The basin was formed as a result of a trough that filled with river sediments. In the
Carboniferous the whole area was part of the ancient
Dzhungarian Sea, a vestige of the
Palaeoasian Ocean. This ancient sea disappeared in the
Permian. By the
Eocene the
Khankhai Sea took shape and filled with saltwater, covering roughly the area of the present-day basin with an eastern extension that included
Lake Zaysan and reached further eastwards into the
Gobi Lakes. In the
Oligocene this sea dried up, leaving residual lakes, including Balkhash, Alakol, Zaisan and Gobi. In the
Miocene the Balkhash depression filled with sediments and lake Balkhash became shallow and desalinated. At the same time, Alakol and Zaisan were merged into a single lake. In the
Pliocene and
Pleistocene, tectonic processes intensified, causing the entire depression to deepen. The rising
Tarbagatai Range split the fresh Zaysan and the brackish Alakol into independent lakes, causing them to significantly decrease in size. Balkhash, however, became larger and divided into a fresh western and a salty eastern part that characterize its present configuration. At the same time, the formation of the Ili, Karatal and other river valleys began. Also during the Pleistocene, glaciations and intensive ice melting resulted in the Balkash deepening and increasing in size, reconnecting with the Alakol as a single lake. By the Holocene, however, the area became shallow and the single body of water split up into modern lakes Balkhash, Alakol and Sasykkol. ==Geography==