(Redirected from Lake Rudolph)
'Lake Turkana' (tər-kăn'ə, tʊr-kä'nə), formerly known as 'Lake Rudolf', is a
lake in the
Great Rift Valley in
Kenya, with its far northern end crossing into
Ethiopia.
[1] It is the world's largest permanent
desert lake and the world's largest
alkaline lake. By volume it is the world's fourth largest salt lake after the
Caspian Sea,
Lake Issyk-Kul and the (shrinking)
Aral Sea, and among all lakes it ranks
twentieth. The water is
potable but not palatable. It supports a rich
lacustrine wildlife. The climate is hot and very dry.
The
rocks of the surrounding area are predominantly
volcanic. Central Island is an active volcano, emitting vapors. Outcrops and rocky shores are found on the East and South shores of the lake, while dunes, spits and flats are on the West and North, at a lower elevation.

Lake Turkana seen from the South Island.
On-shore and off-shore winds can be extremely strong as the lake warms and cools more slowly than the land. Sudden, violent storms are frequent. Three rivers (the
Omo,
Turkwel and
Kerio) flow into the lake, but lacking outflow its only water loss is by evaporation. Lake volume and dimensions are variable. For example, its level fell by 10 meters between 1975 and 1993.
[2]
Due to temperature, aridity and geographic inaccessibility, the lake retains its wild character.
Nile crocodiles are found in great abundance on the flats. The rocky shores are home to
scorpions and
carpet vipers. Although the lake and its environs have been popular for expeditions of every sort under the tutelage of guides, rangers and experienced persons, they certainly must be considered hazardous for unguided tourists.
Lake Turkana National Parks are now listed as a UNESCO
World Heritage Site.
Sibiloi National Park lies on the lake's eastern shore, while
Central Island National Park and
South Island National Park lie in the lake. Both are known for their
crocodiles.
Demography

Language map of Kenya. The lake and its environs are in the upper portion.
The lake was named Lake Rudolf (in honor of
Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria) by
Count Sámuel Teleki de Szék and his second-in-command
Lieutenant Ludwig Ritter Von Höhnel, a
Hungarian and an
Austrian , in 1888.
[3] They were its first European discoverers, "finding" it on a large
safari across
East Africa on March 6, 1888. It was never really lost, of course, having long been known to the native tribes of the region. They include the
Turkana,
Rendille,
Gabbra,
Daasanach, Hamar Koke, Karo, Nyagatom,
Mursi,
Surma and
Molo. For the location of many of these peoples refer to the dialect map in the article.
J. W. Gregory reported in ''The Geographical Journal'' of 1894 that it had been called 'Basso Narok'.
[4] What the native form of this phrase was, what it might mean and in what language is not clear. The lake kept its European name during the colonial period of British East Africa. After the independence of
Kenya, the president, Mzee
Jomo Kenyatta, renamed it in 1975 after the
Turkana, the predominant tribe there.
At some unknown time the lake became known as the 'Jade Sea' from its turquoise color seen on approaching from a distance. The color comes from algae that rise to the surface in calm weather. This is likely also a European name. The Turkana refer to the lake as anam Ka'alakol, meaning the sea of many fish. It is from the name Ka'alakol that
Kalokol, a town on the western shore of Lake Turkana, east of
Lodwar, derives its name. The area still sees few Western visitors, being a three-day drive from
Nairobi, 400 km to the south.
Biology
Biomes
The major
biomes are the lake itself, which is an aquatic biome, and the surrounding region, which is classified as
Deserts and xeric shrublands. The desert is the
Chalbi desert. During moister times a dry grassland appears, featuring ''
Aristida adcensionis'' and ''A. mutabilis''. During drier times the grass disappears. The shrublands contain dwarf shrubs, such as
Duosperma eremophilum and
Indigofera spinosa. Near the lake are
doum palms.
Plankton
Both
phytoplankton and
zooplankton are found in the lake.
[5] Of the former the
Cyanobacteria are represented by ''Microcystis aeruginosa;'' the
Microalgae, ''Botryococcus braunii''. Also present are ''Anabaenopsis arnoldii,'' ''Planctonema lauterbornii,'' ''Oocystis gigas,'' ''Sphaerocystis schroeteri,'' and some others. The zooplankton include
copepods,
Cladocera and
Protozoa.
