Formation Commonly, alpine lakes are formed from current or previous glacial activity (called
glacial lakes) but could also be formed from other geological processes such as damming of water due to volcanic lava flows or debris, volcanic crater collapse, or
landslides. Glacial lakes form when a glacier scours and depresses the
bedrock as it moves downhill, and when the glacier retreats, the depressions are filled with glacier meltwater and run-off. These lakes are usually quite deep for this reason and some lakes that are several hundred meters deep may be caused by a process called
overdeepening. In mountain valleys where glacier movement has formed circular depressions,
cirque lakes (or tarns) may form when the water becomes dammed. When damming occurs due to debris from the glacier movement, these lakes are called
moraine lakes. These dams of debris can be very resilient or may burst, causing extreme flooding which poses significant hazards to communities in the alpine, especially in the
Himalayas. Alpine lakes adjacent to glaciers may also result in a
positive feedback due to decreased albedo of water relative to ice, creating larger lakes and causing more glacial melt. Conversely,
Lake Louise located in the Rocky Mountains was formed from glacial debris damming meltwater (i.e., a moraine lake) from the Victoria Glacier.
Stratification in the Swiss Alps is a naturally
meromictic alpine lake due to saline input from groundwater. The annual cycle of
stratification and mixing in lakes plays a significant role in determining vertical distribution of heat, dissolved chemicals, and biological communities. Seasonal ice cover reinforces the dimictic stratification cycle of alpine lakes by insulating the lake from wind and warm air in the spring when stratification is generally weaker. Some shallow alpine lakes can become fully mixed multiple times per year through episodic wind or cold inflow events and are therefore considered cold
polymictic. A number of
meromictic alpine lakes (in which a deep layer of the lake never mixes with surface water) exist.
Lake Cadagno, located in the Swiss Alps, is meromictic due to natural springs which constantly feed the bottom of the lake with dense, saline water. Other alpine lakes, such as
Traunsee in Austria, have become meromictic due to
salinization from anthropogenic activities such as mining. Recent studies suggest that climate change may impact the annual cycles of stratification in alpine lakes. High altitude regions are experiencing changing seasonal weather patterns and faster warming than the global average. The duration of ice cover on alpine lakes is sensitive to these factors, and shorter ice cover duration has the potential to shift the mixing regime of lakes from dimictic to
monomictic (one stratified and one fully mixed period each year). In addition, the relatively small size and high altitude of alpine lakes may make them especially susceptible to changes in climate.
Hydrology The
hydrology of an alpine lake's watershed plays a large role in determining chemical characteristics and nutrient availability. Sources of water inflow into alpine lakes include precipitation, melting snow and glaciers, and groundwater. Alpine lakes are often situated in mountainous regions near or above the treeline which leads to steep watersheds with underdeveloped soil and sparse vegetation. Therefore, smaller scale wind patterns generated by local topography, such as
diurnal mountain breeze and
katabatic wind, can be important in forcing circulation in alpine lakes. Wind patterns which vary spatially over the extent of the lake may create regions of
upwelling and
downwelling. River inflow can induce circulation in alpine lakes through momentum carried directly into the lake by rivers or streams and through density currents. If the inflowing water is denser than the water at the surface of the lake (due to differences in temperature or sediment concentration),
buoyancy drives the heavier inflowing water down the slope of the lake bed or into the lake interior. Such density-driven flows have been recorded in alpine lakes with velocities reaching nearly 1 m/s. Heating and cooling of alpine lakes can cause surface waters to become more dense than the water in the interior of the lake. This results in a gravitationally unstable water column, and the dense water is pulled downward from the surface causing convection. This vertical circulation is an efficient means for mixing in lakes Basin-scale waves, such as
internal waves and
seiches, can also drive circulation in alpine lakes. Internal seiches in an alpine lake have been observed with attendant velocities on the order of a few centimeters per second. == Ecology ==