Lake Vanda is a
lake in
Wright Valley,
Victoria Land,
Ross Dependency,
Antarctica. The lake is 5 km long and has a maximum depth of 69 m. On its shore,
New Zealand maintained
Vanda Station from 1968 to 1995. Lake Vanda is a
hypersaline lake with a salinity more than ten times that of seawater, more than the salinity of the
Dead Sea, and perhaps even more than of
Lake Assal (Djibouti), which is the world's most saline lake outside of Antarctica. Lake Vanda is also
meromictic, which means that the deeper waters of the lake don't mix with the shallower waters. There are three distinct layers of water ranging in temperature from on the bottom to the middle layer of and the upper layer ranges from . It is only one of the many saline lakes in the ice-free valleys of the
Transantarctic Mountains. The longest
river of Antarctica,
Onyx River, flows West, inland, into Lake Vanda. There is a meteorological station at the mouth of the river.