
Picture From Space Captures Multicoloured Lake Alakol In Kazakhstan
Hidden in the remote eastern reaches of Kazakhstan, Lake Alakol is a natural wonder that blends striking beauty with ancient healing lore. Revered for its shimmering hues – ranging from deep indigo to rust red and turquoise – the lake has long drawn attention not just for its surreal appearance but also for its soothing properties, believed to ease ailments like eczema, joint pain and dry skin.
Now, thanks to high-resolution images captured by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-1 satellite, the world is beginning to witness the lake's mesmerising, ever-shifting palette from space – unveiling a spectacle that changes with the seasons.
Lake Alakol holds a special place in Central Asia's geography. While the lake spans around 1,000 square miles, its most distinctive feature is its isolation from the sea. Fed by the Urzhar and Emil rivers, the lake is completely cut off from any ocean, creating an enclosed system.
Anything that flows in stays there until the sun evaporates it, leaving minerals and salts behind. This continuous cycle has increased the salinity of the water, which is now high enough to repel freshwater fish, yet mild enough for daring swimmers.
The lake typically freezes over for two months at the end of winter before breaking apart in early spring, leaving floating fragments that gleam like shattered glass. The size of its surface varies from year to year. The shoreline may extend several hundred yards in response to a rainy spring, but it retracts after three consecutive dry summers.
These fluctuations affect the salt content and the algae that give the water its turquoise or rust-red colour. The term "the water's mood" is often used to describe this chameleon-like quality.
European Space Agency scientists can now observe these colour shifts from above using Sentinel-1 radar.
In addition to being aesthetically pleasing, Lake Alakol is an important biological habitat, home to several rare bird species. In recognition of its ecological significance, the lake was included in UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere Program in 2013. It was also added to the global list of protected wetlands by Ramsar, an international convention for the conservation of wetlands.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
a day ago
- India Today
Weight loss drugs can double risk of eye disease: Study
Weight loss drugs can double risk of eye disease: Study Credit: Getty Images Weight loss drugs could double the risk of getting eye diseases, a large-scale study has found. The weight loss drugs that belong to the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) can increase the risk of getting age-related eye disease. This eye disease, known as macular degeneration, affects the central vision, primarily impacting older adults with diabetes. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) are medicines that help the body lower blood sugar levels. They work like a natural hormone called GLP-1, which tells the body to release insulin after eating. What are GLP-1 drugs? These drugs are often used to treat type 2 diabetes and sometimes help with weight loss too. Academics at the University of Toronto examined medical data from more than 1 million Ontario students with diabetes. Nearly all of them were taking semaglutide, a popular diabetes and weight loss drug. The study found that those taking semaglutide for at least six months had twice the risk of developing macular degeneration. As per the study, published in JAMA Ophthalmology, diabetic patients who were older and had an even higher risk of developing macular degeneration. "Based on our data, I would advise exercising particular caution when prescribing GLP-1 RAs to older [diabetic] patients or those with a history of stroke," said Marko Popovic, a co-author of the study.


NDTV
2 days ago
- NDTV
"May Not Look, Sound Like Us": Axiom-4 Mission Chief On Extraterrestrial Life
New Delhi: Likening a visit to the space station to a camping trip, former NASA astronaut and Axiom-4 mission commander Peggy Whitson said the orbital station has enough food, water and other supplies to sustain the daily lives of those on board. "We have wet towels that we can use every day to clean ourselves. And we have enough resources from food and water perspectives that we can provide for ourselves. So it isn't like going to some ultra-rich hotel spa or whatever. It is very much a bit of a camping trip. But it's a lot of fun," she told NDTV. Days ahead of the mission's June 10 launch, Dr Whitson said that the most "special part" would be the integration of her team of four with the seven astronauts already on board the International Space station (ISS). The orbital station, she said, is equivalent to inter-connected bus-sized modules of various sizes with four pull-up laboratories, a toilet, exercise hardware and life support systems. "There's actually a lot more space than you think. But obviously, by increasing the crew size by four, it will be a challenge for us to all integrate and work together," she said when asked if the ISS will become crowded when the Axiom-4 team enters it. Should the Axiom-4 mission launch be successful, Dr Whitson and her team members Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, European Space Agency project astronaut Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski of Poland, and Tibor Kapu of Hungary will be seen floating around the orbital lab amid its screens, plugs, wires, switches, pipes and knobs. But what she is confident of is life far beyond among the billions of galaxies that unfold outside the space station's portal windows. "I haven't seen any (extraterrestrial life) with my own eyes. But what I have seen is just billions and billions of stars. And this is just our little galaxy. And there's billions and billions of galaxies. And I know, I know there has to be other life out there, because it is so expansive. I'm sure it exists, it may not look or sound like us," Dr Whitson said. That, she said, is the what pushes the idea of exploration and drives the continuous development of technologies further and further to find out about life beyond Earth. Dr Whitson and her colleague Mr Shukla, who is called "Shux" by the team, will especially look at India from space. "All of planet Earth is beautiful. India is special as well. It's relatively easy to pick out India because of the geography. I'm looking forward to seeing it again," she said. The Axiom-4 mission will launch on June 10 at 5.52 pm IST on board SpaceX's Falcon-9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida. Mr Shukla will be the second Indian to travel to space four decades after Rakesh Sharma's iconic spaceflight onboard Russia's Soyuz spacecraft in 1984. Once docked, the astronauts plan to spend up to 14 days aboard the orbiting laboratory, conducting science, outreach, and commercial activities. The Axiom-4 astronauts will perform around 60 scientific studies and activities representing 31 countries during their 14-day stay at the ISS. Mr Shukla is set to conduct exclusive food and nutrition-related experiments developed under a collaboration between the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the Department of Biotechnology (DBT), with support from NASA. The experiments aim to pioneer space nutrition and self-sustaining life support systems, vital for future long-duration space travel. ISRO has lined up a set of seven experiments for Mr Shukla, who will also participate in five joint studies planned by NASA for its human research programme. It has drawn up plans to focus on India-centric food for carrying out experiments on the ISS, including sprouting methi (Fenugreek) and moong (green gram) in microgravity conditions.


