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Baltic Sea

The Baltic Sea is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that is enclosed by Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Sweden and the North and Central European Plain.

Baltic Sea region
Map of the Baltic Sea region
LocationEurope
Coordinates58°N 20°E / 58°N 20°E / 58; 20Coordinates: 58°N 20°E / 58°N 20°E / 58; 20 (slightly east of the north tip of Gotland Island)
TypeSea
Primary inflowsDaugava, Kemijoki, Neman (Nemunas), Neva, Oder, Vistula, Lule, Narva, Torne
Primary outflowsThe Danish Straits
Catchment area1,641,650 km2 (633,840 sq mi)
Basin countriesCoastal: Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Sweden
Non-coastal: Belarus, Czech Republic, Norway, Slovakia, Ukraine[1]
Max. length1,601 km (995 mi)
Max. width193 km (120 mi)
Surface area377,000 km2 (146,000 sq mi)
Average depth55 m (180 ft)
Max. depth459 m (1,506 ft)
Water volume21,700 km3 (1.76×1010 acre⋅ft)
Residence time25 years
Shore length18,000 km (5,000 mi)
IslandsAbruka, Aegna, Archipelago Sea Islands (Åland), Bornholm, Dänholm, Ertholmene, Falster, Fårö, Fehmarn, Gotland, Hailuoto, Hiddensee, Hiiumaa, Holmöarna, Kassari, Kesselaid, Kihnu, Kimitoön, Kõinastu, Kotlin, Laajasalo, Lauttasaari, Lidingö, Ljusterö, Lolland, Manilaid, Mohni, Møn, Muhu, Poel, Prangli, Osmussaar, Öland, Replot, Ruhnu, Rügen, Saaremaa, Stora Karlsö, Suomenlinna, Suur-Pakri and Väike-Pakri, Ummanz, Usedom/Uznam, Väddö, Värmdö, Vilsandi, Vormsi, Wolin
SettlementsCopenhagen, Gdańsk, Gdynia, Haapsalu, Helsinki, Jūrmala, Kaliningrad, Kiel, Klaipėda, Kuressaare, Kärdla, Lübeck, Luleå, Mariehamn, Oulu, Palanga, Paldiski, Pärnu, Riga, Rostock, Saint Petersburg, Liepāja, Stockholm, Tallinn, Turku, Ventspils
References[2]
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

The sea stretches from 53°N to 66°N latitude and from 10°E to 30°E longitude. It is a shelf sea and marginal sea of the Atlantic with limited water exchange between the two, making it an inland sea. The Baltic Sea drains through the Danish Straits into the Kattegat by way of the Øresund, Great Belt and Little Belt. It includes the Gulf of Bothnia, the Bay of Bothnia, the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Riga and the Bay of Gdańsk.

The "Baltic Proper" is bordered on its northern edge, at latitude 60°N, by Åland and the Gulf of Bothnia, on its northeastern edge by the Gulf of Finland, on its eastern edge by the Gulf of Riga, and in the west by the Swedish part of the southern Scandinavian Peninsula.

The Baltic Sea is connected by artificial waterways to the White Sea via the White Sea–Baltic Canal and to the German Bight of the North Sea via the Kiel Canal.

Definitions

 
Danish Straits and southwestern Baltic Sea
 
Åland between Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia

Administration

The Helsinki Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area includes the Baltic Sea and the Kattegat, without calling Kattegat a part of the Baltic Sea, "For the purposes of this Convention the 'Baltic Sea Area' shall be the Baltic Sea and the Entrance to the Baltic Sea, bounded by the parallel of the Skaw in the Skagerrak at 57°44.43'N."[3]

Traffic history

Historically, the Kingdom of Denmark collected Sound Dues from ships at the border between the ocean and the land-locked Baltic Sea, in tandem: in the Øresund at Kronborg castle near Helsingør; in the Great Belt at Nyborg; and in the Little Belt at its narrowest part then Fredericia, after that stronghold was built. The narrowest part of Little Belt is the "Middelfart Sund" near Middelfart.[4]

Oceanography

Geographers widely agree that the preferred physical border of the Baltic is a line drawn through the southern Danish islands, Drogden-Sill and Langeland.[5] The Drogden Sill is situated north of Køge Bugt and connects Dragør in the south of Copenhagen to Malmö; it is used by the Øresund Bridge, including the Drogden Tunnel. By this definition, the Danish Straits is part of the entrance, but the Bay of Mecklenburg and the Bay of Kiel are parts of the Baltic Sea. Another usual border is the line between Falsterbo, Sweden, and Stevns Klint, Denmark, as this is the southern border of Øresund. It's also the border between the shallow southern Øresund (with a typical depth of 5–10 meters only) and notably deeper water.

Hydrography and biology

Drogden Sill (depth of 7 m (23 ft)) sets a limit to Øresund and Darss Sill (depth of 18 m (59 ft)), and a limit to the Belt Sea.[6] The shallow sills are obstacles to the flow of heavy salt water from the Kattegat into the basins around Bornholm and Gotland.

The Kattegat and the southwestern Baltic Sea are well oxygenated and have a rich biology. The remainder of the Sea is brackish, poor in oxygen, and in species. Thus, statistically, the more of the entrance that is included in its definition, the healthier the Baltic appears; conversely, the more narrowly it is defined, the more endangered its biology appears.

Etymology and nomenclature

Tacitus called it the Suebic Sea, Latin: Mare Suebicum after the Germanic people of the Suebi,[7][8] and Ptolemy Sarmatian Ocean after the Sarmatians,[9] but the first to name it the Baltic Sea (Medieval Latin: Mare Balticum) was the eleventh-century German chronicler Adam of Bremen. The origin of the latter name is speculative and it was adopted into Slavic and Finnic languages spoken around the sea, very likely due to the role of Medieval Latin in cartography. It might be connected to the Germanic word belt, a name used for two of the Danish straits, the Belts, while others claim it to be directly derived from the source of the Germanic word, Latin balteus "belt".[10] Adam of Bremen himself compared the sea with a belt, stating that it is so named because it stretches through the land as a belt (Balticus, eo quod in modum baltei longo tractu per Scithicas regiones tendatur usque in Greciam).

He might also have been influenced by the name of a legendary island mentioned in the Natural History of Pliny the Elder. Pliny mentions an island named Baltia (or Balcia) with reference to accounts of Pytheas and Xenophon. It is possible that Pliny refers to an island named Basilia ("the royal") in On the Ocean by Pytheas. Baltia also might be derived from "belt", and therein mean "near belt of sea, strait".

Others have suggested that the name of the island originates from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰel meaning "white, fair",[11] which may echo the naming of seas after colours relating to the cardinal points (as per Black Sea and Red Sea).[12] This '*bʰel' root and basic meaning were retained in Lithuanian (as baltas), Latvian (as balts) and Slavic (as bely). On this basis, a related hypothesis holds that the name originated from this Indo-European root via a Baltic language such as Lithuanian.[13] Another explanation is that, while derived from the aforementioned root, the name of the sea is related to names for various forms of water and related substances in several European languages, that might have been originally associated with colors found in swamps (compare Proto-Slavic *bolto "swamp"). Yet another explanation is that the name originally meant "enclosed sea, bay" as opposed to open sea.[14]

In the Middle Ages the sea was known by a variety of names. The name Baltic Sea became dominant only after 1600. Usage of Baltic and similar terms to denote the region east of the sea started only in the 19th century.

Name in other languages

The Baltic Sea was known in ancient Latin language sources as Mare Suebicum or even Mare Germanicum.[15] Older native names in languages that used to be spoken on the shores of the sea or near it usually indicate the geographical location of the sea (in Germanic languages), or its size in relation to smaller gulfs (in Old Latvian), or tribes associated with it (in Old Russian the sea was known as the Varanghian Sea). In modern languages, it is known by the equivalents of "East Sea", "West Sea", or "Baltic Sea" in different languages:

History

Classical world

At the time of the Roman Empire, the Baltic Sea was known as the Mare Suebicum or Mare Sarmaticum. Tacitus in his AD 98 Agricola and Germania described the Mare Suebicum, named for the Suebi tribe, during the spring months, as a brackish sea where the ice broke apart and chunks floated about. The Suebi eventually migrated southwest to temporarily reside in the Rhineland area of modern Germany, where their name survives in the historic region known as Swabia. Jordanes called it the Germanic Sea in his work, the Getica.

Middle Ages

 
Cape Arkona on the island of Rügen in Germany, was a sacred site of the Rani tribe before Christianization.

In the early Middle Ages, Norse (Scandinavian) merchants built a trade empire all around the Baltic. Later, the Norse fought for control of the Baltic against Wendish tribes dwelling on the southern shore. The Norse also used the rivers of Russia for trade routes, finding their way eventually to the Black Sea and southern Russia. This Norse-dominated period is referred to as the Viking Age.

Since the Viking Age, the Scandinavians have referred to the Baltic Sea as Austmarr ("Eastern Lake"). "Eastern Sea", appears in the Heimskringla and Eystra salt appears in Sörla þáttr. Saxo Grammaticus recorded in Gesta Danorum an older name, Gandvik, -vik being Old Norse for "bay", which implies that the Vikings correctly regarded it as an inlet of the sea. Another form of the name, "Grandvik", attested in at least one English translation of Gesta Danorum, is likely to be a misspelling.

In addition to fish the sea also provides amber, especially from its southern shores within today's borders of Poland, Russia and Lithuania. First mentions of amber deposits on the South Coast of the Baltic Sea date back to the 12th century.[16] The bordering countries have also traditionally exported lumber, wood tar, flax, hemp and furs by ship across the Baltic. Sweden had from early medieval times exported iron and silver mined there, while Poland had and still has extensive salt mines. Thus, the Baltic Sea has long been crossed by much merchant shipping.

The lands on the Baltic's eastern shore were among the last in Europe to be converted to Christianity. This finally happened during the Northern Crusades: Finland in the twelfth century by Swedes, and what are now Estonia and Latvia in the early thirteenth century by Danes and Germans (Livonian Brothers of the Sword). The Teutonic Order gained control over parts of the southern and eastern shore of the Baltic Sea, where they set up their monastic state. Lithuania was the last European state to convert to Christianity.

An arena of conflict

 
Main trading routes of the Hanseatic League (Hanse).
 
In 1649 the settlement of the Latvian-speaking Kursenieki spanned from Klaipėda to Gdańsk along the coast of the Baltic Sea.

In the period between the 8th and 14th centuries, there was much piracy in the Baltic from the coasts of Pomerania and Prussia, and the Victual Brothers held Gotland.

Starting in the 11th century, the southern and eastern shores of the Baltic were settled by migrants mainly from Germany, a movement called the Ostsiedlung ("east settling"). Other settlers were from the Netherlands, Denmark, and Scotland. The Polabian Slavs were gradually assimilated by the Germans.[17] Denmark gradually gained control over most of the Baltic coast, until she lost much of her possessions after being defeated in the 1227 Battle of Bornhöved.

 
The naval Battle of the Sound took place on 8 November 1658 during the Dano-Swedish War.
 
The burning Cap Arcona shortly after the attacks, 3 May 1945. Only 350 survived of the 4,500 prisoners who had been aboard

In the 13th to 16th centuries, the strongest economic force in Northern Europe was the Hanseatic League, a federation of merchant cities around the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Poland, Denmark, and Sweden fought wars for Dominium maris baltici ("Lordship over the Baltic Sea"). Eventually, it was Sweden that virtually encompassed the Baltic Sea. In Sweden, the sea was then referred to as Mare Nostrum Balticum ("Our Baltic Sea"). The goal of Swedish warfare during the 17th century was to make the Baltic Sea an all-Swedish sea (Ett Svenskt innanhav), something that was accomplished except the part between Riga in Latvia and Stettin in Pomerania. However, the Dutch dominated the Baltic trade in the seventeenth century.

In the eighteenth century, Russia and Prussia became the leading powers over the sea. Sweden's defeat in the Great Northern War brought Russia to the eastern coast. Russia became and remained a dominating power in the Baltic. Russia's Peter the Great saw the strategic importance of the Baltic and decided to found his new capital, Saint Petersburg, at the mouth of the Neva river at the east end of the Gulf of Finland. There was much trading not just within the Baltic region but also with the North Sea region, especially eastern England and the Netherlands: their fleets needed the Baltic timber, tar, flax, and hemp.

During the Crimean War, a joint British and French fleet attacked the Russian fortresses in the Baltic; the case is also known as the Åland War. They bombarded Sveaborg, which guards Helsinki; and Kronstadt, which guards Saint Petersburg; and they destroyed Bomarsund in Åland. After the unification of Germany in 1871, the whole southern coast became German. World War I was partly fought in the Baltic Sea. After 1920 Poland was granted access to the Baltic Sea at the expense of Germany by the Polish Corridor and enlarged the port of Gdynia in rivalry with the port of the Free City of Danzig.

