The lake lies in the region of Dobruja on the western Black Sea shores between the villages of Durankulak to the northwest, Krapets to the south and Vaklino to the southwest, about 15 km north of the town of Shabla and Lake Shabla. It was formed about 10,000 years ago as a result of the sinking of land masses due to epeirogenic movements of the Earth's crust and the intrusion of seawater into the nearby mouths of rivers flowing into the Black Sea.[4][5]
Lake Durankulak has the shape of the letter “Y” with its upper end facing west. It has two main arms, the smaller northwestern begins at the bridge of the first class I-9 road at Durankulak and the southwestern one is fed by the river Shablenska reka. It has an area of around 4 km2 and features two islands in its western part, the Big Island (0.02 km2) and the Small Island (0.0053 km2). Lake Durankulak is linked via an artificial channel to the marsh of Orlovo Blato to the north.[2]
Its maximum depth is 4 m, the water volume is 4.9 million m3 and the salinity is up to 4‰. Due to the irregular river flow and the low rainfall, the lake is mainly fed by karst springs — about 80% of the total water volume.[2][5][6] The annual water balance includes a total inflow of 11.714 million m3 of water, of which 2.001 million m3 comes from precipitation, 0.473 million m3 from surface water and 9.240 million m3 from underground water, and a total outflow of 11.734 million m3, of which 2.270 million m3 from evaporation, 2.322 million m3 from transpiration and 7.142 million m3 flow into the Black Sea.[6]
Of the 446 ha of the Lake Durankulak Protected Area, 250 ha are open water, which includes the neighbouring marsh of Orlovo Blato, 193 ha are covered with aquatic and semi-aquatic vegetation and 2 ha belong to the archaeological site on the Big Island.[8] Over 80% of the vegetation-covered area is occupied by common reed (Phragmites australis) communities, followed by narrowleaf cattail (Typha angustifolia), broadleaf cattail (Typha latifolia), triangular club-rush (Schoenoplectus triqueter) and common club-rush (Schoenoplectus lacustris).[5][12]
The lake is also an archaeologically important area. Pithouses of the oldest known inhabitants of Dobruja, dating to 5100–4700 BC, have been unearthed near the west shore, as well as 3500–3400 BC mound burials and a Sarmatiannecropolis from Late Antiquity. The Big Island of Lake Durankulak is particularly important, as it is the site of an Eneolithic settlement of 4600–4200 BC, a cultural monument of national importance.[3][5] The island also features a 1300–1200 BC fortified settlement, a Hellenistic rock-hewn cave sanctuary of Cybele (3rd century BC) and a Bulgar settlement from the 9th–10th century AD during the First Bulgarian Empire.[5] Because of its age and importance, the archaeological complex has been dubbed the "Bulgarian Troy".[53]
Мичев (Michev), Николай (Nikolay); Михайлов (Mihaylov), Цветко (Tsvetko); Вапцаров (Vaptsarov), Иван (Ivan); Кираджиев (Kiradzhiev), Светлин (Svetlin) (1980). Географски речник на България [Geographic Dictionary of Bulgaria] (in Bulgarian). София (Sofia): Наука и култура (Nauka i kultura).
Golemanski, Vasil; Peev, Dimitar; Chipev, Nesho; Beron, Petar; Biserkov, Valko (2015). Red Book of Bulgaria, Volume II (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. ISBN978-954-9746-19-8.