Lake Van is primarily a
tectonic lake, formed more than 600,000 years ago by the gradual subsidence of a large block of the
Earth's crust due to movement on several major faults that run through this portion of Eastern Anatolia. The lake's southern margin demarcates: a metamorphic rock zone of the Bitlis Massif and volcanic strata of the
Neogene and
Quaternary periods. The deep, western portion of the lake is an antidome basin in a tectonic depression. This was formed by
normal and
strike-slip faulting and thrusting. The lake's proximity to the
Karlıova triple junction has led to molten fluids of the Earth's
mantle accumulating in the strata beneath, still driving gradual change. Dominating the lake's northern shore is the
stratovolcano Mount Süphan. The broad crater of a second, dormant volcano,
Mount Nemrut, is close to the western tip of the lake. There is hydrothermal activity throughout the region. For much of its history, until the
Pleistocene, Lake Van has had an outlet towards the southwest (into the
Murat River and eventually into the
Euphrates river). However, the level of this threshold has varied over time, as the lake has been blocked by successive
lava flows from
Nemrut volcano westward towards the
Muş Plain. This threshold has then been lowered at times by erosion.
Bathymetry The first acoustic survey of Lake Van was performed in 1974. Kempe and Degens later identified three physiographic provinces comprising the lake: • a lacustrine shelf (27% of the lake) from the shore to a clear gradient change • a steeper lacustrine slope (63%) • a deep, relatively flat basin province (10%) in the western center of the lake. The deepest part of the lake is the Tatvan basin, which is almost completely bounded by faults.
Prehistoric lake levels Land terraces (remnant dry, upper banks from previous shorelines) above the present shore have long been recognized. On a visit in 1898, geologist
Felix Oswald noted three raised beaches at 5, 15, and 30 m (15, 50 and 100 ft) above the lake then, as well as recently drowned trees. Research in the past century has identified many similar terraces, and the lake's level has fluctuated significantly during that time. viewed from
Akdamar Island In 1989 and 1990, an international team of geologists led by Stephan Kempe from the University of Hamburg retrieved ten sediment cores from depths up to . Although these cores only penetrated the first few meters of sediment, they provided sufficient
varves to give proxy climate data for up to 14,570 years
BP. The PALEOVAN project has studied in detail the paleolimnology, paleoclimatology, and sedimentology of Lake Van over the last 600,000 years by using seismic reflection and continuous cores recovered from deep borings. These techniques along with investigation of the chronology and sedimentology of associated onshore terraces have been used to reconstruct past climatic, volcanic, and tectonic activity since the formation of Lake Van about 600,000 years ago when a single pull-apart basin was separated into Van and Mus basins by the eruptions of the Nemrut Volcano which also blocked Lake Van's outlet. The PALEOVAN project found that the lake level of Lake Van has varied by as much as during the past 600,000 years. During this period of time, five major lowstands of lake level occurred circa 600, 365–340, 290–230, 150–130, and 30–14 ka BP. Between 600 and 230 ka BP, the lake varied dramatically, by hundreds of meters. The occurrence of major lowstands of Lake Van during glacial periods suggest regional paleoclimate, i.e. greatly reduced precipitation, was the dominant cause for the dramatic changes in lake level of Lake Van. However, volcanic and tectonic forcing factors may have contributed to lake level changes as well. Over the last 90,000 years, significant variations in the lake level of Lake Van have been inferred based on the presence of lowstand deltas and onlap sequences in seismic reflection profiles; the analysis of data extracted PALEOVAN cores; and studies of coastal terraces of differing elevations. First, a major lowstand of below modern lake level occurred between 71 and 59 ka BP as inferred from the presence of lowstand deltas and onlap sequences in seismic reflection profiles. Between 60 and 34 ka BP., the lake level of Lake Van was in general lower than the modern lake level with highstands at 57, 53, 46 and 35 ka BP. About 34 ka BP, a dramatic rise in lake level to about above the present lake level occurred as indicated by the formation of terraces circa above present-day lake level and the presence of onlapping seismic onlap sequences. This rapid rise in lake level was likely either the result of increased melt water delivery or the deposition of a large quantities of tephra and lahars (Nemrut Formation) created during a caldera forming eruption of Mount Nemrut. Two terraces dated at 26 to 24.5 and 21 to 20 ka BP reaching above the present lake level and the occurrence of lowstand deltas and onlap sequences in the seismic reflection profiles indicate high lake levels during the end of Last Glacial period (30 to 15 ka BP). These two terraces were likely deposited during the interstadial events. Between 16 and 15 ka BP, the complete desiccation of Lake Van dropped lake levels to m below modern levels. By the Bøllinge-Allerød period (14.7 to 12.8 ka BP), lake levels were possibly similar to or little lower than the modern lake level. During the Younger Dryas cold period lake levels dropped to lower than the modern level. The early Holocene was characterized by variable lake levels above and below modern with amplitudes of a few tens of meters. These variations in lake levels during the Holocene are indicated by the presence of early to middle Holocene terraces near river mouths,
Recent lake level change Similar but smaller fluctuations have been seen recently. The level of the lake rose by at least during the 1990s, drowning much agricultural land, and (after a brief period of stability and then retreat) seems to be rising again. The level rose approximately in the 10 years immediately prior to 2004. But in the early 2020s it fell. ==Climate==