After the Nazis' rise to power, Germany reclaimed the Memelland and after the outbreak of the Eastern Front (World War II) occupied the Baltic states. In 1945, the Baltic Sea became a mass grave for retreating soldiers and refugees on torpedoed troop transports. The sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff remains the worst maritime disaster in history, killing (very roughly) 9,000 people. In 2005, a Russian group of scientists found over five thousand airplane wrecks, sunken warships, and other material, mainly from World War II, on the bottom of the sea.

Since World War II

Since the end of World War II, various nations, including the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and the United States have disposed of chemical weapons in the Baltic Sea, raising concerns of environmental contamination.[18] Today, fishermen occasionally find some of these materials: the most recent available report from the Helsinki Commission notes that four small scale catches of chemical munitions representing approximately 105 kg (231 lb) of material were reported in 2005. This is a reduction from the 25 incidents representing 1,110 kg (2,450 lb) of material in 2003.[19] Until now, the U.S. Government refuses to disclose the exact coordinates of the wreck sites. Deteriorating bottles leak mustard gas and other substances, thus slowly poisoning a substantial part of the Baltic Sea.

After 1945, the German population was expelled from all areas east of the Oder-Neisse line, making room for new Polish and Russian settlement. Poland gained most of the southern shore. The Soviet Union gained another access to the Baltic with the Kaliningrad Oblast, that had been part of German-settled East Prussia. The Baltic states on the eastern shore were annexed by the Soviet Union. The Baltic then separated opposing military blocs: NATO and the Warsaw Pact. Neutral Sweden developed incident weapons to defend its territorial waters after the Swedish submarine incidents.[20] This border status restricted trade and travel. It ended only after the collapse of the Communist regimes in Central and Eastern Europe in the late 1980s. In 2023, Finland joined NATO.[21]

Since May 2004, with the accession of the Baltic states and Poland, the Baltic Sea has been almost entirely surrounded by countries of the European Union (EU). The remaining non-EU shore areas are Russian: the Saint Petersburg area and the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave.

Winter storms begin arriving in the region during October. These have caused numerous shipwrecks, and contributed to the extreme difficulties of rescuing passengers of the ferry M/S Estonia en route from Tallinn, Estonia, to Stockholm, Sweden, in September 1994, which claimed the lives of 852 people. Older, wood-based shipwrecks such as the Vasa tend to remain well-preserved, as the Baltic's cold and brackish water does not suit the shipworm.

Storm floods

Storm surge floods are generally taken to occur when the water level is more than one metre above normal. In Warnemünde about 110 floods occurred from 1950 to 2000, an average of just over two per year.[22]

Historic flood events were the All Saints' Flood of 1304 and other floods in the years 1320, 1449, 1625, 1694, 1784 and 1825. Little is known of their extent.[23] From 1872, there exist regular and reliable records of water levels in the Baltic Sea. The highest was the flood of 1872 when the water was an average of 2.43 m (8 ft 0 in) above sea level at Warnemünde and a maximum of 2.83 m (9 ft 3 in) above sea level in Warnemünde. In the last very heavy floods the average water levels reached 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) above sea level in 1904, 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in) in 1913, 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in) in January 1954, 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) on 2–4 November 1995 and 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) on 21 February 2002.[24]

Geography

Geophysical data

 
Baltic drainage basins (catchment area), with depth, elevation, major rivers and lakes

An arm of the North Atlantic Ocean, the Baltic Sea is enclosed by Sweden and Denmark to the west, Finland to the northeast, and the Baltic countries to the southeast.

It is about 1,600 km (990 mi) long, an average of 193 km (120 mi) wide, and an average of 55 metres (180 ft) deep. The maximum depth is 459 m (1,506 ft) which is on the Swedish side of the center. The surface area is about 349,644 km2 (134,998 sq mi) [25] and the volume is about 20,000 km3 (4,800 cu mi). The periphery amounts to about 8,000 km (5,000 mi) of coastline.[26]

The Baltic Sea is one of the largest brackish inland seas by area, and occupies a basin (a Zungenbecken) formed by glacial erosion during the last few ice ages.

Physical characteristics of the Baltic Sea, its main sub-regions, and the transition zone to the Skagerrak/North Sea area[27]
Sub-area Area Volume Maximum depth Average depth
km2 km3 m m
Baltic proper 211,069 13,045 459 62.1
Gulf of Bothnia 115,516 6,389 230 60.2
Gulf of Finland 29,600 1,100 123 38.0
Gulf of Riga 16,300 424 > 60 26.0
Belt Sea/Kattegat 42,408 802 109 18.9
Total Baltic Sea 415,266 21,721 459 52.3

Extent

The International Hydrographic Organization defines the limits of the Baltic Sea as follows:[28]

Bordered by the coasts of Germany, Denmark, Poland, Sweden, Finland, Russia, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, it extends north-eastward of the following limits:

Subdivisions

 
Regions and basins of the Baltic Sea:[29]
1 = Bothnian Bay
2 = Bothnian Sea
1 + 2 = Gulf of Bothnia, partly also 3 & 4
3 = Archipelago Sea
4 = Åland Sea
5 = Gulf of Finland
6 = Northern Baltic Proper
7 = Western Gotland Basin
8 = Eastern Gotland Basin
9 = Gulf of Riga
10 = Bay of Gdańsk/Gdansk Basin
11 = Bornholm Basin and Hanö Bight
12 = Arkona Basin
6–12 = Baltic Proper
13 = Kattegat, not an integral part of the Baltic Sea
14 = Belt Sea (Little Belt and Great Belt)
15 = Öresund (The Sound)
14 + 15 = Danish Straits, not an integral part of the Baltic Sea

The northern part of the Baltic Sea is known as the Gulf of Bothnia, of which the northernmost part is the Bay of Bothnia or Bothnian Bay. The more rounded southern basin of the gulf is called Bothnian Sea and immediately to the south of it lies the Sea of Åland. The Gulf of Finland connects the Baltic Sea with Saint Petersburg. The Gulf of Riga lies between the Latvian capital city of Riga and the Estonian island of Saaremaa.

The Northern Baltic Sea lies between the Stockholm area, southwestern Finland, and Estonia. The Western and Eastern Gotland basins form the major parts of the Central Baltic Sea or Baltic proper. The Bornholm Basin is the area east of Bornholm, and the shallower Arkona Basin extends from Bornholm to the Danish isles of Falster and Zealand.

In the south, the Bay of Gdańsk lies east of the Hel Peninsula on the Polish coast and west of the Sambia Peninsula in Kaliningrad Oblast. The Bay of Pomerania lies north of the islands of Usedom/Uznam and Wolin, east of Rügen. Between Falster and the German coast lie the Bay of Mecklenburg and Bay of Lübeck. The westernmost part of the Baltic Sea is the Bay of Kiel. The three Danish straits, the Great Belt, the Little Belt and The Sound (Öresund/Øresund), connect the Baltic Sea with the Kattegat and Skagerrak strait in the North Sea.

Temperature and ice

 
Satellite image of the Baltic Sea in a mild winter
 
Traversing Baltic Sea and ice
 
On particularly cold winters, the coastal parts of the Baltic Sea freeze into ice thick enough to walk or ski on.

The water temperature of the Baltic Sea varies significantly depending on exact location, season and depth. At the Bornholm Basin, which is located directly east of the island of the same name, the surface temperature typically falls to 0–5 °C (32–41 °F) during the peak of the winter and rises to 15–20 °C (59–68 °F) during the peak of the summer, with an annual average of around 9–10 °C (48–50 °F).[30] A similar pattern can be seen in the Gotland Basin, which is located between the island of Gotland and Latvia. In the deep of these basins the temperature variations are smaller. At the bottom of the Bornholm Basin, deeper than 80 m (260 ft), the temperature typically is 1–10 °C (34–50 °F), and at the bottom of the Gotland Basin, at depths greater than 225 m (738 ft), the temperature typically is 4–7 °C (39–45 °F).[30] Generally, offshore locations, lower latitudes and islands maintain maritime climates, but adjacent to the water continental climates are common, especially on the Gulf of Finland. In the northern tributaries the climates transition from moderate continental to subarctic on the northernmost coastlines.

On the long-term average, the Baltic Sea is ice-covered at the annual maximum for about 45% of its surface area. The ice-covered area during such a typical winter includes the Gulf of Bothnia, the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Riga, the archipelago west of Estonia, the Stockholm archipelago, and the Archipelago Sea southwest of Finland. The remainder of the Baltic does not freeze during a normal winter, except sheltered bays and shallow lagoons such as the Curonian Lagoon. The ice reaches its maximum extent in February or March; typical ice thickness in the northernmost areas in the Bothnian Bay, the northern basin of the Gulf of Bothnia, is about 70 cm (28 in) for landfast sea ice. The thickness decreases farther south.

Freezing begins in the northern extremities of the Gulf of Bothnia typically in the middle of November, reaching the open waters of the Bothnian Bay in early January. The Bothnian Sea, the basin south of Kvarken, freezes on average in late February. The Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Riga freeze typically in late January. In 2011, the Gulf of Finland was completely frozen on 15 February.[31]

The ice extent depends on whether the winter is mild, moderate, or severe. In severe winters ice can form around southern Sweden and even in the Danish straits. According to the 18th-century natural historian William Derham, during the severe winters of 1703 and 1708, the ice cover reached as far as the Danish straits.[32] Frequently, parts of the Gulf of Bothnia and the Gulf of Finland are frozen, in addition to coastal fringes in more southerly locations such as the Gulf of Riga. This description meant that the whole of the Baltic Sea was covered with ice.

Since 1720, the Baltic Sea has frozen over entirely 20 times, most recently in early 1987, which was the most severe winter in Scandinavia since 1720. The ice then covered 400,000 km2 (150,000 sq mi). During the winter of 2010–11, which was quite severe compared to those of the last decades, the maximum ice cover was 315,000 km2 (122,000 sq mi), which was reached on 25 February 2011. The ice then extended from the north down to the northern tip of Gotland, with small ice-free areas on either side, and the east coast of the Baltic Sea was covered by an ice sheet about 25 to 100 km (16 to 62 mi) wide all the way to Gdańsk. This was brought about by a stagnant high-pressure area that lingered over central and northern Scandinavia from around 10 to 24 February. After this, strong southern winds pushed the ice further into the north, and much of the waters north of Gotland were again free of ice, which had then packed against the shores of southern Finland.[33] The effects of the afore-mentioned high-pressure area did not reach the southern parts of the Baltic Sea, and thus the entire sea did not freeze over. However, floating ice was additionally observed near Świnoujście harbor in January 2010.

In recent years before 2011, the Bothnian Bay and the Bothnian Sea were frozen with solid ice near the Baltic coast and dense floating ice far from it. In 2008, almost no ice formed except for a short period in March.[34]

 
Piles of drift ice on the shore of Puhtulaid, near Virtsu, Estonia, in late April

During winter, fast ice, which is attached to the shoreline, develops first, rendering ports unusable without the services of icebreakers. Level ice, ice sludge, pancake ice, and rafter ice form in the more open regions. The gleaming expanse of ice is similar to the Arctic, with wind-driven pack ice and ridges up to 15 m (49 ft). Offshore of the landfast ice, the ice remains very dynamic all year, and it is relatively easily moved around by winds and therefore forms pack ice, made up of large piles and ridges pushed against the landfast ice and shores.

In spring, the Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Bothnia normally thaw in late April, with some ice ridges persisting until May in the eastern extremities of the Gulf of Finland. In the northernmost reaches of the Bothnian Bay, ice usually stays until late May; by early June it is practically always gone. However, in the famine year of 1867 remnants of ice were observed as late as 17 July near Uddskär.[35] Even as far south as Øresund, remnants of ice have been observed in May on several occasions; near Taarbaek on 15 May 1942 and near Copenhagen on 11 May 1771. Drift ice was also observed on 11 May 1799.[36][37][38]

The ice cover is the main habitat for two large mammals, the grey seal (Halichoerus grypus) and the Baltic ringed seal (Pusa hispida botnica), both of which feed underneath the ice and breed on its surface. Of these two seals, only the Baltic ringed seal suffers when there is not adequate ice in the Baltic Sea, as it feeds its young only while on ice. The grey seal is adapted to reproducing also with no ice in the sea. The sea ice also harbors several species of algae that live in the bottom and inside unfrozen brine pockets in the ice.

Due to the often fluctuating winter temperatures between above and below freezing, the saltwater ice of the Baltic Sea can be treacherous and hazardous to walk on, in particular in comparison to the more stable fresh water-ice sheets in the interior lakes.

Hydrography

 
Depths of the Baltic Sea in meters

The Baltic Sea flows out through the Danish straits; however, the flow is complex. A surface layer of brackish water discharges 940 km3 (230 cu mi) per year into the North Sea. Due to the difference in salinity, by salinity permeation principle, a sub-surface layer of more saline water moving in the opposite direction brings in 475 km3 (114 cu mi) per year. It mixes very slowly with the upper waters, resulting in a salinity gradient from top to bottom, with most of the saltwater remaining below 40 to 70 m (130 to 230 ft) deep. The general circulation is anti-clockwise: northwards along its eastern boundary, and south along with the western one .[39]

The difference between the outflow and the inflow comes entirely from fresh water. More than 250 streams drain a basin of about 1,600,000 km2 (620,000 sq mi), contributing a volume of 660 km3 (160 cu mi) per year to the Baltic. They include the major rivers of north Europe, such as the Oder, the Vistula, the Neman, the Daugava and the Neva. Additional fresh water comes from the difference of precipitation less evaporation, which is positive.