New Indian Express
3 days ago
- New Indian Express
Covid infections growing milder, occasional surges expected but don't worry: experts
The death toll is 55 in the current surge which started January this year, primarily among individuals with pre-existing illnesses, according to the Union Health ministry. "People with pre-existing illnesses and those older than 65 should follow standard precautions, as they would against any other respiratory infection -- not just for COVID-19," explained Lahariya, a consultant physician and former staff member of WHO. Kerala is the most affected with over 1,600 cases, followed by Gujarat, West Bengal, Delhi and Maharashtra, ministry data shows. The case surge in India is part of a wider wave impacting parts of Southeast Asia, including Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Hong Kong, which have been seeing a rise in infections over the past months. Wastewater surveillance by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research-National Chemical Laboratory (NCL) has detected presence of SARS-CoV-2 -- which causes COVID-19 -- in samples from 10 sewage treatment plants in Pune, the Times of India reported. Patterns are similar to those seen in the weeks preceding earlier surges, NCL scientists were quoted as saying. Genome sequencing of samples from India's west and south have shown links to the subvariants of Omicron -- LF.7, XFG, JN.1 and NB.1.8.1. The cases are not severe and there is no need to worry, Director General of Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) Rajiv Behl said earlier this week. LF.7 and been classified as 'variants under monitoring' (VUM) by the WHO to alert public health authorities that a variant of SARS-CoV-2 requires prioritised attention and monitoring. JN.1 has been circulating in India since November 2023. The current situation, Behl stressed, is being monitored. Immunologist Satyajit Rath explained that the subvariants driving up case numbers indicate that they are probably better at binding themselves to human cells, despite pre-existing antibodies created in response to a prior infection or vaccination -- or 'infectivity'. "However, the important issue here is not their infectivity, but their tendency to cause severe disease, or 'virulence'," Rath, former scientist at New Delhi's National Institute of Immunology, told PTI. "Since selection pressure among the virus strains depends on infectivity and transmissibility -- and not on virulence -- there is no reason to expect a steady increase in the virulence of the emerging virus strains, which, in fact, has not at all been seen either," he added. Moreover, given that the COVID-19-causing virus is now endemic and constantly 'mutating' or evolving, ups and downs in infections in the population are expected, the health experts said. "People need not worry themselves until they are informed of a new 'variant of concern'. VUM is not relevant to the public, but only to public health authorities," Agarwal said. Lahariya advised the public to gather information from reliable sources and not to forward unverified messages, while Rath suggested that citizens keep a watch for the virulence of newly emerging strains. The experts also stressed on the role of authorities. "National and state governments in India should keep a watch on cases, monitor the trends in new cases and share data widely. The linkage between infections and clinical outcomes should be explored to understand the clinical features of the variants in circulation," Lahariya said. Rath drew attention to systemic issues that remain regarding preparedness of public health systems and availability of healthcare facilities across sections of the society should a virulent variant emerge. "The catch is, how efficiently, systematically and rigorously are our public health systems tracking virus strains, their infectivity and their virulence, not only for SARS-CoV-2 but for any other infection?" he asked. "Are we making next generation Covid vaccines at all? Are we making them available widely and affordably? Are we even carefully tracking evidence to see how well or poorly the current vaccine-induced immunity functions against emerging strains?" he added. The poor and vulnerable would need special protection "but are masks being made widely and freely available? And if not, we are throwing poor communities onto their own resources even for taking such simple precautions, and that is a systemic problem," Rath said.