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A depth of 5,370 feet (1,637 metres) is reported by the World Conservation Monitoring Centre, “Descriptions of Natural World Heritage Properties: Lake Baikal Basin” <http://www.wcmc.org.uk:80/protected_areas/data/wh/baikal.htm> (accessed Jan. 20, 1999) and the Tahoe Baikal Institute, “Facts About Tahoe and Baikal” <http://tahoe.ceres.ca.gov/tbi/facts.html> (accessed Jan. 20, 1999).
According to the Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World (Columbia University Press, 1961) and a table in Peter H. Gleick (ed.), Water In Crisis (1993), the deepest point is 5,712 feet (1,741 metres). Sources noting 5,715 feet (1,742 metres) include Leslie Symons (ed.), The Soviet Union: A Systematic Geography, 2nd edition (1990); Merriam-Webster’s New Geographical Dictionary (1972, 1984); and Merriam-Webster’s Geographical Dictionary, 3rd edition (1997).
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