An important source of salty water is infrequent inflows of North Sea water into the Baltic. Such inflows, important to the Baltic ecosystem because of the oxygen they transport into the Baltic deeps, used to happen regularly until the 1980s. In recent decades, they have become less frequent. The latest four occurred in 1983, 1993, 2003, and 2014 suggesting a new inter-inflow period of about ten years.

The water level is generally far more dependent on the regional wind situation than on tidal effects. However, tidal currents occur in narrow passages in the western parts of the Baltic Sea. Tides can reach 17 to 19 cm (6.7 to 7.5 in) in the Gulf of Finland.[40]

The significant wave height is generally much lower than that of the North Sea. Quite violent, sudden storms sweep the surface ten or more times a year, due to large transient temperature differences and a long reach of the wind. Seasonal winds also cause small changes in sea level, of the order of 0.5 m (1 ft 8 in) .[39] According to the media, during a storm in January 2017, an extreme wave above 14 m (46 ft) has been measured and significant wave height of around 8 m (26 ft) has been measured by the FMI. A numerical study has shown the presence of events with 8 to 10 m (26 to 33 ft) significant wave heights. Those extreme waves events can play an important role in the coastal zone on erosion and sea dynamics.[41]

Salinity

 
Baltic Sea near Klaipėda (Karklė).

The Baltic Sea is the world's largest inland brackish sea.[42] Only two other brackish waters are larger according to some measurements: The Black Sea is larger in both surface area and water volume, but most of it is located outside the continental shelf (only a small fraction is inland). The Caspian Sea is larger in water volume, but—despite its name—it is a lake rather than a sea.[42]

The Baltic Sea's salinity is much lower than that of ocean water (which averages 3.5%), as a result of abundant freshwater runoff from the surrounding land (rivers, streams and alike), combined with the shallowness of the sea itself; runoff contributes roughly one-fortieth its total volume per year, as the volume of the basin is about 21,000 km3 (5,000 cu mi) and yearly runoff is about 500 km3 (120 cu mi).[citation needed]

The open surface waters of the Baltic Sea "proper" generally have a salinity of 0.3 to 0.9%, which is border-line freshwater. The flow of freshwater into the sea from approximately two hundred rivers and the introduction of salt from the southwest builds up a gradient of salinity in the Baltic Sea. The highest surface salinities, generally 0.7–0.9%, are in the southwesternmost part of the Baltic, in the Arkona and Bornholm basins (the former located roughly between southeast Zealand and Bornholm, and the latter directly east of Bornholm). It gradually falls further east and north, reaching the lowest in the Bothnian Bay at around 0.3%.[43] Drinking the surface water of the Baltic as a means of survival would actually hydrate the body instead of dehydrating, as is the case with ocean water.[note 1][citation needed]

As saltwater is denser than freshwater, the bottom of the Baltic Sea is saltier than the surface. This creates a vertical stratification of the water column, a halocline, that represents a barrier to the exchange of oxygen and nutrients, and fosters completely separate maritime environments.[44] The difference between the bottom and surface salinities varies depending on location. Overall it follows the same southwest to east and north pattern as the surface. At the bottom of the Arkona Basin (equalling depths greater than 40 m or 130 ft) and Bornholm Basin (depths greater than 80 m or 260 ft) it is typically 1.4–1.8%. Further east and north the salinity at the bottom is consistently lower, being the lowest in Bothnian Bay (depths greater than 120 m or 390 ft) where it is slightly below 0.4%, or only marginally higher than the surface in the same region.[43]

In contrast, the salinity of the Danish straits, which connect the Baltic Sea and Kattegat, tends to be significantly higher, but with major variations from year to year. For example, the surface and bottom salinity in the Great Belt is typically around 2.0% and 2.8% respectively, which is only somewhat below that of the Kattegat.[43] The water surplus caused by the continuous inflow of rivers and streams to the Baltic Sea means that there generally is a flow of brackish water out through the Danish Straits to the Kattegat (and eventually the Atlantic).[45] Significant flows in the opposite direction, salt water from the Kattegat through the Danish Straits to the Baltic Sea, are less regular. From 1880 to 1980 inflows occurred on average six to seven times per decade. Since 1980 it has been much less frequent, although a very large inflow occurred in 2014.[30]

Major tributaries

The rating of mean discharges differs from the ranking of hydrological lengths (from the most distant source to the sea) and the rating of the nominal lengths. Göta älv, a tributary of the Kattegat, is not listed, as due to the northward upper low-salinity-flow in the sea, its water hardly reaches the Baltic proper:

Name Mean
Discharge
(m3/s)
Length (km) Basin (km2) States sharing the basin Longest watercourse
Neva 2500 74 (nominal)
860 (hydrological)
281,000 Russia, Finland (Ladoga-affluent Vuoksi) Suna (280 km) → Lake Onega (160 km) →
Svir (224 km) → Lake Ladoga (122 km) → Neva
Vistula 1080 1047 194,424 Poland, tributaries: Belarus, Ukraine, Slovakia Bug (774 km) → Narew (22 km) → Vistula (156 km) total 1204 km
Daugava 678 1020 87,900 Russia (source), Belarus, Latvia
Neman 678 937 98,200 Belarus (source), Lithuania, Russia
Kemijoki 556 550 (main river)
600 (river system)
51,127 Finland, Norway (source of Ounasjoki) longer tributary Kitinen
Oder 540 866 118,861 Czech Republic (source), Poland, Germany Warta (808 km) → Oder (180 km) total: 928 km
Lule älv 506 461 25,240 Sweden
Narva 415 77 (nominal)
652 (hydrological)
56,200 Russia (Source of Velikaya), Estonia Velikaya (430 km) → Lake Peipus (145 km) → Narva
Torne älv 388 520 (nominal)
630 (hydrological)
40,131 Norway (source), Sweden, Finland Válfojohka → Kamajåkka → Abiskojaure → Abiskojokk
(total 40 km) → Torneträsk (70 km) → Torne älv

Islands and archipelagoes

 
Skerries form an integral and typical part of many of the archipelagos of the Baltic Sea, such as these in the archipelago of Åland, Finland.
 
Aerial view of Bornholm, Denmark

Coastal countries

 
Population density in the Baltic Sea catchment area

Countries that border the sea: Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Sweden.

Countries lands in the outer drainage basin: Belarus, Czech Republic, Norway, Slovakia, Ukraine.

The Baltic Sea drainage basin is roughly four times the surface area of the sea itself. About 48% of the region is forested, with Sweden and Finland containing the majority of the forest, especially around the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland.

About 20% of the land is used for agriculture and pasture, mainly in Poland and around the edge of the Baltic Proper, in Germany, Denmark, and Sweden. About 17% of the basin is unused open land with another 8% of wetlands. Most of the latter are in the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland.

The rest of the land is heavily populated. About 85 million people live in the Baltic drainage basin, 15 million within 10 km (6 mi) of the coast and 29 million within 50 km (31 mi) of the coast. Around 22 million live in population centers of over 250,000. 90% of these are concentrated in the 10 km (6 mi) band around the coast. Of the nations containing all or part of the basin, Poland includes 45% of the 85 million, Russia 12%, Sweden 10% and the others less than 6% each.[46]

Cities

 
Stockholm in Sweden
 
Riga in Latvia
 
Helsinki in Finland
 
Gdańsk in Poland
 
Tallinn in Estonia

The biggest coastal cities (by population):

Other important ports:

Geology

 
Ancylus Lake around 8700 years BP. The relic of Scandinavian Glacier in white. The rivers Svea älv (Svea river) and Göta älv formed an outlet to the Atlantic.
 
Much of modern Finland is former seabed or archipelago: illustrated are sea levels immediately after the last ice age.

The Baltic Sea somewhat resembles a riverbed, with two tributaries, the Gulf of Finland and Gulf of Bothnia. Geological surveys show that before the Pleistocene, instead of the Baltic Sea, there was a wide plain around a great river that paleontologists call the Eridanos. Several Pleistocene glacial episodes scooped out the river bed into the sea basin. By the time of the last, or Eemian Stage (MIS 5e), the Eemian Sea was in place. Instead of a true sea, the Baltic can even today also be understood as the common estuary of all rivers flowing into it.

From that time the waters underwent a geologic history summarized under the names listed below. Many of the stages are named after marine animals (e.g. the Littorina mollusk) that are clear markers of changing water temperatures and salinity.

The factors that determined the sea's characteristics were the submergence or emergence of the region due to the weight of ice and subsequent isostatic readjustment, and the connecting channels it found to the North Sea-Atlantic, either through the straits of Denmark or at what are now the large lakes of Sweden, and the White Sea-Arctic Sea.

The land is still emerging isostatically from its depressed state, which was caused by the weight of ice during the last glaciation. The phenomenon is known as post-glacial rebound. Consequently, the surface area and the depth of the sea are diminishing. The uplift is about eight millimeters per year on the Finnish coast of the northernmost Gulf of Bothnia. In the area, the former seabed is only gently sloping, leading to large areas of land being reclaimed in what are, geologically speaking, relatively short periods (decades and centuries).

The "Baltic Sea anomaly"

The "Baltic Sea anomaly" is a feature on an indistinct sonar image taken by Swedish salvage divers on the floor of the northern Baltic Sea in June 2011. The treasure hunters suggested the image showed an object with unusual features of seemingly extraordinary origin. Speculation published in tabloid newspapers claimed that the object was a sunken UFO. A consensus of experts and scientists say that the image most likely shows a natural geological formation.[48][49][50][51][52]

Biology

Fauna and flora

The fauna of the Baltic Sea is a mixture of marine and freshwater species. Among marine fishes are Atlantic cod, Atlantic herring, European hake, European plaice, European flounder, shorthorn sculpin and turbot, and examples of freshwater species include European perch, northern pike, whitefish and common roach. Freshwater species may occur at outflows of rivers or streams in all coastal sections of the Baltic Sea. Otherwise, marine species dominate in most sections of the Baltic, at least as far north as Gävle, where less than one-tenth are freshwater species. Further north the pattern is inverted. In the Bothnian Bay, roughly two-thirds of the species are freshwater. In the far north of this bay, saltwater species are almost entirely absent.[30] For example, the common starfish and shore crab, two species that are very widespread along European coasts, are both unable to cope with the significantly lower salinity. Their range limit is west of Bornholm, meaning that they are absent from the vast majority of the Baltic Sea.[30] Some marine species, like the Atlantic cod and European flounder, can survive at relatively low salinities but need higher salinities to breed, which therefore occurs in deeper parts of the Baltic Sea.[53][54]

There is a decrease in species richness from the Danish belts to the Gulf of Bothnia. The decreasing salinity along this path causes restrictions in both physiology and habitats.[55] At more than 600 species of invertebrates, fish, aquatic mammals, aquatic birds and macrophytes, the Arkona Basin (roughly between southeast Zealand and Bornholm) is far richer than other more eastern and northern basins in the Baltic Sea, which all have less than 400 species from these groups, with the exception of the Gulf of Finland with more than 750 species. However, even the most diverse sections of the Baltic Sea have far fewer species than the almost-full saltwater Kattegat, which is home to more than 1600 species from these groups.[30] The lack of tides has affected the marine species as compared with the Atlantic.

Since the Baltic Sea is so young there are only two or three known endemic species: the brown alga Fucus radicans and the flounder Platichthys solemdali. Both appear to have evolved in the Baltic basin and were only recognized as species in 2005 and 2018 respectively, having formerly been confused with more widespread relatives.[54][56] The tiny Copenhagen cockle (Parvicardium hauniense), a rare mussel, is sometimes considered endemic, but has now been recorded in the Mediterranean.[57] However, some consider non-Baltic records to be misidentifications of juvenile lagoon cockles (Cerastoderma glaucum).[58] Several widespread marine species have distinctive subpopulations in the Baltic Sea adapted to the low salinity, such as the Baltic Sea forms of the Atlantic herring and lumpsucker, which are smaller than the widespread forms in the North Atlantic.[45]

A peculiar feature of the fauna is that it contains a number of glacial relict species, isolated populations of arctic species which have remained in the Baltic Sea since the last glaciation, such as the large isopod Saduria entomon, the Baltic subspecies of ringed seal, and the fourhorn sculpin. Some of these relicts are derived from glacial lakes, such as Monoporeia affinis, which is a main element in the benthic fauna of the low-salinity Bothnian Bay.

