaped like a
banana, Lake Baikal —636km from north to south, but only
60km wide —was formed by rifting tectonic plates. Though nearly 8km
of the rift is fillede with sediment, it is gradually getting
deeper as the plates seperate. It will eventually become the
earth's fifth ocean, splitting the Asian contiment. In the
meanwhile it's the world's deepest lake: 1637m near the
western shore. It is so of deeply beauty that a metaphor
haunts me often —Lake Baikal is just like a great Goet-typed
church upside down into the ground. As such, it contains
nearly one-fifth of the world's fresh, unfrozen water — more
than North America's five Great lakes combined.
Lake Baikal also has its own special history of
humanities.For instance, once upon a time in 19th century,
some famouse Decembrists lived and worked here, and
much earlier than that, a Chinese official named Suwu, who
had been sent on commission by the Emperor of Han Danasty, was kept
here as a herdsman of sheep. At that time, Lake Baikal was
called Beihai Sea in our Chinese classics. Areas around the lake
and of whole Siberia have been famouse for exiles.
Though the Siberian exile system wa abolished at the turn of the
20th century, but Stalin brought it back with a vengeance.
It was during his rule that Siberia became synonymous with death.
For all the reasons, Lake Baikal has the quality to
be selected a cultural as well bas natural heritage of the
world.
And the
wildlife is unique.Thanks to warm water entering from vents
in the bottom of the lake, and the filtering action of countless
millions of minute crustaceans called epishura, the water is
exceptionally bclear and pure. Over 1000 species of plants and
animals live in the lake, nearly all endemic, including 200 of
shrimp and 80 of flatworm. One of the latter is the world's largest
and eats fish. Uniquely for a deep lake, life exists right down to
the bottom.
The many kinds of fish include the
endemic omul, Baikal's mian commercial fish. A remarkable bspecies,
the omul is reputed to emit a shrill cry when caught. It spawns in
the Selenga River, but its main food source is the endemic Baikal
alga,nmelosira. The golomyanka, a pink, translucent oilfish with
large pectorial fines, is the lake's most common fish as
well as endemic, by day it lives in the deep, dark depths,
rising at night to near the surface. Golomyanka is the preferred
food of the Baikal seal, the world's only freshwater seal,
with no relatives nearer than the ringed seal of the Arctic
and at the top of the food chain.
There is plenty of other wildlife around the
lake. The huge delta, nearly 40km wide, formed by the sediment
brought down to the lake by the Selenga River, is a great
attraction to wild fowl and wading birds. In summer such beautiful
and rare species as the Asiatic Dowitcher and White-wingled black
tern nest there, while in autumn vast numbere of waterfowl from the
north use the mudflats and marshes to rest and feed on their
migration south — a sort of international bird airport —
while many overwinter there, too.