IJsselmeer
IJsselmeer | |
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Landsat photo | |
Location | Northern Netherlands |
Coordinates | 52°49′N 5°15′E / 52.817°N 5.250°ECoordinates: 52°49′N 5°15′E / 52.817°N 5.250°E |
Lake type | artificial lake |
Primary inflows | IJssel, Vechte |
Primary outflows | North Sea |
Basin countries | Netherlands |
Surface area | 1,100 km2 (420 sq mi) |
Average depth | 5.5 m (18 ft) |
Max. depth | 7 m (23 ft) |
Surface elevation | −0.4 m (−1.3 ft) (winter) −0.2 m (−0.66 ft) (summer) |
IJsselmeer (Dutch pronunciation: [ɛi̯səlˈmeːr]; Lake IJssel, alternative spelling: Lake Yssel; Frisian: Iselmar) is a shallow artificial lake of 1100 km² in the central Netherlands bordering the provinces of Flevoland, North Holland and Friesland, with an average depth of 5 to 6 m. The IJsselmeer is the largest lake in Western Europe.[1][2]
The IJsselmeer is a freshwater lake fed through the Ketelmeer by the river IJssel, which gives it its name. It is mainly fed by water from the Rhine since the IJssel is a branch of it.
The first two letters of the name are capitalized because IJ is a digraph in Dutch, possibly a ligature, so it is treated as a single letter for most purposes (see IJ (digraph)).
The IJsselmeer was created in 1932 when a large shallow inland bay, the Zuiderzee, was closed by a 32 km dam, the Afsluitdijk. This was part of a major hydraulic engineering project known as the Zuiderzee Works, that years later led to the reclaiming of land from the IJsselmeer, thereby diminishing the size of the lake.
In 1975 the IJsselmeer was further split in two by the completion of the Houtribdijk, now also called Markerwaarddijk because it was originally designed to border the Markerwaard; this dike runs from Enkhuizen southeast to Lelystad. This former southern part of the IJsselmeer is now the hydrologically separate Markermeer.
The IJsselmeer functions as a major fresh water reserve, serving as a source for agriculture and drinking water. It also offers a number of opportunities for recreational activities.
The province of Flevoland was established in 1986 and consists of three polders reclaimed from the IJsselmeer.
The narrow lake east of IJsselmeer is Lake Ketelmeer. The lake receives water from rivers that carry industrial pollutants from factories upstream. Those polluted sediments have settled to the bottom in a thick layer of contaminated sludge. To restore a normal aquatic environment, this material needs to be removed from the lakebed.
In 2010 an artificial island called the IJsseloog was installed in Lake Ketelmeer. It is a repository for contaminated material dredged from the bottom of the lake. Once the repository is full, it will be capped and turned into a nature reserve.[3]
References
- ↑ Dams in the Netherlands
- ↑ "Ketelmeer". Slopeindicator.com. Retrieved 2013-11-09.
- ↑ "IJsselmeer, Netherlands | Earthshots: Satellite Images of Environmental Change". Earthshots.usgs.gov. 2012-08-21. Retrieved 2013-11-09.
External links
- Media related to IJsselmeer at Wikimedia Commons
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