Cetaceans in the Baltic Sea are monitored by the countries bordering the sea and data compiled by various intergovernmental bodies, such as ASCOBANS. A critically endangered population of harbor porpoise inhabit the Baltic proper, whereas the species is abundant in the outer Baltiuc (Western Baltic and Danish Straits) and occasionally oceanic and out-of-range species such as minke whales,[59] bottlenose dolphins,[60] beluga whales,[61] orcas,[62] and beaked whales[63] visit the waters. In recent years, very small, but with increasing rates, fin whales[64][65][66][67] and humpback whales migrate into Baltic sea including mother and calf pair.[68] Now extinct Atlantic grey whales (remains found from Gräsö along Bothnian Sea/southern Bothnian Gulf[69] and Ystad[70]) and eastern population of North Atlantic right whales that is facing functional extinction[71] once migrated into Baltic Sea.[72]

Other notable megafauna include the basking sharks.[73]

Environmental status

 
Satellite photo of the Baltic Sea surrounding Gotland, Sweden, with algae bloom (phytoplankton) swirling in the water

Satellite images taken in July 2010 revealed a massive algal bloom covering 377,000 square kilometres (146,000 sq mi) in the Baltic Sea. The area of the bloom extended from Germany and Poland to Finland. Researchers of the phenomenon have indicated that algal blooms have occurred every summer for decades. Fertilizer runoff from surrounding agricultural land has exacerbated the problem and led to increased eutrophication.[74]

Approximately 100,000 km2 (38,610 sq mi) of the Baltic's seafloor (a quarter of its total area) is a variable dead zone. The more saline (and therefore denser) water remains on the bottom, isolating it from surface waters and the atmosphere. This leads to decreased oxygen concentrations within the zone. It is mainly bacteria that grow in it, digesting organic material and releasing hydrogen sulfide. Because of this large anaerobic zone, the seafloor ecology differs from that of the neighboring Atlantic.

Plans to artificially oxygenate areas of the Baltic that have experienced eutrophication have been proposed by the University of Gothenburg and Inocean AB. The proposal intends to use wind-driven pumps to inject oxygen (air) into waters at, or around, 130m below sea level.[75]

After World War II, Germany had to be disarmed and large quantities of ammunition stockpiles were disposed directly into the Baltic Sea and the North Sea. Environmental experts and marine biologists warn that these ammunition dumps pose a major environmental threat with potentially life-threatening consequences to the health and safety of humans on the coastlines of these seas.[76]

Economy

 
Pedestrian pier in Sellin, Germany

Construction of the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark (completed 1997) and the Øresund Bridge-Tunnel (completed 1999), linking Denmark with Sweden, provided a highway and railroad connection between Sweden and the Danish mainland (the Jutland Peninsula, precisely the Zealand). The undersea tunnel of the Øresund Bridge-Tunnel provides for navigation of large ships into and out of the Baltic Sea. The Baltic Sea is the main trade route for the export of Russian petroleum. Many of the countries neighboring the Baltic Sea have been concerned about this since a major oil leak in a seagoing tanker would be disastrous for the Baltic—given the slow exchange of water.[citation needed] The tourism industry surrounding the Baltic Sea is naturally concerned about oil pollution.[citation needed]

Much shipbuilding is carried out in the shipyards around the Baltic Sea. The largest shipyards are at Gdańsk, Gdynia, and Szczecin, Poland; Kiel, Germany; Karlskrona and Malmö, Sweden; Rauma, Turku, and Helsinki, Finland; Riga, Ventspils, and Liepāja, Latvia; Klaipėda, Lithuania; and Saint Petersburg, Russia.

There are several cargo and passenger ferries that operate on the Baltic Sea, such as Scandlines, Silja Line, Polferries, the Viking Line, Tallink, and Superfast Ferries.

Construction of the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link between Denmark and Germany is due to finish in 2029. It will be a three-bore tunnel carrying four motorway lanes and two rail tracks.

Tourism

 
Svetlogorsk resort town in Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia
 
Mrzeżyno beach in Poland

The Helsinki Convention

1974 Convention

For the first time ever, all the sources of pollution around an entire sea were made subject to a single convention, signed in 1974 by the then seven Baltic coastal states. The 1974 Convention entered into force on 3 May 1980.

1992 Convention

In the light of political changes and developments in international environmental and maritime law, a new convention was signed in 1992 by all the states bordering on the Baltic Sea, and the European Community. After ratification, the Convention entered into force on 17 January 2000. The Convention covers the whole of the Baltic Sea area, including inland waters and the water of the sea itself, as well as the seabed. Measures are also taken in the whole catchment area of the Baltic Sea to reduce land-based pollution. The convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area, 1992, entered into force on 17 January 2000.

The governing body of the convention is the Helsinki Commission,[77] also known as HELCOM, or Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission. The present contracting parties are Denmark, Estonia, the European Community, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, and Sweden.

The ratification instruments were deposited by the European Community, Germany, Latvia and Sweden in 1994, by Estonia and Finland in 1995, by Denmark in 1996, by Lithuania in 1997, and by Poland and Russia in November 1999.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A healthy serum concentration of sodium is around 0.8–0.85%, and healthy kidneys can concentrate salt in urine to at least 1.4%.

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  74. ^ "Satellite spies vast algal bloom in Baltic Sea". BBC News. 23 July 2010. from the original on 26 July 2010. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  75. ^ "Oxygenation at a Depth of 120 Meters Could Save the Baltic Sea, Researchers Demonstrate". Science Daily. from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  76. ^ "Ticking time bombs on the bottom of the North and Baltic Sea". DW.COM. 23 August 2017. from the original on 4 June 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  77. ^ Helcom : Welcome 6 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Helcom.fi. Retrieved on 23 June 2011.

Bibliography

  • Alhonen, Pentti (1966). "Baltic Sea". In Fairbridge, Rhodes (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Oceanography. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Company. pp. 87–91.
  • Schmitt, Rüdiger (1989). "BLACK SEA". Black Sea – Encyclopaedia Iranica. Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. IV, Fasc. 3. pp. 310–313.

Further reading

  • Norbert Götz. "Spatial Politics and Fuzzy Regionalism: The Case of the Baltic Sea Area." Baltic Worlds 9 (2016) 3: 54–67.
  • Aarno Voipio (ed., 1981): "The Baltic Sea." Elsevier Oceanography Series, vol. 30, Elsevier Scientific Publishing, 418 p, ISBN 0-444-41884-9
  • Ojaveer, H.; Jaanus, A.; MacKenzie, B. R.; Martin, G.; Olenin, S.; et al. (2010). "Status of Biodiversity in the Baltic Sea". PLoS ONE. 5 (9): e12467. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...512467O. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012467. PMC 2931693. PMID 20824189.
  • Peter, Bruce (2009). Baltic Ferries. Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608057.
  • The BACC II Author Team; et al. (2015). Second Assessment of Climate Change for the Baltic Sea Basin. Regional Climate Studies. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-16006-1. ISBN 978-3-319-16006-1. S2CID 127011711.

Historical

  • Bogucka, Maria. "The Role of Baltic Trade in European Development from the XVIth to the XVIIIth Centuries". Journal of European Economic History 9 (1980): 5–20.
  • Davey, James. The Transformation of British Naval Strategy: Seapower and Supply in Northern Europe, 1808–1812 (Boydell, 2012).
  • Dickson, Henry Newton (1911). "Baltic Sea" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). pp. 286–287.
  • Fedorowicz, Jan K. England's Baltic Trade in the Early Seventeenth Century: A Study in Anglo-Polish Commercial Diplomacy (Cambridge UP, 2008).
  • Frost, Robert I. The Northern Wars: War, State, and Society in Northeastern Europe, 1558–1721 (Longman, 2000).
  • Grainger, John D. The British Navy in the Baltic (Boydell, 2014).
  • Kent, Heinz S. K. War and Trade in Northern Seas: Anglo-Scandinavian Economic Relations in the Mid Eighteenth Century (Cambridge UP, 1973).
  • Koningsbrugge, Hans van. "In War and Peace: The Dutch and the Baltic in Early Modern Times". Tijdschrift voor Skandinavistiek 16 (1995): 189–200.
  • Lindblad, Jan Thomas. "Structural Change in the Dutch Trade in the Baltic in the Eighteenth Century". Scandinavian Economic History Review 33 (1985): 193–207.
  • Lisk, Jill. The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic, 1600–1725 (U of London Press, 1967).
  • Roberts, Michael. The Early Vasas: A History of Sweden, 1523–1611 (Cambridge UP, 1968).
  • Rystad, Göran, Klaus-R. Böhme, and Wilhelm M. Carlgren, eds. In Quest of Trade and Security: The Baltic in Power Politics, 1500–1990. Vol. 1, 1500–1890. Stockholm: Probus, 1994.
  • Salmon, Patrick, and Tony Barrow, eds. Britain and the Baltic: Studies in Commercial, Political and Cultural Relations (Sunderland University Press, 2003).
  • Stiles, Andrina. Sweden and the Baltic 1523–1721 (1992).
  • Thomson, Erik. "Beyond the Military State: Sweden's Great Power Period in Recent Historiography". History Compass 9 (2011): 269–283. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2011.00761.x
  • Tielhof, Milja van. The "Mother of All Trades": The Baltic Grain Trade in Amsterdam from the Late 16th to Early 19th Century. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2002.
  • Warner, Richard. "British Merchants and Russian Men-of-War: The Rise of the Russian Baltic Fleet". In Peter the Great and the West: New Perspectives. Edited by Lindsey Hughes, 105–117. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001.

External links

  • The Baltic Sea Portal – a site maintained by the. Archived from the original on 14 February 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2007. (FIMR) (in English, Finnish, Swedish and Estonian)
  • in the Baltic
  • – Prehistory of the Baltic from the Polish Geological Institute
  • Late Weichselian and Holocene shore displacement history of the Baltic Sea in Finland – more prehistory of the Baltic from the Department of Geography of the University of Helsinki
  • Can a New Cleanup Plan Save the Sea? – spiegel.de
  • HELCOM is the governing body of the "Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area"
  • Baltice.org – information related to winter navigation in the Baltic Sea.
  • – Marine weather forecasts
  • – A short film (55'), showing the coastline and the major German cities at the Baltic sea.

