Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lake Petén Itzá

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Primary inflows
  
Rio Ixlú, Rio Ixpó

Basin countries
  
Guatemala

Max. depth
  
160 m (520 ft)

Surface elevation
  
110 m

Primary outflows
  
(subterranean)

Surface area
  
99 km (38 sq mi)

Area
  
99 km²

Lake Petén Itzá httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Sections/sub-basins
  
Main north basin, shallow south basin

Similar
  
Tikal, Dulce River, Lake Atitlán, El Mirador, Semuc Champey

Lake Petén Itzá (Lago Petén Itzá, [ˈlaɣo peˈten iˈtsa]) is a lake in the northern Petén Department in Guatemala. It is the second largest lake in Guatemala, after the Izabal Lake. It is located around 16°59′0″N 89°48′0″W. It has an area of 99 km² some 32 km. long and 5 km wide. Its maximum depth is 160 m. The lake area presents high levels of migration, due to the existence of natural resources such as wood, chewing gum, oil, and agricultural and pasture activities. Because of its archaeological richness, around 150,000 tourists pass through this region yearly. The city of Flores, the capital of El Petén, lies on an island near its southern shore.

Contents

Map of Lago Peten Itza, Guatemala

Several streams flow into Lake Petén Itzá, but it has no surface outflow. Although it loses water mostly by evaporation, it is not a salt lake.

Notable sitesEdit

There are at least 27 Maya sites around this lake and the archaeological remains of Tayasal, located across the lake on a peninsula close to the former Itza Maya capital, the last to be conquered in Mesoamerica in 1697.

FaunaEdit

This lake has more than 100 important indigenous species such as the giant cichlid (Petenia splendida), crocodiles (Crocodylus moreletii and Crocodylus acutus), jaguars (Panthera onca), Pumas (Puma concolor), White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), red brocket (Mazana americana), and several bird species, including parrots, toucans, and macaws. On its northeast shore is the Cerro Cahui Protected Biotope, a natural reserve for butterflies is a 1,600-acre (6.5 km2) reserve is home to toucans, spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi), howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata, Alouatta pigra), and many other rain forest species.

References

Lake Petén Itzá Wikipedia