Fish
A number of species of native fish abound both in the
demersal zone and the
pelagic zone of the lake
[6]: the
Alestiidae, or African tetras, a few genera of
Cichlids, such as
Tilapia, some species of
bichir, an elephantfish (''
Mormyridae''), the
African arowana, the African knifefish (''
Gymnarchus niloticus''), ''Distichodus niloticus'' of the
Distichodontidae, as well as the
Nile perch (''Lates niloticus'') and the
Rudolph lates (''Longispina''), and numerous others. The lake has been heavily fished. The Norwegians built a fish factory there. During the early
Holocene, the water level of lake Turkana was higher, and the lake overflowed into the
Nile River, allowing fish and crocodiles access.
Birds
The Lake Turkana region is home to hundreds of species of birds endemic to
Kenya.
[7] The East African Rift System also serves as a flyway for migrating birds, bringing in hundreds more. The birds are essentially supported by plankton masses in the lake, which also feed the fish.
Some birds more common to Turkana are the
Little Stint, the
Wood Sandpiper, and the
Common Sandpiper. The
African Skimmer (''Rhyncops flavirostris'') nests in the banks of Central Island. The White-necked Cormorant (''Phalacrocorax africanus'') ranges over the lake. The
Greater Flamingo wades in its shallows.
Heuglin's Bustard (''Neotis heuglinii'') is found in the east of the lake region.
Reptiles
The lake formerly contained
Africa's largest population of Nile
crocodiles: 14,000, as estimated in a 1968 study by Alistair Graham -- see the book 'Eyelids of Morning' for an excellent account of the Lake and its crocodiles.
Mammals
Over the dry grasslands ranges a frail population of grazing mammals and predators. The grazers are chiefly
Grevy's zebra,
Burchell's Zebra, the
Beisa Oryx,
Grant's Gazelle, the
topi and the
reticulated giraffe. They are hunted by the
lion and the
cheetah.
Elephants and the
black rhinoceros are no longer seen, although
Teleki reported seeing (and shooting) many. Closer to the dust is the
gerbil (''Gerbillus pulvinatus'').
Geology
Lake Turkana is an
East African Rift feature.
[8] A
rift is a weak place in the Earth's crust due to the separation of two
tectonic plates, often accompanied by a
graben, or trough, in which lake water can collect. The rift began when East Africa, impelled by currents in the
mantle[9], began separating from the rest of Africa, moving to the northeast. Currently the graben is 320 km wide in the north of the lake, 170 km in the south. This rift is one of two, and is called the Great or Eastern Rift. There is another to the west, the Western Rift.
The basement rocks of the region have been dated by two analytical determinations to 522 and 510 million years ago (ma or mya). No rift was in the offing at that time. A rift is signalled by volcanic activity through the weakened crust. The oldest volcanic activity of the region occurred in the Nabwal Hills northeast of Turkana and is dated to 34.8 mya in the late
Eocene.
[10]
The visible tectonic features of the region result from extensive extrusions of
basalt over the Turkana-Omo basin in the window 4.18-3.99 mya.
[11] These are called the Gombe Group Basalts. They are subdivided into the Mursi Basalts and the Gombi Basalts.
The two latter basalts are identified as the outcrops that are the rocky mountains and badlands around the lake. In the Omo portion of the basin, of the Mursi Basalts, the Mursi Formation is on the west side of the Omo, the Nkalabong on the Omo, and the Usno and Shungura east of the Omo. Probably the best known of the formations are the
Koobi Fora on the east side of Turkana and the Nachukui on the west.
Short-term fluctuations in lake level combined with periodic volcanic ash spewings over the region have resulted in a fortuitous layering of the ground cover over the basal rocks. These horizons can be dated more precisely by chemical analysis of the
tuff.
[12] As this region is believed to have been an evolutionary nest of
Hominins, the dates are important for generating a diachronic array of fossils, both Hominoid and non-Hominoid. Many thousands have been excavated.
Terraces representing ancient shores are visible in the Turkana basin. The highest is 75 m above the surface of the lake (only approximate, as the lake level fluctuates), which was current about 9500 years ago, at the end of the
Pleistocene. It is generally theorized that Turkana was part of the upper Nile system at that time, connecting to
Lake Baringo at the southern end and the
White Nile in the north, and that volcanic land adjustments severed the connection. Such a hypothesis explains the Nile species in the lake, such as the crocodiles and the Nile Perch.
Anthropology
Around 2 million–3 million years ago, the lake was larger and the area more fertile, making it a centre for early
hominins.