baltic, atlantic, ocean, that, enclosed, denmark, estonia, finland, germany, latvia, lithuania, poland, russia, sweden, north, central, european, plain, regionmap, regionlocationeuropecoordinates58, coordinates, slightly, east, north, gotland, island, typeseap. The Baltic Sea is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that is enclosed by Denmark Estonia Finland Germany Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia Sweden and the North and Central European Plain Baltic Sea regionMap of the Baltic Sea regionLocationEuropeCoordinates58 N 20 E 58 N 20 E 58 20 Coordinates 58 N 20 E 58 N 20 E 58 20 slightly east of the north tip of Gotland Island TypeSeaPrimary inflowsDaugava Kemijoki Neman Nemunas Neva Oder Vistula Lule Narva TornePrimary outflowsThe Danish StraitsCatchment area1 641 650 km2 633 840 sq mi Basin countriesCoastal Denmark Estonia Finland Germany Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia SwedenNon coastal Belarus Czech Republic Norway Slovakia Ukraine 1 Max length1 601 km 995 mi Max width193 km 120 mi Surface area377 000 km2 146 000 sq mi Average depth55 m 180 ft Max depth459 m 1 506 ft Water volume21 700 km3 1 76 1010 acre ft Residence time25 yearsShore length18 000 km 5 000 mi IslandsAbruka Aegna Archipelago Sea Islands Aland Bornholm Danholm Ertholmene Falster Faro Fehmarn Gotland Hailuoto Hiddensee Hiiumaa Holmoarna Kassari Kesselaid Kihnu Kimitoon Koinastu Kotlin Laajasalo Lauttasaari Lidingo Ljustero Lolland Manilaid Mohni Mon Muhu Poel Prangli Osmussaar Oland Replot Ruhnu Rugen Saaremaa Stora Karlso Suomenlinna Suur Pakri and Vaike Pakri Ummanz Usedom Uznam Vaddo Varmdo Vilsandi Vormsi WolinSettlementsCopenhagen Gdansk Gdynia Haapsalu Helsinki Jurmala Kaliningrad Kiel Klaipeda Kuressaare Kardla Lubeck Lulea Mariehamn Oulu Palanga Paldiski Parnu Riga Rostock Saint Petersburg Liepaja Stockholm Tallinn Turku VentspilsReferences 2 1 Shore length is not a well defined measure The sea stretches from 53 N to 66 N latitude and from 10 E to 30 E longitude It is a shelf sea and marginal sea of the Atlantic with limited water exchange between the two making it an inland sea The Baltic Sea drains through the Danish Straits into the Kattegat by way of the Oresund Great Belt and Little Belt It includes the Gulf of Bothnia the Bay of Bothnia the Gulf of Finland the Gulf of Riga and the Bay of Gdansk The Baltic Proper is bordered on its northern edge at latitude 60 N by Aland and the Gulf of Bothnia on its northeastern edge by the Gulf of Finland on its eastern edge by the Gulf of Riga and in the west by the Swedish part of the southern Scandinavian Peninsula The Baltic Sea is connected by artificial waterways to the White Sea via the White Sea Baltic Canal and to the German Bight of the North Sea via the Kiel Canal Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 Administration 1 2 Traffic history 1 3 Oceanography 1 4 Hydrography and biology 2 Etymology and nomenclature 2 1 Name in other languages 3 History 3 1 Classical world 3 2 Middle Ages 3 3 An arena of conflict 3 4 Since World War II 3 5 Storm floods 4 Geography 4 1 Geophysical data 4 2 Extent 4 3 Subdivisions 4 4 Temperature and ice 4 5 Hydrography 4 6 Salinity 4 7 Major tributaries 4 8 Islands and archipelagoes 4 9 Coastal countries 4 9 1 Cities 5 Geology 5 1 The Baltic Sea anomaly 6 Biology 6 1 Fauna and flora 6 2 Environmental status 7 Economy 7 1 Tourism 8 The Helsinki Convention 8 1 1974 Convention 8 2 1992 Convention 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 Further reading 12 1 Historical 13 External linksDefinitions Edit Danish Straits and southwestern Baltic Sea Aland between Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia Administration Edit The Helsinki Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area includes the Baltic Sea and the Kattegat without calling Kattegat a part of the Baltic Sea For the purposes of this Convention the Baltic Sea Area shall be the Baltic Sea and the Entrance to the Baltic Sea bounded by the parallel of the Skaw in the Skagerrak at 57 44 43 N 3 Traffic history Edit Historically the Kingdom of Denmark collected Sound Dues from ships at the border between the ocean and the land locked Baltic Sea in tandem in the Oresund at Kronborg castle near Helsingor in the Great Belt at Nyborg and in the Little Belt at its narrowest part then Fredericia after that stronghold was built The narrowest part of Little Belt is the Middelfart Sund near Middelfart 4 Oceanography Edit Geographers widely agree that the preferred physical border of the Baltic is a line drawn through the southern Danish islands Drogden Sill and Langeland 5 The Drogden Sill is situated north of Koge Bugt and connects Dragor in the south of Copenhagen to Malmo it is used by the Oresund Bridge including the Drogden Tunnel By this definition the Danish Straits is part of the entrance but the Bay of Mecklenburg and the Bay of Kiel are parts of the Baltic Sea Another usual border is the line between Falsterbo Sweden and Stevns Klint Denmark as this is the southern border of Oresund It s also the border between the shallow southern Oresund with a typical depth of 5 10 meters only and notably deeper water Hydrography and biology Edit Drogden Sill depth of 7 m 23 ft sets a limit to Oresund and Darss Sill depth of 18 m 59 ft and a limit to the Belt Sea 6 The shallow sills are obstacles to the flow of heavy salt water from the Kattegat into the basins around Bornholm and Gotland The Kattegat and the southwestern Baltic Sea are well oxygenated and have a rich biology The remainder of the Sea is brackish poor in oxygen and in species Thus statistically the more of the entrance that is included in its definition the healthier the Baltic appears conversely the more narrowly it is defined the more endangered its biology appears Etymology and nomenclature EditTacitus called it the Suebic Sea Latin Mare Suebicum after the Germanic people of the Suebi 7 8 and Ptolemy Sarmatian Ocean after the Sarmatians 9 but the first to name it the Baltic Sea Medieval Latin Mare Balticum was the eleventh century German chronicler Adam of Bremen The origin of the latter name is speculative and it was adopted into Slavic and Finnic languages spoken around the sea very likely due to the role of Medieval Latin in cartography It might be connected to the Germanic word belt a name used for two of the Danish straits the Belts while others claim it to be directly derived from the source of the Germanic word Latin balteus belt 10 Adam of Bremen himself compared the sea with a belt stating that it is so named because it stretches through the land as a belt Balticus eo quod in modum baltei longo tractu per Scithicas regiones tendatur usque in Greciam He might also have been influenced by the name of a legendary island mentioned in the Natural History of Pliny the Elder Pliny mentions an island named Baltia or Balcia with reference to accounts of Pytheas and Xenophon It is possible that Pliny refers to an island named Basilia the royal in On the Ocean by Pytheas Baltia also might be derived from belt and therein mean near belt of sea strait Others have suggested that the name of the island originates from the Proto Indo European root bʰel meaning white fair 11 which may echo the naming of seas after colours relating to the cardinal points as per Black Sea and Red Sea 12 This bʰel root and basic meaning were retained in Lithuanian as baltas Latvian as balts and Slavic as bely On this basis a related hypothesis holds that the name originated from this Indo European root via a Baltic language such as Lithuanian 13 Another explanation is that while derived from the aforementioned root the name of the sea is related to names for various forms of water and related substances in several European languages that might have been originally associated with colors found in swamps compare Proto Slavic bolto swamp Yet another explanation is that the name originally meant enclosed sea bay as opposed to open sea 14 In the Middle Ages the sea was known by a variety of names The name Baltic Sea became dominant only after 1600 Usage of Baltic and similar terms to denote the region east of the sea started only in the 19th century Name in other languages Edit The Baltic Sea was known in ancient Latin language sources as Mare Suebicum or even Mare Germanicum 15 Older native names in languages that used to be spoken on the shores of the sea or near it usually indicate the geographical location of the sea in Germanic languages or its size in relation to smaller gulfs in Old Latvian or tribes associated with it in Old Russian the sea was known as the Varanghian Sea In modern languages it is known by the equivalents of East Sea West Sea or Baltic Sea in different languages Baltic Sea is used in Modern English in the Baltic languages Latvian Baltijas jura in Old Latvian it was referred to as the Big Sea while the present day Gulf of Riga was referred to as the Little Sea and Lithuanian Baltijos jura in Latin Mare Balticum and the Romance languages French Mer Baltique Italian Mar Baltico Portuguese Mar Baltico Romanian Marea Baltică and Spanish Mar Baltico in Greek Baltikh 8alassa Valtiki Thalassa in Albanian Deti Balltik in Welsh Mor Baltig in the Slavic languages Polish Morze Baltyckie or Baltyk Czech Baltske more or Balt Slovenian Baltsko morje Bulgarian Baltijsko more Baltijsko More Kashubian Bolt Macedonian Baltichko More Balticko More Ukrainian Baltijske more Baltijs ke More Belarusian Baltyjskae mora Baltyjskaje Mora Russian Baltijskoe more Baltiyskoye More and Serbo Croatian Balticko more Baltichko more in Hungarian Balti tenger In Germanic languages except English East Sea is used as in Afrikaans Oossee Danish Ostersoen ˈostɐˌsoˀn Dutch Oostzee German Ostsee Low German Oostsee Icelandic and Faroese Eystrasalt Norwegian Bokmal Ostersjoen ˈo steˌʂoːn Nynorsk Austersjoen and Swedish Ostersjon In Old English it was known as Ostsǣ also in Hungarian the former name was Keleti tenger East sea due to German influence In addition Finnish a Finnic language uses the term Itameri East Sea possibly a calque from a Germanic language As the Baltic is not particularly eastward in relation to Finland the use of this term may be a leftover from the period of Swedish rule In another Finnic language Estonian it is called the West Sea Laanemeri with the correct geography the sea is west of Estonia In South Estonian it has the meaning of both West Sea and Evening Sea Odagumeri History EditClassical world Edit At the time of the Roman Empire the Baltic Sea was known as the Mare Suebicum or Mare Sarmaticum Tacitus in his AD 98 Agricola and Germania described the Mare Suebicum named for the Suebi tribe during the spring months as a brackish sea where the ice broke apart and chunks floated about The Suebi eventually migrated southwest to temporarily reside in the Rhineland area of modern Germany where their name survives in the historic region known as Swabia Jordanes called it the Germanic Sea in his work the Getica Middle Ages Edit Cape Arkona on the island of Rugen in Germany was a sacred site of the Rani tribe before Christianization In the early Middle Ages Norse Scandinavian merchants built a trade empire all around the Baltic Later the Norse fought for control of the Baltic against Wendish tribes dwelling on the southern shore The Norse also used the rivers of Russia for trade routes finding their way eventually to the Black Sea and southern Russia This Norse dominated period is referred to as the Viking Age Since the Viking Age the Scandinavians have referred to the Baltic Sea as Austmarr Eastern Lake Eastern Sea appears in the Heimskringla and Eystra salt appears in Sorla thattr Saxo Grammaticus recorded in Gesta Danorum an older name Gandvik vik being Old Norse for bay which implies that the Vikings correctly regarded it as an inlet of the sea Another form of the name Grandvik attested in at least one English translation of Gesta Danorum is likely to be a misspelling In addition to fish the sea also provides amber especially from its southern shores within today s borders of Poland Russia and Lithuania First mentions of amber deposits on the South Coast of the Baltic Sea date back to the 12th century 16 The bordering countries have also traditionally exported lumber wood tar flax hemp and furs by ship across the Baltic Sweden had from early medieval times exported iron and silver mined there while Poland had and still has extensive salt mines Thus the Baltic Sea has long been crossed by much merchant shipping The lands on the Baltic s eastern shore were among the last in Europe to be converted to Christianity This finally happened during the Northern Crusades Finland in the twelfth century by Swedes and what are now Estonia and Latvia in the early thirteenth century by Danes and Germans Livonian Brothers of the Sword The Teutonic Order gained control over parts of the southern and eastern shore of the Baltic Sea where they set up their monastic state Lithuania was the last European state to convert to Christianity An arena of conflict Edit Main trading routes of the Hanseatic League Hanse In 1649 the settlement of the Latvian speaking Kursenieki spanned from Klaipeda to Gdansk along the coast of the Baltic Sea In the period between the 8th and 14th centuries there was much piracy in the Baltic from the coasts of Pomerania and Prussia and the Victual Brothers held Gotland Starting in the 11th century the southern and eastern shores of the Baltic were settled by migrants mainly from Germany a movement called the Ostsiedlung east settling Other settlers were from the Netherlands Denmark and Scotland The Polabian Slavs were gradually assimilated by the Germans 17 Denmark gradually gained control over most of the Baltic coast until she lost much of her possessions after being defeated in the 1227 Battle of Bornhoved The naval Battle of the Sound took place on 8 November 1658 during the Dano Swedish War The burning Cap Arcona shortly after the attacks 3 May 1945 Only 350 survived of the 4 500 prisoners who had been aboard In the 13th to 16th centuries the strongest economic force in Northern Europe was the Hanseatic League a federation of merchant cities around the Baltic Sea and the North Sea In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries Poland Denmark and Sweden fought wars for Dominium maris baltici Lordship over the Baltic Sea Eventually it was Sweden that virtually encompassed the Baltic Sea In Sweden the sea was then referred to as Mare Nostrum Balticum Our Baltic Sea The goal of Swedish warfare during the 17th century was to make the Baltic Sea an all Swedish sea Ett Svenskt innanhav something that was accomplished except the part between Riga in Latvia and Stettin in Pomerania However the Dutch dominated the Baltic trade in the seventeenth century In the eighteenth century Russia and Prussia became the leading powers over the sea Sweden s defeat in the Great Northern War brought Russia to the eastern coast Russia became and remained a dominating power in the Baltic Russia s Peter the Great saw the strategic importance of the Baltic and decided to found his new capital Saint Petersburg at the mouth of the Neva river at the east end of the Gulf of Finland There was much trading not just within the Baltic region but