A Boat Floats On What Looks Like A Huge Strawberry Milk-Lake.
The Wooden Vessels Were Photographed From The Air Bobbing On Lake Retba, In Senegal.
From Above The Mass Of Water, Which Spans One Square Mile, Looks Staggeringly Similar To A Giant Milkshake.
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Salt Lake Retba in Senegal is highlighted in an unusual color. Microbiologist Bernard Oliver found out the reason for such an unusual color.
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The lake contains a microorganism Dunaliella salina, which absorbs the solar colors, highlights the pigment of strawberry-milky color. The bizarre colour is caused by high levels of salt – with some areas containing up to 40% of the condiment.
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They produce a red pigment that absorbs and uses the energy of sunlight to create more energy, turning the water pink.
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“Lakes like Retba and the Dead Sea, which have high salt concentrations, were once thought to be incompatible with life – hence the names. But they are very much alive.”
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Salt collectors can often be seen scouring the expanse to remove the valuable mineral – but first have to coat their skin with sheer butter.
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This helps protect their skin from exposure to the intense salt levels in the three metre deep lake.
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And towering piles of collected salt litter the shoreline. Villagers then process it before selling and using the valuable mineral.
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