Richard Leakey has led numerous
anthropological digs in the area which have led to many important discoveries of hominin remains. The two-million-year-old
Skull 1470 was found in 1972. It was originally thought to be ''
Homo habilis'', but some anthropologists have assigned it to a new species, ''
Homo rudolfensis'', named after the lake. In 1984, the
Turkana Boy, a nearly complete skeleton of a
Homo erectus boy was discovered by
Kamoya Kimeu. More recently,
Meave Leakey discovered a 3,500,000-year-old skull there, named ''
Kenyanthropus platyops'', which means "The Flat-Faced Man of Kenya".
The lake in popular culture
The lake is featured in Fernando Meirelles's film ''
The Constant Gardener'', which is based on the
book of the same name by
John le Carré, although some of the footage was actually filmed at
Lake Magadi.
In the Kim Basinger movie ''I Dreamed of Africa'' (2000), the lake is briefly mentioned early in the film as Lake Rudolf and later as Lake Turkana.
The lake is also featured in the video game series
Xenosaga as being the location of an excavation to discover the original
Zohar and the
Anima Relics in the year A.D. 20xx.
In his book ''A Lifetime with Lions'',
George Adamson (best known from the movie
Born Free) describes various adventures along Lake Turkana, including a harrowing attempt to cross it in a makeshift raft.
The travel writer John Hillaby describes a camel safari he undertook around the lake in his 1964 book ''Journey to the Jade Sea'',
''Eyelids of the Morning: The Mingled Destinies of Crocodiles and Men'' by Alistair Graham and Peter Hill Beard; originally published in 1973 (New York Graphic Society - ISBN 0-8212-0464-5). For decades out of print, then back in print, currently out of print. Graham, who was the biologist of the team, writes a venerable account of a valuable, difficult, and gruesome scientific study; while Beard (when not catching crocodiles) took the dramatic photos, and designed this quirky, graphic coffee-table book. Together they spent a year on Lake Rudolf (now called Lake Turkana) studying crocs for ecological analysis. Additionally, it is an entrancing portrait of Turkana society.
See also
★
Lake Naivasha
★
Lake Nakuru
★
Lake Baringo
★
Lake Bogoria
★
Rift Valley lakes
★
Great Rift Valley
External links
★
Lake Turkana's entry on UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites
★
Map of the Lake Turkana basin at Water Resources eAtlas
★
Satellite images showing Lake Turkana's falling water levels
★
Sibiloi National Park, World Heritage Site
★
Ongoing Palaeoanthropological research in the Turkana Basin
★
World Lakes Database
★
Masai Xeric Grasslands and Shrublands
★
Remote Tribes of Northern Kenya
★
Crocodile Natural History
Footnotes
1. The boundary between Ethiopia and Kenya has been a contentious rational distinction. A brief consideration of the topic can be found in the State Department document, Ethiopia - Kenya Boundary
2. Historic lake levels are graphed in the World Lakes Database.
3. A summary of the European discovery as well as Teleki's map and some Turkana tribe legends are stated in a University of Trieste document online.
4. Contributions to the Physical Geography of British East Africa, in Vol. 4, No. 4 (Oct., 1894), pp. 289-315.
5. The World Lakes Database includes mention of the lake plankton, some of which are responsible for its turquoise color.
6. In addition to the source of the previous note see also ''Fish Species in Lake Turkana''
7. The Internet hosts a number of bird sites giving scientific names, data and photographs of birds found around the lake: The Sibiloi National Park site, the Kenya Birds site, the African Bird Image Database, the Birdlife International site, and many others.
8. A good introduction is stated in the Regions of Kenya site.
9. For the mantle currents, or "plumes", see the abstract of Tertiary Mafic Lavas of Turkana ..., Journal of Petrology Volume 47, Number 6 Pp. 1221-1244.
10. See the abstract of Geochronology of the Nabwal Hills ..., ''Geological Magazine''; January 2006; v. 143; no. 1; p. 25-39.
11. See Mineral chemistry of Turkana basalts and implications for basin development, Karla Knudson, Louise Miltich, Nick Swanson-Hysell. The article is highly technical. Look for the summaries.
12. Refer to the abstract of Precise ... geochronology for the upper Koobi Fora Formation...., Journal of the Geological Society; January 2006; v. 163; no. 1; p. 205-220.
References
★ Encyclopedia Britannica under ''Rudolf, Lake.''
★ Chambers World Gazeteer, ed. David Munro, W & R Chambers Ltd. & The Press Syndicate of the University of Camvridge, 5th Edition, 1988, ISBN 1085296-200-3 under ''Turkana, Lake.''