also with the North Sea region especially eastern England and the Netherlands their fleets needed the Baltic timber tar flax and hemp During the Crimean War a joint British and French fleet attacked the Russian fortresses in the Baltic the case is also known as the Aland War They bombarded Sveaborg which guards Helsinki and Kronstadt which guards Saint Petersburg and they destroyed Bomarsund in Aland After the unification of Germany in 1871 the whole southern coast became German World War I was partly fought in the Baltic Sea After 1920 Poland was granted access to the Baltic Sea at the expense of Germany by the Polish Corridor and enlarged the port of Gdynia in rivalry with the port of the Free City of Danzig After the Nazis rise to power Germany reclaimed the Memelland and after the outbreak of the Eastern Front World War II occupied the Baltic states In 1945 the Baltic Sea became a mass grave for retreating soldiers and refugees on torpedoed troop transports The sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff remains the worst maritime disaster in history killing very roughly 9 000 people In 2005 a Russian group of scientists found over five thousand airplane wrecks sunken warships and other material mainly from World War II on the bottom of the sea Since World War II Edit Since the end of World War II various nations including the Soviet Union the United Kingdom and the United States have disposed of chemical weapons in the Baltic Sea raising concerns of environmental contamination 18 Today fishermen occasionally find some of these materials the most recent available report from the Helsinki Commission notes that four small scale catches of chemical munitions representing approximately 105 kg 231 lb of material were reported in 2005 This is a reduction from the 25 incidents representing 1 110 kg 2 450 lb of material in 2003 19 Until now the U S Government refuses to disclose the exact coordinates of the wreck sites Deteriorating bottles leak mustard gas and other substances thus slowly poisoning a substantial part of the Baltic Sea After 1945 the German population was expelled from all areas east of the Oder Neisse line making room for new Polish and Russian settlement Poland gained most of the southern shore The Soviet Union gained another access to the Baltic with the Kaliningrad Oblast that had been part of German settled East Prussia The Baltic states on the eastern shore were annexed by the Soviet Union The Baltic then separated opposing military blocs NATO and the Warsaw Pact Neutral Sweden developed incident weapons to defend its territorial waters after the Swedish submarine incidents 20 This border status restricted trade and travel It ended only after the collapse of the Communist regimes in Central and Eastern Europe in the late 1980s In 2023 Finland joined NATO 21 Since May 2004 with the accession of the Baltic states and Poland the Baltic Sea has been almost entirely surrounded by countries of the European Union EU The remaining non EU shore areas are Russian the Saint Petersburg area and the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave Winter storms begin arriving in the region during October These have caused numerous shipwrecks and contributed to the extreme difficulties of rescuing passengers of the ferry M S Estonia en route from Tallinn Estonia to Stockholm Sweden in September 1994 which claimed the lives of 852 people Older wood based shipwrecks such as the Vasa tend to remain well preserved as the Baltic s cold and brackish water does not suit the shipworm Storm floods Edit Storm surge floods are generally taken to occur when the water level is more than one metre above normal In Warnemunde about 110 floods occurred from 1950 to 2000 an average of just over two per year 22 Historic flood events were the All Saints Flood of 1304 and other floods in the years 1320 1449 1625 1694 1784 and 1825 Little is known of their extent 23 From 1872 there exist regular and reliable records of water levels in the Baltic Sea The highest was the flood of 1872 when the water was an average of 2 43 m 8 ft 0 in above sea level at Warnemunde and a maximum of 2 83 m 9 ft 3 in above sea level in Warnemunde In the last very heavy floods the average water levels reached 1 88 m 6 ft 2 in above sea level in 1904 1 89 m 6 ft 2 in in 1913 1 73 m 5 ft 8 in in January 1954 1 68 m 5 ft 6 in on 2 4 November 1995 and 1 65 m 5 ft 5 in on 21 February 2002 24 Geography EditGeophysical data Edit Baltic drainage basins catchment area with depth elevation major rivers and lakes Curonian Spit in Kaliningrad Oblast Russia An arm of the North Atlantic Ocean the Baltic Sea is enclosed by Sweden and Denmark to the west Finland to the northeast and the Baltic countries to the southeast It is about 1 600 km 990 mi long an average of 193 km 120 mi wide and an average of 55 metres 180 ft deep The maximum depth is 459 m 1 506 ft which is on the Swedish side of the center The surface area is about 349 644 km2 134 998 sq mi 25 and the volume is about 20 000 km3 4 800 cu mi The periphery amounts to about 8 000 km 5 000 mi of coastline 26 The Baltic Sea is one of the largest brackish inland seas by area and occupies a basin a Zungenbecken formed by glacial erosion during the last few ice ages Physical characteristics of the Baltic Sea its main sub regions and the transition zone to the Skagerrak North Sea area 27 Sub area Area Volume Maximum depth Average depthkm2 km3 m mBaltic proper 211 069 13 045 459 62 1Gulf of Bothnia 115 516 6 389 230 60 2Gulf of Finland 29 600 1 100 123 38 0Gulf of Riga 16 300 424 gt 60 26 0Belt Sea Kattegat 42 408 802 109 18 9Total Baltic Sea 415 266 21 721 459 52 3Extent Edit The International Hydrographic Organization defines the limits of the Baltic Sea as follows 28 Bordered by the coasts of Germany Denmark Poland Sweden Finland Russia Estonia Latvia and Lithuania it extends north eastward of the following limits In the Little Belt A line joining Falshoft 54 47 N 9 57 5 E 54 783 N 9 9583 E 54 783 9 9583 and Vejsnaes Nakke AEro 54 49 N 10 26 E 54 817 N 10 433 E 54 817 10 433 In the Great Belt A line joining Gulstav South extreme of Langeland Island and Kappel Kirke 54 46 N 11 01 E 54 767 N 11 017 E 54 767 11 017 on Island of Lolland In the Guldborg Sound A line joining Flinthorne Rev and Skjelby 54 38 N 11 53 E 54 633 N 11 883 E 54 633 11 883 In the Sound A line joining Stevns Lighthouse 55 17 N 12 27 E 55 283 N 12 450 E 55 283 12 450 and Falsterbo Point 55 23 N 12 49 E 55 383 N 12 817 E 55 383 12 817 Subdivisions Edit Regions and basins of the Baltic Sea 29 1 Bothnian Bay2 Bothnian Sea1 2 Gulf of Bothnia partly also 3 amp 43 Archipelago Sea4 Aland Sea5 Gulf of Finland6 Northern Baltic Proper7 Western Gotland Basin8 Eastern Gotland Basin9 Gulf of Riga10 Bay of Gdansk Gdansk Basin11 Bornholm Basin and Hano Bight12 Arkona Basin6 12 Baltic Proper13 Kattegat not an integral part of the Baltic Sea14 Belt Sea Little Belt and Great Belt 15 Oresund The Sound 14 15 Danish Straits not an integral part of the Baltic Sea The northern part of the Baltic Sea is known as the Gulf of Bothnia of which the northernmost part is the Bay of Bothnia or Bothnian Bay The more rounded southern basin of the gulf is called Bothnian Sea and immediately to the south of it lies the Sea of Aland The Gulf of Finland connects the Baltic Sea with Saint Petersburg The Gulf of Riga lies between the Latvian capital city of Riga and the Estonian island of Saaremaa The Northern Baltic Sea lies between the Stockholm area southwestern Finland and Estonia The Western and Eastern Gotland basins form the major parts of the Central Baltic Sea or Baltic proper The Bornholm Basin is the area east of Bornholm and the shallower Arkona Basin extends from Bornholm to the Danish isles of Falster and Zealand In the south the Bay of Gdansk lies east of the Hel Peninsula on the Polish coast and west of the Sambia Peninsula in Kaliningrad Oblast The Bay of Pomerania lies north of the islands of Usedom Uznam and Wolin east of Rugen Between Falster and the German coast lie the Bay of Mecklenburg and Bay of Lubeck The westernmost part of the Baltic Sea is the Bay of Kiel The three Danish straits the Great Belt the Little Belt and The Sound Oresund Oresund connect the Baltic Sea with the Kattegat and Skagerrak strait in the North Sea Temperature and ice Edit Satellite image of the Baltic Sea in a mild winter Traversing Baltic Sea and ice On particularly cold winters the coastal parts of the Baltic Sea freeze into ice thick enough to walk or ski on The water temperature of the Baltic Sea varies significantly depending on exact location season and depth At the Bornholm Basin which is located directly east of the island of the same name the surface temperature typically falls to 0 5 C 32 41 F during the peak of the winter and rises to 15 20 C 59 68 F during the peak of the summer with an annual average of around 9 10 C 48 50 F 30 A similar pattern can be seen in the Gotland Basin which is located between the island of Gotland and Latvia In the deep of these basins the temperature variations are smaller At the bottom of the Bornholm Basin deeper than 80 m 260 ft the temperature typically is 1 10 C 34 50 F and at the bottom of the Gotland Basin at depths greater than 225 m 738 ft the temperature typically is 4 7 C 39 45 F 30 Generally offshore locations lower latitudes and islands maintain maritime climates but adjacent to the water continental climates are common especially on the Gulf of Finland In the northern tributaries the climates transition from moderate continental to subarctic on the northernmost coastlines On the long term average the Baltic Sea is ice covered at the annual maximum for about 45 of its surface area The ice covered area during such a typical winter includes the Gulf of Bothnia the Gulf of Finland the Gulf of Riga the archipelago west of Estonia the Stockholm archipelago and the Archipelago Sea southwest of Finland The remainder of the Baltic does not freeze during a normal winter except sheltered bays and shallow lagoons such as the Curonian Lagoon The ice reaches its maximum extent in February or March typical ice thickness in the northernmost areas in the Bothnian Bay the northern basin of the Gulf of Bothnia is about 70 cm 28 in for landfast sea ice The thickness decreases farther south Freezing begins in the northern extremities of the Gulf of Bothnia typically in the middle of November reaching the open waters of the Bothnian Bay in early January The Bothnian Sea the basin south of Kvarken freezes on average in late February The Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Riga freeze typically in late January In 2011 the Gulf of Finland was completely frozen on 15 February 31 The ice extent depends on whether the winter is mild moderate or severe In severe winters ice can form around southern Sweden and even in the Danish straits According to the 18th century natural historian William Derham during the severe winters of 1703 and 1708 the ice cover reached as far as the Danish straits 32 Frequently parts of the Gulf of Bothnia and the Gulf of Finland are frozen in addition to coastal fringes in more southerly locations such as the Gulf of Riga This description meant that the whole of the Baltic Sea was covered with ice Since 1720 the Baltic Sea has frozen over entirely 20 times most recently in early 1987 which was the most severe winter in Scandinavia since 1720 The ice then covered 400 000 km2 150 000 sq mi During the winter of 2010 11 which was quite severe compared to those of the last decades the maximum ice cover was 315 000 km2 122 000 sq mi which was reached on 25 February 2011 The ice then extended from the north down to the northern tip of Gotland with small ice free areas on either side and the east coast of the Baltic Sea was covered by an ice sheet about 25 to 100 km 16 to 62 mi wide all the way to Gdansk This was brought about by a stagnant high pressure area that lingered over central and northern Scandinavia from around 10 to 24 February After this strong southern winds pushed the ice further into the north and much of the waters north of Gotland were again free of ice which had then packed against the shores of southern Finland 33 The effects of the afore mentioned high pressure area did not reach the southern parts of the Baltic Sea and thus the entire sea did not freeze over However floating ice was additionally observed near Swinoujscie harbor in January 2010 In recent years before 2011 the Bothnian Bay and the Bothnian Sea were frozen with solid ice near the Baltic coast and dense floating ice far from it In 2008 almost no ice formed except for a short period in March 34 Piles of drift ice on the shore of Puhtulaid near Virtsu Estonia in late April During winter fast ice which is attached to the shoreline develops first rendering ports unusable without the services of icebreakers Level ice ice sludge pancake ice and rafter ice form in the more open regions The gleaming expanse of ice is similar to the Arctic with wind driven pack ice and ridges up to 15 m 49 ft Offshore of the landfast ice the ice remains very dynamic all year and it is relatively easily moved around by winds and therefore forms pack ice made up of large piles and ridges pushed against the landfast ice and shores In spring the Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Bothnia normally thaw in late April with some ice ridges persisting until May in the eastern extremities of the Gulf of Finland In the northernmost reaches of the Bothnian Bay ice usually stays until late May by early June it is practically always gone However in the famine year of 1867 remnants of ice were observed as late as 17 July near Uddskar 35 Even as far south as Oresund remnants of ice have been observed in May on several occasions near Taarbaek on 15 May 1942 and near Copenhagen on 11 May 1771 Drift ice was also observed on 11 May 1799 36 37 38 The ice cover is the main habitat for two large mammals the grey seal Halichoerus grypus and the Baltic ringed seal Pusa hispida botnica both of which feed underneath the ice and breed on its surface Of these two seals only the Baltic ringed seal suffers when there is not adequate ice in the Baltic Sea as it feeds its young only while on ice The grey seal is adapted to reproducing also with no ice in the sea The sea ice also harbors several species of algae that live in the bottom and inside unfrozen brine pockets in the ice Due to the often fluctuating winter temperatures between above and below freezing the saltwater ice of the Baltic Sea can be treacherous and hazardous to walk on in particular in comparison to the more stable fresh water ice sheets in the interior lakes Hydrography Edit Depths of the Baltic Sea in meters The Baltic Sea flows out through the Danish straits however the flow is complex A surface layer of brackish water discharges 940 km3 230 cu mi per year into the North Sea Due to the difference in salinity by salinity permeation principle a sub surface layer of more saline water moving in the opposite direction brings in 475 km3 114 cu mi per year It mixes very slowly with the upper waters resulting in a salinity gradient from top to bottom with most of the saltwater remaining below 40 to 70 m 130 to 230 ft deep The general circulation is anti