Lake Hillier, is a lake on Middle Island, the largest of the
islands and islets that make up the Recherche Archipelago, Western
Australia.
The most notable feature of this lake is its pink colour. It
is such a significant distinguishing feature of the archipelago that air
passengers often take note of it. The colour is permanent, and does not alter
when the water is taken in a container. The length of the lake is about six
hundred metres (3/8 mile). The lake is surrounded by a rim of sand and a dense
woodland of paperbark and eucalyptus trees with a narrow
strip of sand dunes covered by vegetation separating it to the north from the Southern
Ocean.
The island and lake are thought to have been first charted
by the Flinders expedition in 1802. Captain Flinders is said to have
observed the pink lake after ascending the island's peak. John Thistle, the
ship's master, collected some of the lake's water, which he found to be
saturated with salt. Although the source of the pink colour has not been
definitively proven in the case of Lake Hillier, the pink colour of other salt
lakes (e.g., Pink Lake) in the region arises from a dye created by the
organisms Dunaliella salina and Halobacteria. Another hypothesis
is that the pink colour is due to red halophilic bacteria in the salt crusts.
Despite the unusual hue, the lake exhibits no known adverse
effects upon humans. From above, the lake appears a solid bubble gum pink, but
from the shoreline it appears more of a clear pink hue. The shoreline is also covered
in salt crust deposits.

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