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Taihu (Chinese:太湖), also known asLake Tai orLake Taihu, is a lake in theYangtze Delta and third largestfreshwaterlakes[1] in China. The lake is inJiangsu province and a significant part of its southern shore forms its border withZhejiang. With an area of 2,250 square kilometers (869 sq mi) and an average depth of 2 meters (6.6 ft),[2] it is thethird-largest freshwater lake entirely in China, afterPoyang andDongting.[a] The lake contains about 90 islands, ranging in size from a few square meters to several square kilometers.
Lake Tai is linked to theGrand Canal and is the origin of a number of rivers, including theSuzhou Creek.
Scientific studies suggest that Lake Tai's circular structure is the result of ameteor impact, which resulted inshatter cones,shock-metamorphosedquartz,microtektites, and shock-metamorphic unloading fractures.[3] The prospectiveimpact crater has been dated to be greater than 70 million years old and possibly from the lateDevonian Period.[4] Research in 2012 suggested that present evidence shows no impact crater structure or shock-mineral at Lake Tai.[5] A more comprehensive study of soils in the lake in 2021 supported the hypothesis that the crater was instead formed by ameteor air burst high up, explaining the lake's shallowness.[6] Fossils indicate that Lake Tai was dry land until the ingression of theEast China Sea during theHolocene epoch. The growingdeltas of theYangtze andQiantang rivers eventually sealed off Lake Tai from the sea, and the influx of fresh water from rivers and rains turned it into a freshwater lake.
Three of the lake's islands are preserved as anational geological park under the nameSanshan. They are famed as a former haunt of local bandits.[citation needed]Mei Yuan is also located in Lake Tai, along withYuantouzhu. Yuantouzhu received its name ("Turtle Head Isle") from the shape of its outline.
The "Star of Lake Tai" is a giant, 115-meter (377 ft)ferris wheel on the shore of the lake.[7] Completed in 2008, it takes 18 minutes to complete one revolution. Passengers can enjoy the scenery of Lake Tai and the city center. At night, lighting effects are switched on around the wheel.
The lake is known for its productive fishing industry and is often covered by fleets of small private fishing boats.[8] Since the late 1970s, harvesting food products such as fish and crabs has been invaluable to people living along the lake and has contributed significantly to the economy of the surrounding area.
The lake is home to an extensive ceramic industry, including theYixing pottery factory, which producesYixing clay teapots.
Pollution of the lake has been ongoing for decades despite efforts to reduce pollution that were not sustained and thus proved ineffective. In the 1980s and 1990s, the number of industries in the lake region tripled, and the population also increased significantly. One billion tons of wastewater, 450,000 tons of garbage, and 880,000 tons of animal waste were dumped into the shallow lake in 1993 alone. The central government intervened and initiated a campaign to clean up the lake, setting a deadline to comply with pollution standards. When the deadline was not met, 128 factories were closed on New Year's Eve in 1999. Compliance improved somewhat afterward, but the pollution problem remained severe.[9]
In May 2007, the lake was overtaken by a majoralgae bloom and by major pollution withcyanobacteria.[10] The Chinese government called the lake a majornatural disaster despite the anthropogenic origin of this environmental catastrophe. With the average price of bottled water rising to six times the normal rate, the government banned all regional water providers from implementing price hikes.[11] (The lake provides water to 30 million residents, including about one million in Wuxi.[12]) By October 2007, it was reported that the Chinese government had shut down or given notice to over 1,300 factories around the lake. Nonetheless,Wu Lihong, one of the leading environmentalists who had been publicizing pollution of the lake, was sentenced to three years in prison for alleged extortion of one of the polluters,[10] but, undeterred, alleged in 2010 that not a single factory was closed.[13]
Jiangsu province planned to clean the lake;[14] chaired by then prime ministerWen Jiabao, the State Council set a target to complete the task by 2012.[15] However, in 2010The Economist reported that pollution had broken out again and that Wu Lihong, released from prison that April, was claiming that the government was trying to suppress news of the outbreak while switching to other supplies in place of lake water.[16]
^太湖 [Lake Tai].The Suzhou Science Window苏州科普之窗 (in Chinese). Science and Technology Association of Suzhou City [苏州市科学技术协会]. Archived fromthe original on June 11, 2007.
^Wang Erkang; Wan Yuqiu; Xu Shijin (May 2002). "Discovery and implication of shock metamorphic unloading microfractures in Devonian bedrock of Taihu Lake".Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences.45 (5): 459.doi:10.1360/02yd9048.S2CID195300513.
^Wang, K.; Geldsetzer, H. H. J. (1992). "A late Devonian impact event and its association with a possible extinction event on Eastern Gondwana".Lunar and Planetary Inst., International Conference on Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution: 77.Bibcode:1992lmip.conf...77W.
^Dong; et al. (2012). "The Deformation Features of Quartz grains In the Sandstone of Taihu Area: Taihu Impact Origin Controversy".Geological Journal of China Universities.