clockwise northwards along its eastern boundary and south along with the western one 39 The difference between the outflow and the inflow comes entirely from fresh water More than 250 streams drain a basin of about 1 600 000 km2 620 000 sq mi contributing a volume of 660 km3 160 cu mi per year to the Baltic They include the major rivers of north Europe such as the Oder the Vistula the Neman the Daugava and the Neva Additional fresh water comes from the difference of precipitation less evaporation which is positive An important source of salty water is infrequent inflows of North Sea water into the Baltic Such inflows important to the Baltic ecosystem because of the oxygen they transport into the Baltic deeps used to happen regularly until the 1980s In recent decades they have become less frequent The latest four occurred in 1983 1993 2003 and 2014 suggesting a new inter inflow period of about ten years The water level is generally far more dependent on the regional wind situation than on tidal effects However tidal currents occur in narrow passages in the western parts of the Baltic Sea Tides can reach 17 to 19 cm 6 7 to 7 5 in in the Gulf of Finland 40 The significant wave height is generally much lower than that of the North Sea Quite violent sudden storms sweep the surface ten or more times a year due to large transient temperature differences and a long reach of the wind Seasonal winds also cause small changes in sea level of the order of 0 5 m 1 ft 8 in 39 According to the media during a storm in January 2017 an extreme wave above 14 m 46 ft has been measured and significant wave height of around 8 m 26 ft has been measured by the FMI A numerical study has shown the presence of events with 8 to 10 m 26 to 33 ft significant wave heights Those extreme waves events can play an important role in the coastal zone on erosion and sea dynamics 41 Salinity Edit Baltic Sea near Klaipeda Karkle The Baltic Sea is the world s largest inland brackish sea 42 Only two other brackish waters are larger according to some measurements The Black Sea is larger in both surface area and water volume but most of it is located outside the continental shelf only a small fraction is inland The Caspian Sea is larger in water volume but despite its name it is a lake rather than a sea 42 The Baltic Sea s salinity is much lower than that of ocean water which averages 3 5 as a result of abundant freshwater runoff from the surrounding land rivers streams and alike combined with the shallowness of the sea itself runoff contributes roughly one fortieth its total volume per year as the volume of the basin is about 21 000 km3 5 000 cu mi and yearly runoff is about 500 km3 120 cu mi citation needed The open surface waters of the Baltic Sea proper generally have a salinity of 0 3 to 0 9 which is border line freshwater The flow of freshwater into the sea from approximately two hundred rivers and the introduction of salt from the southwest builds up a gradient of salinity in the Baltic Sea The highest surface salinities generally 0 7 0 9 are in the southwesternmost part of the Baltic in the Arkona and Bornholm basins the former located roughly between southeast Zealand and Bornholm and the latter directly east of Bornholm It gradually falls further east and north reaching the lowest in the Bothnian Bay at around 0 3 43 Drinking the surface water of the Baltic as a means of survival would actually hydrate the body instead of dehydrating as is the case with ocean water note 1 citation needed As saltwater is denser than freshwater the bottom of the Baltic Sea is saltier than the surface This creates a vertical stratification of the water column a halocline that represents a barrier to the exchange of oxygen and nutrients and fosters completely separate maritime environments 44 The difference between the bottom and surface salinities varies depending on location Overall it follows the same southwest to east and north pattern as the surface At the bottom of the Arkona Basin equalling depths greater than 40 m or 130 ft and Bornholm Basin depths greater than 80 m or 260 ft it is typically 1 4 1 8 Further east and north the salinity at the bottom is consistently lower being the lowest in Bothnian Bay depths greater than 120 m or 390 ft where it is slightly below 0 4 or only marginally higher than the surface in the same region 43 In contrast the salinity of the Danish straits which connect the Baltic Sea and Kattegat tends to be significantly higher but with major variations from year to year For example the surface and bottom salinity in the Great Belt is typically around 2 0 and 2 8 respectively which is only somewhat below that of the Kattegat 43 The water surplus caused by the continuous inflow of rivers and streams to the Baltic Sea means that there generally is a flow of brackish water out through the Danish Straits to the Kattegat and eventually the Atlantic 45 Significant flows in the opposite direction salt water from the Kattegat through the Danish Straits to the Baltic Sea are less regular From 1880 to 1980 inflows occurred on average six to seven times per decade Since 1980 it has been much less frequent although a very large inflow occurred in 2014 30 Major tributaries Edit See also List of rivers of the Baltic Sea The rating of mean discharges differs from the ranking of hydrological lengths from the most distant source to the sea and the rating of the nominal lengths Gota alv a tributary of the Kattegat is not listed as due to the northward upper low salinity flow in the sea its water hardly reaches the Baltic proper Name MeanDischarge m3 s Length km Basin km2 States sharing the basin Longest watercourseNeva 2500 74 nominal 860 hydrological 281 000 Russia Finland Ladoga affluent Vuoksi Suna 280 km Lake Onega 160 km Svir 224 km Lake Ladoga 122 km NevaVistula 1080 1047 194 424 Poland tributaries Belarus Ukraine Slovakia Bug 774 km Narew 22 km Vistula 156 km total 1204 kmDaugava 678 1020 87 900 Russia source Belarus LatviaNeman 678 937 98 200 Belarus source Lithuania RussiaKemijoki 556 550 main river 600 river system 51 127 Finland Norway source of Ounasjoki longer tributary KitinenOder 540 866 118 861 Czech Republic source Poland Germany Warta 808 km Oder 180 km total 928 kmLule alv 506 461 25 240 SwedenNarva 415 77 nominal 652 hydrological 56 200 Russia Source of Velikaya Estonia Velikaya 430 km Lake Peipus 145 km NarvaTorne alv 388 520 nominal 630 hydrological 40 131 Norway source Sweden Finland Valfojohka Kamajakka Abiskojaure Abiskojokk total 40 km Tornetrask 70 km Torne alvIslands and archipelagoes Edit Main article List of islands in the Baltic Sea Skerries form an integral and typical part of many of the archipelagos of the Baltic Sea such as these in the archipelago of Aland Finland Stockholm archipelago Aerial view of Bornholm Denmark Aland Finland autonomous Archipelago Sea Finland Pargas Nagu Korpo Houtskar Kustavi Kimito Blekinge archipelago Sweden Bornholm including Christianso Denmark Falster Denmark Gotland Sweden Hailuoto Finland Kotlin Russia Lolland Denmark Kvarken archipelago including Valsorarna Finland Mon Denmark Oland Sweden Rugen Germany Stockholm archipelago Sweden Varmdon Sweden Usedom or Uznam split between Germany and Poland West Estonian archipelago Estonia Hiiumaa Muhu Saaremaa Vormsi Wolin Poland Zealand Denmark Coastal countries Edit Population density in the Baltic Sea catchment area Countries that border the sea Denmark Estonia Finland Germany Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia Sweden Countries lands in the outer drainage basin Belarus Czech Republic Norway Slovakia Ukraine The Baltic Sea drainage basin is roughly four times the surface area of the sea itself About 48 of the region is forested with Sweden and Finland containing the majority of the forest especially around the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland About 20 of the land is used for agriculture and pasture mainly in Poland and around the edge of the Baltic Proper in Germany Denmark and Sweden About 17 of the basin is unused open land with another 8 of wetlands Most of the latter are in the Gulfs of Bothnia and Finland The rest of the land is heavily populated About 85 million people live in the Baltic drainage basin 15 million within 10 km 6 mi of the coast and 29 million within 50 km 31 mi of the coast Around 22 million live in population centers of over 250 000 90 of these are concentrated in the 10 km 6 mi band around the coast Of the nations containing all or part of the basin Poland includes 45 of the 85 million Russia 12 Sweden 10 and the others less than 6 each 46 Cities Edit Main article List of cities and towns around the Baltic Sea Vasilyevsky Island in Saint Petersburg Russia Stockholm in Sweden Riga in Latvia Helsinki in Finland Gdansk in Poland Tallinn in Estonia The biggest coastal cities by population Saint Petersburg Russia 5 392 992 metropolitan area 6 000 000 Stockholm Sweden 962 154 metropolitan area 2 315 612 Helsinki Finland 658 864 metropolitan area 1 536 810 Riga Latvia 614 618 metropolitan area 1 070 00 Gdansk Poland 462 700 metropolitan area 1 041 000 Tallinn Estonia 435 245 metropolitan area 542 983 Kaliningrad Russia 431 500 Szczecin Poland 413 600 metropolitan area 778 000 Gdynia Poland 255 600 metropolitan area 1 041 000 Espoo Finland 257 195 part of Helsinki metropolitan area Kiel Germany 247 000 47 Lubeck Germany 216 100 Rostock Germany 212 700 Klaipeda Lithuania 194 400 Oulu Finland 191 050 Turku Finland 180 350 Other important ports Estonia Parnu 44 568 Maardu 16 570 Sillamae 16 567 Finland Pori 83 272 Kotka 54 887 Kokkola 46 809 Port of Naantali 18 789 Mariehamn 11 372 Hanko 9 270 Germany Flensburg 94 000 Stralsund 58 000 Greifswald 55 000 Wismar 44 000 Eckernforde 22 000 Neustadt in Holstein 16 000 Wolgast 12 000 Sassnitz 10 000 Latvia Liepaja 85 000 Ventspils 44 000 Lithuania Palanga 17 000 Poland Kolobrzeg 44 800 Swinoujscie 41 500 Police 34 284 Wladyslawowo 15 000 Darlowo 14 000 Russia Vyborg 79 962 Baltiysk 34 000 Sweden Norrkoping 84 000 Gavle 75 451 Trelleborg 26 000 Karlshamn 19 000 Oxelosund 11 000Geology EditMain article Geology of the Baltic Sea Ancylus Lake around 8700 years BP The relic of Scandinavian Glacier in white The rivers Svea alv Svea river and Gota alv formed an outlet to the Atlantic Much of modern Finland is former seabed or archipelago illustrated are sea levels immediately after the last ice age The Baltic Sea somewhat resembles a riverbed with two tributaries the Gulf of Finland and Gulf of Bothnia Geological surveys show that before the Pleistocene instead of the Baltic Sea there was a wide plain around a great river that paleontologists call the Eridanos Several Pleistocene glacial episodes scooped out the river bed into the sea basin By the time of the last or Eemian Stage MIS 5e the Eemian Sea was in place Instead of a true sea the Baltic can even today also be understood as the common estuary of all rivers flowing into it From that time the waters underwent a geologic history summarized under the names listed below Many of the stages are named after marine animals e g the Littorina mollusk that are clear markers of changing water temperatures and salinity The factors that determined the sea s characteristics were the submergence or emergence of the region due to the weight of ice and subsequent isostatic readjustment and the connecting channels it found to the North Sea Atlantic either through the straits of Denmark or at what are now the large lakes of Sweden and the White Sea Arctic Sea Eemian Sea 130 000 115 000 years ago Baltic Ice Lake 12 600 10 300 Yoldia Sea 10 300 9500 Ancylus Lake 9 500 8 000 Mastogloia Sea 8 000 7 500 Littorina Sea 7 500 4 000 Post Littorina Sea 4 000 presentThe land is still emerging isostatically from its depressed state which was caused by the weight of ice during the last glaciation The phenomenon is known as post glacial rebound Consequently the surface area and the depth of the sea are diminishing The uplift is about eight millimeters per year on the Finnish coast of the northernmost Gulf of Bothnia In the area the former seabed is only gently sloping leading to large areas of land being reclaimed in what are geologically speaking relatively short periods decades and centuries The Baltic Sea anomaly Edit Main article Baltic Sea anomaly The Baltic Sea anomaly is a feature on an indistinct sonar image taken by Swedish salvage divers on the floor of the northern Baltic Sea in June 2011 The treasure hunters suggested the image showed an object with unusual features of seemingly extraordinary origin Speculation published in tabloid newspapers claimed that the object was a sunken UFO A consensus of experts and scientists say that the image most likely shows a natural geological formation 48 49 50 51 52 Biology EditFauna and flora Edit See also List of fish in Sweden The fauna of the Baltic Sea is a mixture of marine and freshwater species Among marine fishes are Atlantic cod Atlantic herring European hake European plaice European flounder shorthorn sculpin and turbot and examples of freshwater species include European perch northern pike whitefish and common roach Freshwater species may occur at outflows of rivers or streams in all coastal sections of the Baltic Sea Otherwise marine species dominate in most sections of the Baltic at least as far north as Gavle where less than one tenth are freshwater species Further north the pattern is inverted In the Bothnian Bay roughly two thirds of the species are freshwater In the far north of this bay saltwater species are almost entirely absent 30 For example the common starfish and shore crab two species that are very widespread along European coasts are both unable to cope with the significantly lower salinity Their range limit is west of Bornholm meaning that they are absent from the vast majority of the Baltic Sea 30 Some marine species like the Atlantic cod and European flounder can survive at relatively low salinities but need higher salinities to breed which therefore occurs in deeper parts of the Baltic Sea 53 54 There is a decrease in species richness from the Danish belts to the Gulf of Bothnia The decreasing salinity along this path causes restrictions in both physiology and habitats 55 At more than 600 species of invertebrates fish aquatic mammals aquatic birds and macrophytes the Arkona Basin roughly between southeast Zealand and Bornholm is far richer than other more eastern and northern basins in the Baltic Sea which all have less than 400 species from these groups with the exception of the Gulf of Finland with more than 750 species However even the most diverse sections of the Baltic Sea have far fewer species than the almost full saltwater Kattegat which is home to more than 1600 species from these groups 30 The lack of tides has affected the marine species as compared with the Atlantic Since the Baltic Sea is so young there are only two or three known endemic species the brown alga Fucus radicans and the flounder Platichthys solemdali Both appear to have evolved in the Baltic basin and were only recognized as species in 2005 and 2018 respectively having formerly been confused with more widespread relatives 54 56 The tiny Copenhagen cockle Parvicardium hauniense a rare mussel is sometimes considered endemic but