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Frying Pan Lake is World’s Largest Hot Spring

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  • by Daniel Kelly
  • — March 10, 2014

Born of a volcanic eruption in 1886, Frying Pan Lake lives up to the heat its name implies. Water temperatures in the hot spring stay around 50 to 60 degrees Celsius (pushing 140 degrees Fahrenheit).

Frying-Pan-Lake

Frying Pan Lake. (Credit: Wikipedia User Famelor via Wikimedia Commons)

The New Zealand lake sits on the country’s North Island in the Waimangu Volcanic Rift Valley, home to Lake Rotomahana, the once-active Waimangu Geyser and also Inferno Crater Lake.

Frying-Pan-Lake-New-Zealand

Frying Pan Lake. (Credit: Wikimedia Commons User Andy_king50)

A 1980 bathymetry modeling survey revealed that Frying Pan Lake spans 200 meters, making it the world’s largest hot spring. This study also looked at other lakes in the valley, finding that Inferno Crater Lake reached temperatures higher than Frying Pan Lake – around 74 degrees Celsius for short amounts of time.

Inferno-Crater-Lake

Inferno Crater Lake, October 2013. (Credit: Wikimedia Commons User Fvanrenterghem)

Frying Pan Lake’s average depth is six meters, maxing out at 20 meters deep. It supports a range of thermophiles – lifeforms, usually bacteria, that thrive in extremely hot environments.

frying-pan-lake-august-2011

Frying Pan Lake, August 2011. (Credit: Flickr User Tom Hilton via Creative Commons)

These lifeforms are believed to have been some of the earliest to live on Earth. Many thermophiles comprise archaea, which are not bacteria but separately classed single-celled organisms.

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