has now been recorded in the Mediterranean 57 However some consider non Baltic records to be misidentifications of juvenile lagoon cockles Cerastoderma glaucum 58 Several widespread marine species have distinctive subpopulations in the Baltic Sea adapted to the low salinity such as the Baltic Sea forms of the Atlantic herring and lumpsucker which are smaller than the widespread forms in the North Atlantic 45 A peculiar feature of the fauna is that it contains a number of glacial relict species isolated populations of arctic species which have remained in the Baltic Sea since the last glaciation such as the large isopod Saduria entomon the Baltic subspecies of ringed seal and the fourhorn sculpin Some of these relicts are derived from glacial lakes such as Monoporeia affinis which is a main element in the benthic fauna of the low salinity Bothnian Bay Cetaceans in the Baltic Sea are monitored by the countries bordering the sea and data compiled by various intergovernmental bodies such as ASCOBANS A critically endangered population of harbor porpoise inhabit the Baltic proper whereas the species is abundant in the outer Baltiuc Western Baltic and Danish Straits and occasionally oceanic and out of range species such as minke whales 59 bottlenose dolphins 60 beluga whales 61 orcas 62 and beaked whales 63 visit the waters In recent years very small but with increasing rates fin whales 64 65 66 67 and humpback whales migrate into Baltic sea including mother and calf pair 68 Now extinct Atlantic grey whales remains found from Graso along Bothnian Sea southern Bothnian Gulf 69 and Ystad 70 and eastern population of North Atlantic right whales that is facing functional extinction 71 once migrated into Baltic Sea 72 Other notable megafauna include the basking sharks 73 Environmental status Edit Further information Baltic Sea hypoxia Satellite photo of the Baltic Sea surrounding Gotland Sweden with algae bloom phytoplankton swirling in the water Satellite images taken in July 2010 revealed a massive algal bloom covering 377 000 square kilometres 146 000 sq mi in the Baltic Sea The area of the bloom extended from Germany and Poland to Finland Researchers of the phenomenon have indicated that algal blooms have occurred every summer for decades Fertilizer runoff from surrounding agricultural land has exacerbated the problem and led to increased eutrophication 74 Approximately 100 000 km2 38 610 sq mi of the Baltic s seafloor a quarter of its total area is a variable dead zone The more saline and therefore denser water remains on the bottom isolating it from surface waters and the atmosphere This leads to decreased oxygen concentrations within the zone It is mainly bacteria that grow in it digesting organic material and releasing hydrogen sulfide Because of this large anaerobic zone the seafloor ecology differs from that of the neighboring Atlantic Plans to artificially oxygenate areas of the Baltic that have experienced eutrophication have been proposed by the University of Gothenburg and Inocean AB The proposal intends to use wind driven pumps to inject oxygen air into waters at or around 130m below sea level 75 After World War II Germany had to be disarmed and large quantities of ammunition stockpiles were disposed directly into the Baltic Sea and the North Sea Environmental experts and marine biologists warn that these ammunition dumps pose a major environmental threat with potentially life threatening consequences to the health and safety of humans on the coastlines of these seas 76 Economy EditSee also Baltic Sea cruiseferries and Ports of the Baltic Sea Pedestrian pier in Sellin Germany Construction of the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark completed 1997 and the Oresund Bridge Tunnel completed 1999 linking Denmark with Sweden provided a highway and railroad connection between Sweden and the Danish mainland the Jutland Peninsula precisely the Zealand The undersea tunnel of the Oresund Bridge Tunnel provides for navigation of large ships into and out of the Baltic Sea The Baltic Sea is the main trade route for the export of Russian petroleum Many of the countries neighboring the Baltic Sea have been concerned about this since a major oil leak in a seagoing tanker would be disastrous for the Baltic given the slow exchange of water citation needed The tourism industry surrounding the Baltic Sea is naturally concerned about oil pollution citation needed Much shipbuilding is carried out in the shipyards around the Baltic Sea The largest shipyards are at Gdansk Gdynia and Szczecin Poland Kiel Germany Karlskrona and Malmo Sweden Rauma Turku and Helsinki Finland Riga Ventspils and Liepaja Latvia Klaipeda Lithuania and Saint Petersburg Russia There are several cargo and passenger ferries that operate on the Baltic Sea such as Scandlines Silja Line Polferries the Viking Line Tallink and Superfast Ferries Construction of the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link between Denmark and Germany is due to finish in 2029 It will be a three bore tunnel carrying four motorway lanes and two rail tracks Tourism Edit Svetlogorsk resort town in Kaliningrad Oblast Russia Mrzezyno beach in Poland Piers Ahlbeck Usedom Germany Bansin Germany Binz Germany Heiligendamm Germany Kuhlungsborn Germany Sellin Germany Liepaja Latvia Sventoji Lithuania Klaipeda Lithuania Gdansk Poland Gdynia Poland Kolobrzeg Poland Misdroy Poland Sopot Poland Resort towns Haapsalu Estonia Kuressaare Estonia Narva Joesuu Estonia Parnu Estonia Hanko Finland Mariehamn Finland Binz Germany Heiligendamm Germany Heringsdorf Germany Travemunde Germany Sellin Germany Ueckermunde Germany Jurmala Latvia Nida Lithuania Palanga Lithuania Sventoji Lithuania Juodkrante Lithuania Pervalka Lithuania Karkle Lithuania Kamien Pomorski Poland Kolobrzeg Poland Sopot Poland Swinoujscie Poland Ustka Poland Svetlogorsk RussiaThe Helsinki Convention Edit1974 Convention Edit For the first time ever all the sources of pollution around an entire sea were made subject to a single convention signed in 1974 by the then seven Baltic coastal states The 1974 Convention entered into force on 3 May 1980 1992 Convention Edit Main article Helsinki Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area In the light of political changes and developments in international environmental and maritime law a new convention was signed in 1992 by all the states bordering on the Baltic Sea and the European Community After ratification the Convention entered into force on 17 January 2000 The Convention covers the whole of the Baltic Sea area including inland waters and the water of the sea itself as well as the seabed Measures are also taken in the whole catchment area of the Baltic Sea to reduce land based pollution The convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area 1992 entered into force on 17 January 2000 The governing body of the convention is the Helsinki Commission 77 also known as HELCOM or Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission The present contracting parties are Denmark Estonia the European Community Finland Germany Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia and Sweden The ratification instruments were deposited by the European Community Germany Latvia and Sweden in 1994 by Estonia and Finland in 1995 by Denmark in 1996 by Lithuania in 1997 and by Poland and Russia in November 1999 See also Edit Oceans portal Geography portalBaltic disambiguation Baltic region Baltic Sea Action Group BSAG Council of the Baltic Sea States List of cities and towns around the Baltic Sea List of rivers of the Baltic Sea Nord Stream 1 Nord Stream 2 Northern Europe Ports of the Baltic Sea ScandinaviaNotes Edit A healthy serum concentration of sodium is around 0 8 0 85 and healthy kidneys can concentrate salt in urine to at least 1 4 References Edit Coalition Clean Baltic Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2013 Gunderson Lance H Pritchard Lowell 1 October 2002 Resilience and the Behavior of Large Scale Systems Island Press ISBN 9781559639712 via Google Books Text of Helsinki Convention Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2014 Sundzoll Academic dictionaries and encyclopedias Archived from the original on 2 October 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2022 Fragen zum Meer Antworten IOW www io warnemuende de Archived from the 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Ostsee Zeitung GmbH amp Co Finnwal in der Ostsee gesichtet www ostsee zeitung de Archived from the original on 30 October 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Allgemeine Augsburger Angler filmt Wal in Ostsee Bucht Archived from the original on 30 October 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Jansson N 2007 Vi sag valen i viken Archived 7 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Aftonbladet Retrieved on 7 September 2017 Whales seen again in the waters of the Baltic Sea Science in Poland Archived from the original on 4 July 2022 Retrieved 30 June 2022 Jones L M Swartz L S Leatherwood S The Gray Whale Eschrichtius Robustus Archived 27 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Eastern Atlantic Specimens pp 41 44 Academic Press Retrieved on 5 September 2017 Global Biodiversity Information Facility Occurrence Detail 1322462463 Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 21 September 2017 Berry George North Atlantic right whale Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2022 Regional Species Extinctions Examples of regional species extinctions over the last 1000 years and more PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2011 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2019 Retrieved 18 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Satellite spies vast algal bloom in Baltic Sea BBC News 23 July 2010 Archived from the original on 26 July 2010 Retrieved 27 July 2010 Oxygenation at a Depth of 120 Meters Could Save the Baltic Sea Researchers Demonstrate Science Daily Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 9 March 2018 Ticking time bombs on the bottom of the North and Baltic Sea DW COM 23 August 2017 Archived from the original on 4 June 2020 Retrieved 13 September 2019 Helcom Welcome Archived 6 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Helcom fi Retrieved on 23 June 2011 Bibliography Edit Alhonen Pentti 1966 Baltic Sea In Fairbridge Rhodes ed The Encyclopedia of Oceanography New York Van Nostrand Reinhold Company pp 87 91 Schmitt Rudiger 1989 BLACK SEA Black Sea Encyclopaedia Iranica Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol IV Fasc 3 pp 310 313 Further reading EditNorbert Gotz Spatial Politics and Fuzzy Regionalism The Case of the Baltic Sea Area Baltic Worlds 9 2016 3 54 67 Aarno Voipio ed 1981 The Baltic Sea Elsevier Oceanography Series vol 30 Elsevier Scientific Publishing 418 p ISBN 0 444 41884 9 Ojaveer H Jaanus A MacKenzie B R Martin G Olenin S et al 2010 Status of Biodiversity in the Baltic Sea PLoS ONE 5 9 e12467 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 512467O doi 10 1371 journal pone 0012467 PMC 2931693 PMID 20824189 Peter Bruce 2009 Baltic Ferries Ramsey Isle of Man Ferry Publications ISBN 9781906608057 The BACC II Author Team et al 2015 Second Assessment of Climate Change for the Baltic Sea Basin Regional Climate Studies Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 16006 1 ISBN 978 3 319 16006 1 S2CID 127011711 Historical Edit Bogucka Maria The Role of Baltic Trade in European Development from the XVIth to the XVIIIth Centuries Journal of European Economic History 9 1980 5 20 Davey James The Transformation of British Naval Strategy Seapower and Supply in Northern Europe 1808 1812 Boydell 2012 Dickson Henry Newton 1911 Baltic Sea Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed pp 286 287 Fedorowicz Jan K England s Baltic Trade in the Early Seventeenth Century A Study in Anglo Polish Commercial Diplomacy Cambridge UP 2008 Frost Robert I The Northern Wars War State and Society in Northeastern Europe 1558 1721 Longman 2000 Grainger John D The British Navy in the Baltic Boydell 2014 Kent Heinz S K War and Trade in Northern Seas Anglo Scandinavian Economic Relations in the Mid Eighteenth Century Cambridge UP 1973 Koningsbrugge Hans van In War and Peace The Dutch and the Baltic in Early Modern Times Tijdschrift voor Skandinavistiek 16 1995 189 200 Lindblad Jan Thomas Structural Change in the Dutch Trade in the Baltic in the Eighteenth Century Scandinavian Economic History Review 33 1985 193 207 Lisk Jill The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic 1600 1725 U of London Press 1967 Roberts Michael The Early Vasas A History of Sweden 1523 1611 Cambridge UP 1968 Rystad Goran Klaus R Bohme and Wilhelm M Carlgren eds In Quest of Trade and Security The Baltic in Power Politics 1500 1990 Vol 1 1500 1890 Stockholm Probus 1994 Salmon Patrick and Tony Barrow eds Britain and the Baltic Studies in Commercial Political and Cultural Relations Sunderland University Press 2003 Stiles Andrina Sweden and the Baltic 1523 1721 1992 Thomson Erik Beyond the Military State Sweden s Great Power Period in Recent Historiography History Compass 9 2011 269 283 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2011 00761 x Tielhof Milja van The Mother of All Trades The Baltic Grain Trade in Amsterdam from the Late 16th to Early 19th Century Leiden The Netherlands Brill 2002 Warner Richard British Merchants and Russian Men of War The Rise of the Russian Baltic Fleet In Peter the Great and the West New Perspectives Edited by Lindsey Hughes 105 117 Basingstoke UK Palgrave Macmillan 2001 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baltic Sea Wikisource has the text of the 1879 American Cyclopaedia article Baltic Sea Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Baltic Sea The Baltic Sea Kattegat and Skagerrak sea areas and draining basins poster with integral information by the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute Baltic Sea clickable map and details Protect the Baltic Sea while it s still not too late The Baltic Sea Portal a site maintained by the Finnish Institute of Marine Research Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Retrieved 15 July 2007 FIMR in English Finnish Swedish and Estonian www balticnest org Encyclopedia of Baltic History Old shipwrecks in the Baltic How the Baltic Sea was changing Prehistory of the Baltic from the Polish Geological Institute Late Weichselian and Holocene shore displacement history of the Baltic Sea in Finland more prehistory of the Baltic from the Department of Geography of the University of Helsinki Baltic Environmental Atlas Interactive map of the Baltic Sea region Can a New Cleanup Plan Save the Sea spiegel de List of all ferry lines in the Baltic Sea The Helsinki Commission HELCOM HELCOM is the governing body of the Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area Baltice org information related to winter navigation in the Baltic Sea Baltic Sea Wind Marine weather forecasts Ostseeflug A short film 55 showing the coastline and the major German cities at the Baltic sea Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baltic Sea amp oldid 1154779326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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